In a surprising development that has sent shockwaves through the tech and AI community, OpenAI has reversed course on its widely discussed internal restructuring plans. While this move may appear to quell immediate concerns from employees and stakeholders, experts warn it may simply replace one problem for another—trading governance complexity for longer-term strategic instability.
As seen in Millionaire MNL, the original restructuring was intended to address mounting concerns around transparency, decision-making, and the alignment of OpenAI’s nonprofit charter with its for-profit ambitions. However, with the reversal now confirmed, critics suggest the company may be kicking deeper governance issues further down the road.
The background: from capped-profit to commercial powerhouse
OpenAI was founded in 2015 with a mission to ensure that artificial general intelligence (AGI) benefits all of humanity. Originally structured as a nonprofit, the company introduced a “capped-profit” arm in 2019—OpenAI LP—to attract funding while still aiming to adhere to its founding principles. The complex dual structure raised eyebrows from the beginning.
The now-abandoned restructuring plan aimed to simplify this architecture, possibly by merging entities or reevaluating board control and investor rights. But that plan has now been reversed, with OpenAI citing concerns about execution risks, employee morale, and maintaining operational focus.
Sources close to the matter suggest internal disagreements—particularly regarding the pace of commercialization and external partnerships—drove the reversal. The fallout from the high-profile leadership crisis in late 2023, when CEO Sam Altman was briefly removed and then reinstated, has only intensified scrutiny of how OpenAI makes its biggest decisions.
The risks of governance whiplash
While reversing the restructuring plan may seem like a win for stability, it introduces new concerns about the organization’s long-term governance. The hybrid nonprofit-for-profit model was already criticized for being opaque and difficult to manage. Without the planned overhaul, OpenAI may now struggle to balance its ethical commitments with the realities of aggressive market competition.
“OpenAI is trying to build the future of AI with one foot in Silicon Valley and the other in social responsibility,” said analyst Leila Hwang of the Institute for Future Governance. “But this reversal signals hesitation at the very moment it needs clarity and conviction.”
The lack of a clear governance path could complicate partnerships, fundraising, and public trust—especially as OpenAI deepens integrations with corporate giants like Microsoft, which has invested billions into the firm.
Investor confidence and operational control
Investors, while attracted to OpenAI’s technological dominance, have long voiced concerns about the nonprofit board’s power to override for-profit leadership decisions. The now-reversed restructuring was seen as a way to give investors more visibility, if not more control, over the company’s direction.
By walking back the changes, OpenAI risks alienating some stakeholders while emboldening others to demand more transparency. “You can’t have a $90 billion company operating like a research collective,” one venture capital partner noted anonymously. “Eventually, you’ll hit a wall where investors want governance that matches the scale of the business.”
This tension between mission and monetization could affect OpenAI’s ability to retain top talent, secure future rounds of investment, and execute on its increasingly ambitious roadmap.
Employee morale and internal alignment
Internally, the proposed restructuring had created friction among staff—particularly around decision-making, leadership accountability, and strategic focus. Some employees reportedly feared that governance changes would shift power too far toward commercial interests, diluting the company’s broader ethical goals.
Reversing the plan may temporarily boost morale among mission-aligned staffers, but it also leaves major questions unanswered: Who ultimately controls OpenAI’s direction? How will disagreements between nonprofit ideals and commercial realities be resolved?
As seen in Millionaire MNL, the most successful mission-driven companies are those that align structure with purpose. Without a clear, stable model, OpenAI may struggle to execute consistently across both its public-facing mission and its commercial strategy.
What happens next?
OpenAI’s leadership has emphasized that while the formal restructuring is off the table, efforts will continue to improve transparency and alignment across the organization. However, without formal structural changes, those efforts may lack the teeth to resolve deeper issues.
For now, OpenAI remains a powerful force in the AI space, with ChatGPT and GPT-4o continuing to dominate headlines and attract users. But as the company edges closer to AGI and expands its footprint in enterprise and consumer applications, the question of who gets to steer the ship—and under what principles—will only grow louder.
This reversal may buy time, but it won’t quiet the calls for a governance model that can scale alongside the technology OpenAI is racing to build.