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Anthropic stopped competing on the model. It buys the chain.

On May 19, Anthropic absorbed Stainless, KPMG, MCP tunnels, and Karpathy in 24 hours. Your marketing partner stack is collapsing toward one lab.

Anthropic stopped competing on the model. It buys the chain.

Ricardo Argüello

Ricardo Argüello
Ricardo Argüello

CEO & Founder

AI in Marketing 9 min read

May 19, 2026. In a single business day, Anthropic acquired Stainless, signed a global alliance with KPMG, launched MCP tunnels and self-hosted sandboxes, and announced Andrej Karpathy on its pre-training team. Four different layers of the stack between a brand and its AI model, in the hands of the same company, all on the same calendar page.

LinkedIn this week focused on Karpathy, but that’s the move with the slowest immediate impact on your team. Stainless is the SDK pipeline OpenAI, Google, and Cloudflare used to ship developer libraries; Anthropic paid over $300 million for it and is winding the hosted products down. KPMG just embedded Claude across 276,000 employees, starting with tax, legal, and private equity, with a co-development agreement for portfolio company products. MCP tunnels let a Claude agent reach into a customer’s private network without exposing anything to the public internet. And Karpathy joined to help train the next Claude using Claude itself.

Greg Henson summed it up in one line: “The model is a feature. The supply chain is the company.” That’s the right thesis. The AI moat is no longer which model scores higher on a benchmark. It’s which layers of the path between the model and your customer are owned by the same lab.

For a marketing director, that shift moves faster than your annual vendor evaluation cycle can absorb. The partner ecosystem your team used to assemble — creative agency, martech vendor, data partner, research consultancy — is collapsing toward a single lab. Your job stops being “buy parts” and starts being “negotiate a direct relationship with the lab before the lab decides to handle it without you.”

What Anthropic absorbed in 24 hours

Four moves. Each covers a different layer of the path between the model and your customer.

Stainless. Anthropic acquired the New York startup for over $300 million. Stainless auto-generated the production SDKs OpenAI, Google, and Cloudflare relied on across five languages. Anthropic is winding the hosted products down. Existing customers keep what they shipped; new work goes to Anthropic, or nowhere. It bought a piece of infrastructure its three biggest rivals depended on, and locked the door behind them.

KPMG. Anthropic signed a global alliance with KPMG that embeds Claude directly into the firm’s client delivery platform. 276,000 employees. Initial focus: tax, legal, and private equity. KPMG was named Anthropic’s preferred consultant for PE. The two firms co-develop new Claude-powered products for portfolio companies. This isn’t a pilot. It’s a firm-wide deployment across one of the largest professional services networks on the planet.

MCP tunnels + self-hosted sandboxes. At Code with Claude London, Anthropic announced that agents can run inside a customer’s private network without exposing anything to the public internet. Before: your agent needed access to your MCP server, you had to expose it to the internet, and legal said no. Now: the agent reaches your internal server through an encrypted tunnel to Anthropic. Your firewall, your policies, your perimeter. The agent operates inside.

Karpathy on pre-training. Andrej Karpathy — founding member of OpenAI, former Director of AI at Tesla — joined the Anthropic pre-training team with a specific mandate: use Claude to accelerate the research that builds the next Claude. The roster around him includes the Instagram cofounder, the ex-Stripe CTO, and the ex-Microsoft AI Platform president. The R&D loop closes inward.

Add them up. Anthropic no longer competes on “whose model is smarter.” It competes on “who owns the developer surface, the delivery partner, the deployment perimeter, and the internal R&D loop.” That list is the entire supply chain.

How this translates inside your marketing stack

If you lead marketing at a mid-size B2B company, this hits you on four fronts at once.

Your creative agency now competes against KPMG with Claude embedded. Six months ago your agency sold you brand strategy, audience research, and integrated campaigns. Today one of the Big Four offers the same thing with 276,000 people and Claude as the internal copilot. KPMG was already in transformation consulting; now it does transformation consulting with native AI compressing a six-week research-strategy-deliverable cycle into six days. Regional agencies without direct access to Claude or an equivalent model lose the clock.

Your martech vendor is renting Anthropic’s infrastructure. If your HubSpot, your email platform, your DAM, or your CMS sells itself as “powered by AI,” the model on the back end shipped with an SDK generated somewhere. Anthropic just bought the main generator. The diversification you thought you had — one vendor for email, another for CRM, another for creative — is a UI-layer fiction. The back layer is one.

