Infosys partners with Anthropic to build enterprise-grade AI agents

Infosys partners with Anthropic to build enterprise-grade AI agents
TechCrunch

Key Points

  • Infosys and Anthropic partner to integrate Claude models into Infosys' Topaz AI platform.
  • The collaboration aims to create autonomous AI agents for complex workflows in banking, telecoms and manufacturing.
  • Announced at India's AI Impact Summit in New Delhi amid concerns about AI disrupting the Indian IT services sector.
  • Infosys will use Anthropic's Claude Code for software development tasks and has already begun internal testing.
  • AI services generated ₹25 billion in revenue for Infosys, representing 5.5 % of its total revenue in the December quarter.
  • Anthropic sees the partnership as a pathway into regulated enterprise markets, leveraging Infosys' industry expertise.
  • Anthropic opened its first India office in Bengaluru; India accounts for about 6 % of global Claude usage.
  • The deal is similar to previous collaborations, such as HCLTech's partnership with OpenAI.

Infosys announced a partnership with Anthropic to integrate the latter's Claude models into its Topaz AI platform, creating autonomous AI agents for complex enterprise workflows in sectors such as banking, telecoms and manufacturing. The deal was unveiled at India's AI Impact Summit in New Delhi amid concerns that large‑language‑model tools could disrupt the Indian IT services industry. Infosys will use Anthropic's Claude Code for software development tasks and has already begun internal deployments. The collaboration also offers Anthropic a pathway into regulated enterprise markets, leveraging Infosys' industry expertise.

Partnership Overview

Indian IT services leader Infosys announced a strategic partnership with artificial‑intelligence firm Anthropic to develop enterprise‑grade AI agents. The collaboration will see Anthropic's Claude family of large language models integrated into Infosys' Topaz AI platform, enabling the creation of "agentic" systems that can autonomously manage complex workflows across industries such as banking, telecommunications and manufacturing.

Strategic Context

The announcement took place at India's AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, a gathering that attracted senior executives from AI companies and major technology firms. The timing reflects growing anxiety in the Indian IT sector that AI tools—particularly those from leading labs like Anthropic and OpenAI—could reshape the labor‑intensive outsourcing model that underpins a $280 billion industry.

Earlier in the month, shares of Indian IT firms fell after Anthropic launched a suite of enterprise AI tools claiming to automate tasks in legal, sales, marketing and research roles. The new partnership gives Infosys direct access to Anthropic's Claude models and developer tools designed for building AI agents tailored to large enterprises.

Implementation Details

Infosys plans to employ Anthropic's Claude Code to assist its engineers in writing, testing and debugging software. The company has already begun internal deployments of Claude‑powered tools to build expertise that will later be applied to client engagements.

Financial Impact

AI‑related services contributed revenue of ₹25 billion (approximately $275 million), representing 5.5 % of Infosys' total revenue of ₹454.8 billion (about $5 billion) in the December quarter. By comparison, rival Tata Consultancy Services reported AI services generating about $1.8 billion annually, roughly 6 % of its revenue.

Industry Implications

For Anthropic, the partnership opens a route into heavily regulated enterprise sectors where scaling AI solutions requires deep industry knowledge and robust governance. Anthropic co‑founder and CEO Dario Amodei highlighted the gap between a model that works in a demo environment and one that performs reliably in regulated industries, noting that Infosys' experience in sectors like financial services, telecoms and manufacturing helps bridge that divide.

Anthropic also opened its first India office in Bengaluru, expanding its presence in a market that now accounts for about 6 % of global Claude usage, second only to the United States, with much of the activity focused on programming.

Broader Landscape

The Infosys‑Anthropic tie‑up mirrors other recent collaborations in the Indian IT space, such as HCLTech's partnership with OpenAI last year to help enterprises deploy AI tools at scale.

Details regarding the timeline for deploying Claude‑powered AI agents and the financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

#Infosys#Anthropic#Enterprise AI#AI agents#Claude#Topaz AI#Indian IT services#AI Impact Summit#Large language models#Automation
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