Eric Glyman, who co-founded and serves as CEO of fintech company
Glyman attributes Simo’s success to her exceptional talent for bringing out the best in her teams, highlighting her leadership at Instacart and her current responsibilities at OpenAI. At OpenAI, she leads product innovation and company growth, which frees Sam Altman to concentrate on research and safety priorities. Glyman also commended Simo’s subtle yet significant influence, especially in making information and health resources more accessible to everyone.
Satya Nadella, who has spent ten years reshaping
The swift expansion of Ramp and its commitment to AI are indicative of larger industry shifts. Ramp’s AI Index shows that by April 2025, 32.4% of U.S. businesses were purchasing OpenAI’s AI models, platforms, and tools, up from 18.9% in January. OpenAI now leads the field, far outpacing Anthropic, which has an 8% adoption rate, and Google AI, whose share fell from 2.3% to 0.1%. This data underscores OpenAI’s leadership in enterprise AI, with projected annual revenues expected to hit $127 billion in 2025 and $294 billion the following year.
Glyman’s leadership style centers on recruiting top performers—those excelling in sales, marketing, and engineering—and creating an environment where employees are encouraged to capitalize on their strengths rather than focus on shortcomings. This approach mirrors the culture Nadella has fostered at Microsoft, where every team member is recognized as vital to the company’s achievement. Additionally, Glyman has looked to Simo’s emphasis on building scalable solutions that help alleviate time constraints for both low-income households and busy business owners.
As Ramp advances with its AI-driven autonomous finance tools—setting its sights on rivals like