Your data partner can run inside your firewall without IT noticing. MCP tunnels let a Claude agent reach your CRM, your CMS, or your data warehouse directly, without opening ports. That’s good for your team. It also means the friction that used to give you three weeks of security review on a new integration just evaporated. Your vendor can deploy a new agent on Friday, and on Monday it ships without going through procurement.

Your 12-month RFP cycle stopped working. In the old pattern you evaluated vendors for a year, signed, implemented, and lived with the decision for three. In the new pattern the lab consolidates a layer every quarter. By the time your RFP finishes, the vendor you evaluated has been acquired, or the lab has shipped the same capability as native. Last week I argued martech itself has to justify line by line; this week the consolidation moved up a floor. It’s not just your tools. It’s your partners.

The playbook is 36 years old. It now runs 10× faster.

This isn’t the first time a platform absorbs its partners. I’ve been in computing for 36 years, since 1990, starting on a Commodore 64 with 64KB where every byte had to be defended.

Microsoft, late 80s and early 90s. Bought DOS, then bundled Office against WordPerfect, Lotus 1-2-3, and Harvard Graphics. The partners who assembled “the best productivity stack” ran out of oxygen one by one. WordPerfect held around 60% of the word processor market in 1991; four years later it had been sold to Novell at a fraction of peak value. The difference wasn’t the product. It was control of the distribution layer.

In Costa Rica, I watched entire products die that depended on Lotus 1-2-3 as their base layer. Financial macros, accounting templates, executive dashboards — each one a respectable business until Excel packaged the native capability and the sales curve flattened. No Lotus expert survived selling expertise on a platform whose distribution had already been shut off.

The pattern is identical. What changed in 2026 is speed: Microsoft took five years to close the Office cycle; Anthropic absorbed four layers in one day. The decision horizon on partners moved from “what do we sign for the year” to “what do we sign for the quarter.” Yesterday’s post argued AI moves the bottleneck instead of removing it; today the same observation sits one floor higher — the lab moves the partner frontier without warning.

Three moves for this Wednesday

Things a marketing director can execute this week without waiting for next quarter.

The map first. One sheet, two columns. First column: every active partner — creative agency, martech vendor, SEO tool, analytics platform, recurring freelancer, external consultancy. Second column: the relationship type. Is it built on top of an Anthropic, OpenAI, or Google model, or does it have real proprietary technology beyond the wrapper? Most will land in the first column. What matters isn’t the vendor’s brand; it’s knowing which lab you’re exposed to through each one. That sheet is your risk map, not your expense map.

Then go to the critical partner. The one carrying the most weight in your operation. Ask for the real six-month roadmap, not the sales deck. What model changes did they absorb this quarter? What’s coming next? What happens to your usage if the underlying lab ships the same capability natively next month? If the answer is “we don’t know,” that is the answer. If the answer is “we run multi-model with quarterly capability monitoring,” that’s a real 2026 partner.

And if your consolidated AI spend in marketing passes about five thousand dollars a month in inference cost, ask for a direct meeting with your lab. Anthropic or OpenAI will take it — that wasn’t true twelve months ago. The conversation isn’t “sell me your newest model.” It’s “explain how your product changes in six months so my stack can prepare.” That outvalues three vendor demos stacked together.

The bigger decision sits in next quarter: what partner ecosystem do you design knowing the lab will keep absorbing layers? The right answer isn’t “fewer partners.” It’s “partners who know the layer beneath them is moving.”

What IQ Source does about this

At IQ Source, we work with marketing leaders in Central America sitting exactly in this corner: an agency that arrived years ago, a HubSpot that arrived later, two or three vertical tools added in the last twelve months, and the feeling the stack no longer moves coherently. The Growth Strategy program maps the current ecosystem, analyzes exposure layer by layer, and proposes a direct relationship with one or two labs so the marketing team takes the clock back.

AI Maestro is the deeper version: two months of discovery ending with a Process Reality Map and an AI Opportunity Score — which partner stays, which gets renegotiated, which exits before the next renewal. Neither assumes you cut anything tomorrow. Both assume the math changed.

One hour with your team and me, no proposal attached, to map where you’re exposed: info@iqsource.ai. Your team brings the list; I bring the lens and the coffee. The question isn’t whether your ecosystem will change this year. It’s whether you’ll be inside the decision when it does, or outside.

Map my partner ecosystem before next quarter

Frequently Asked Questions

Anthropic AI supply chain KPMG Stainless B2B marketing partner ecosystem AI consolidation

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