AI giant Anthropic hires Australian boss as it opens local office

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David Swan

US artificial intelligence giant Anthropic has appointed long-time enterprise software executive Theo Hourmouzis as its first general manager for Australia and New Zealand, as the Claude maker formally opens its Sydney office this week.

Hourmouzis joins from data cloud company Snowflake, where he was most recently senior vice president for Australia, New Zealand and ASEAN. The Swinburne University graduate has spent close to three decades in enterprise technology, with prior leadership stints at Silicon Valley tech firms Cohesity and Sysdig.

New Australian Anthropic general manager Theo Hourmouzis.

He will lead a growing local team and meet customers and partners in Sydney this week alongside visiting executives from Anthropic’s global leadership. The appointment comes at a crucial time for the company, which is deep in an arms race with the likes of OpenAI – maker of ChatGPT – and other rivals including Meta and Microsoft as many workers are becoming increasingly anxious about AI’s impact on their jobs.

“Organisations across Australia and New Zealand are thinking carefully about how to adopt AI, and they want partners who take safety and rigour as seriously as they take the opportunity,” Hourmouzis said in a statement to this masthead. “The organisations that do best with AI will be the ones that pair ambition with discipline.”

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The appointment caps a frenetic month for the San Francisco-based company in Australia. In April, chief executive Dario Amodei met Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Canberra to sign a memorandum of understanding with the federal government, the first formal agreement struck under Australia’s National AI Plan. The non-binding deal commits Anthropic to share frontier model risk data with Australia’s AI Safety Institute and to feed adoption metrics from its Economic Index into government policymaking.

Claude has become one of the most popular AI chatbots globally.Bloomberg

The Sydney office follows recent Anthropic launches in Tokyo and Bengaluru, with Seoul next on the list. Australia ranks among the top users of its chatbot Claude, and the company has flagged it is “exploring” investment in local data centre and energy infrastructure as part of its MOU commitments – an open question being closely watched by an industry already grappling with surging compute demand.

Anthropic’s managing director of international, Chris Ciauri, said Hourmouzis would “build the team and partnerships we need to support our customers across Australia and New Zealand for the long term”.

The general manager will inherit a customer book that already includes Commonwealth Bank and analytics firm Quantium, alongside research partnerships with Australian National University, the Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and Curtin University.

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Anthropic recently announced platform-level collaborations with home-grown technology heavyweights Canva and Xero, embedding Claude into both the design platform and the cloud accounting software.

Australia is unusually fertile ground for the company. Anthropic’s own Economic Index ranks the country among the top five globally for per-capita Claude use, behind only Israel and Singapore and on par with New Zealand and South Korea. Locally, Claude usage is heavily concentrated in NSW and Victoria – the two states drove the bulk of activity in February – reflecting workforces tilted toward finance, professional services and technology.

A new not-for-profit partnership with YMCA South Australia has also been unveiled, with the youth and community organisation using Claude across its 65-plus locations to build custom AI tools.

Globally, Anthropic has ridden a once-in-a-generation enterprise wave: the company hit roughly $US14 billion ($19.5 billion) in annualised revenue in February and closed a $US30 billion Series G venture capital funding round at a $US380 billion valuation, with Claude now used by most of the Fortune 100 companies.

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The hire signals Anthropic’s intent to challenge OpenAI and Microsoft for enterprise AI investments in a market where chief executives are under mounting pressure to translate AI pilots into measurable productivity gains. It also comes as the Albanese government shelved mandatory AI guardrails on the recommendation of the Productivity Commission, instead pursuing voluntary, bilateral agreements of the kind Anthropic has signed.

Anthropic said Hourmouzis was unavailable for interviews this week, citing customer commitments.

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David SwanDavid Swan is the technology editor for The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald. He was previously technology editor for The Australian newspaper.Connect via X or email.

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au