Microsoft is reportedly preparing its sales force to take a more aggressive stance against the very companies that helped build its AI empire. According to a report from Bloomberg, the company held an internal strategy session on Tuesday where executives outlined plans for salespeople to negatively compare AI products from OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic to Microsoft’s own offerings. The meeting, framed as a kickoff for the new fiscal year, focused heavily on promoting the efficiency and cost advantages of Microsoft’s in-house models over those of its competitors.
The instruction was clear. Sales teams were told to position Microsoft not as just another vendor but as a provider of a complete system. Executive Vice President Jay Parikh told the room, according to the report, that every other company is selling pieces while Microsoft sells the full end to end system. He urged the team to get out and tell that story throughout the 2027 fiscal year.
A direct comparison to Claude
The internal meeting included a presentation from Copilot executive vice president Jacob Andreou. Andreou reportedly compared Microsoft’s Copilot directly to Anthropic’s chatbot Claude. He argued that within Microsoft’s office applications, Anthropic’s model was slower, less accurate, and lacked proper security integrations. TechCrunch reached out to Microsoft and Anthropic for comment but did not immediately receive a response.
It is not unusual for a company to coach its salespeople on how to talk about competitors. But the target of Microsoft’s criticism is notable. The company is now taking aim at the same organizations it has relied on for many of the AI models powering its own products. That shift marks a significant change in the dynamics of the AI industry.
A relationship in transition
Earlier this month, reports indicated that Microsoft had been swapping out OpenAI and Anthropic models from flagship applications like Word and Excel in favor of its own technology. The move was described as a cost cutting measure. It also signals a broader strategy to reduce dependence on external AI providers.
Microsoft and OpenAI once had an unusually tight partnership. The two companies struck a deal years ago that gave Microsoft access to OpenAI’s API and models in exchange for capital and computing resources. That arrangement changed in April when the companies amended their agreement and removed the exclusivity clause. The change allowed OpenAI to sell its technology to Microsoft’s competitors. It also freed Microsoft to more openly compete with OpenAI on the AI front.
The new sales pitch likely stems from that revised relationship. Microsoft has faced a challenging stock outlook over the past year as investors question the enormous spending required to build its AI business. Emphasizing the competitiveness of its in house models may be an attempt to restore confidence in the company’s long term AI plan. By training salespeople to talk down rivals, Microsoft is signaling that it no longer sees itself as a partner to OpenAI and Anthropic but as a direct competitor.
The broader implication is clear. The AI landscape is shifting from collaboration to head to head competition. Microsoft is leaning into its own technology and pushing its sales force to highlight the strengths of its integrated platform. For more on how the humanoid robot race is unfolding, check out our coverage of the humanoid robot race. As the battle for AI dominance heats up, every move by Microsoft will be watched closely for what it reveals about the future of enterprise software and the companies that build it.






