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OpenAI Says AI Agents Need to Be Managed Like Humans

DATE POSTED:February 9, 2026

OpenAI says autonomous agents must be governed and organized more like human workers than disjointed software tools.

This week the company introduced OpenAI Frontier, a platform designed to help organizations build, deploy and manage artificial intelligence (AI) agents with the same structure and oversight companies give human workers. According to OpenAI, many firms today simply layer agents onto existing systems, leading to fragmented workflows, disconnected tools and siloed data.

Frontier is available immediately to a “limited set of customers” with broader availability planned over the coming months, OpenAI says. The company listed Intuit, State Farm, Thermo Fisher and Uber among the initial adopters, and added that “dozens of existing customers” have already piloted the platform.

Agents Without Governance Are a Liability

The timing of Frontier’s launch reflects a growing enterprise realization as outlined by Fortune that companies struggle to operationalize agentic AI at scale because there is no consistent way to manage autonomy, permissions, compliance or accountability once agents start operating across teams. Many organizations initially create agents that plug directly into SaaS tools like Salesforce, Workday or internal apps, but those agents often lack a shared business context and cannot reliably communicate or collaborate with one another.

OpenAI’s thesis with Frontier is that agents are more like digital co-workers than standalone scripts: They need context about business processes, access to tools and systems with governed permissions, and a management layer that tracks performance and outcomes. Without that, enterprises risk islands of intelligent automation that boost productivity in one corner but create governance blind spots elsewhere.

In this sense, Frontier is positioned as a unifying layer on top of existing enterprise infrastructure one that can tie agents into centralized data sources, shared workflows and defined security boundaries. The goal is to reduce fragmentation and ensure that agents “know” the same business rules, objectives and guardrails that human workers do.

Human-Like Management for Software Workers

OpenAI’s own framing of Frontier emphasizes that agents should not be ephemeral experiments, but entities with identity, memory and life cycle management. In revealing the product, executives said agents on Frontier will operate with a common context, have defined roles, be able to communicate with other agents, and be traceable, all features that mirror the way organizations govern people.

The Wall Street Journal described Frontier as a way to build “AI co-workers” that connect into enterprise workflows, with centralized oversight that aligns agent behavior with business norms. The distinction matters because many legacy automation tools and point solutions lack the ability to manage agents once they span multiple departments or software platforms.

Parallel moves in the market highlight the same trend: Anthropic recently introduced its “cowork” capabilities aimed at turning its Claude models into customizable collaborators tailored to specific jobs, and it has expanded plugin support to help enterprises bind those agents to particular functions and tools.

The Stakes for Enterprise Adoption

Treating agents like workers has practical implications beyond semantics. Firms that cannot trace decisions back to governed policies risk compliance failures, inconsistent behavior and operational risk when agents handle sensitive tasks such as customer support, claims processing or supply chain decisions. Fortune coverage emphasized that enterprises considering autonomous AI must win trust not just from technologists, but from compliance, security and business leadership.

As competition intensifies with offerings like Anthropic’s cowork system and other platform players integrating agents into broader enterprise systems, the ability to manage autonomy at scale could become a key differentiator.

PYMNTS has earlier reported on Open AI’s data about employees using AI tools save more than an hour daily on tasks including email composition, document analysis and research. However, these individual productivity improvements do not automatically translate into enterprise value without proper integration and governance structures.

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The post OpenAI Says AI Agents Need to Be Managed Like Humans appeared first on PYMNTS.com.