LmCast :: Stay tuned in

How Claude Code Is Reshaping Software—and Anthropic

Recorded: Jan. 23, 2026, 10 a.m.

Original Summarized

How Claude Code Is Reshaping Software—and Anthropic | WIREDSkip to main contentMenuSECURITYPOLITICSTHE BIG STORYBUSINESSSCIENCECULTUREREVIEWSMenuAccountAccountNewslettersSecurityPoliticsThe Big StoryBusinessScienceCultureReviewsChevronMoreExpandThe Big InterviewMagazineEventsWIRED InsiderWIRED ConsultingNewslettersPodcastsVideoMerchSearchSearchSign InSign InMaxwell ZeffBusinessJan 22, 2026 2:00 PMHow Claude Code Is Reshaping Software—and AnthropicWIRED spoke with Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, about how the viral coding tool is changing the way Anthropic works.Photo-Illustration: WIRED Staff; Getty ImagesCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyEngineers in Silicon Valley have been raving about Anthropic’s AI coding tool, Claude Code, for months. But recently, the buzz feels as if it’s reached a fever pitch.Earlier this week, I sat down with Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, to try to understand how the company is meeting this moment.“We built the simplest possible thing,” said Cherny. “The craziest thing was learning three months ago that half of the sales team at Anthropic uses Claude Code every week.”AI-powered coding has evolved quickly. From 2021 to 2024, most tools functioned as little more than autocomplete, suggesting a few lines of code as developers typed. By early 2025, startups like Cursor and Windsurf began rolling out early “agentic” coding products, which let developers describe a feature in plain language and leave the rest up to an AI agent.Claude Code launched around this time too. Cherny acknowledges that early versions of Claude Code often stumbled, making errors or getting stuck in costly loops. Cherny says Anthropic built Claude Code for where AI capabilities were headed, rather than where they were at launch.That bet was prescient. Several developers claim AI coding products reached an inflection point in recent months, particularly around the launch of Anthropic’s latest AI model, Claude Opus 4.5.Kian Katanforoosh, an adjunct lecturer on AI at Stanford and the CEO of the startup Workera, says his company recently switched over to Claude Code after testing several AI coding tools internally. Ultimately, he says, Claude Code worked better for his senior engineers than tools from Cursor and Windsurf.“The only model I can point to where I saw a step-function improvement in coding abilities recently has been Claude Opus 4.5,” says Katanforoosh. “It doesn’t even feel like it’s coding like a human, you sort of feel like it has figured out a better way.”Last year, the business of AI coding agents took off. In November, Anthropic announced that Claude Code had reached $1 billion in annualized recurring revenue, less than a year after its debut.By the end of 2025, Claude Code’s ARR had grown by at least another $100 million, according to a person familiar with the company’s financials. At the time the product accounted for roughly 12 percent of Anthropic’s total ARR, which stood around $9 billion. While still smaller than Anthropic’s enterprise business—which supplies AI systems to entire corporations—coding is one of the company’s fastest-growing segments.Anthropic has also told investors it aims to be cash-flow positive by 2028 and that Claude Code could play an important role in its revenue growth. The company declined to comment on its finances.While Anthropic feels dominant in AI coding, the buzz around Claude Opus 4.5 appears to be lifting several companies. Cursor, which lets users code using models from Anthropic and other AI labs, also said its coding tool reached $1 billion in ARR in November. In December, the company posted particularly strong month-over-month revenue growth, according to a person close to the company. OpenAI, Google, and xAI are also racing to claim a larger share of the AI coding market, developing agentic products of their own powered by in-house AI models.Now, Anthropic is trying to use Claude Code’s momentum to create agents for non-coding sectors. Earlier this month, the company launched Cowork, an AI agent that can manage files on a user’s computer and interact with software—without requiring any interaction with a coding terminal.This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.WIRED: There's been excitement around Claude Code for months. Why is it taking off now?BORIS CHERNY: We released Claude Code like a year ago, and at the time, we weren't sure if agentic coding was even going to be a thing. We had this hypothesis that maybe the model is ready for something like this. Almost immediately, it started to click.When we first launched this, I wrote maybe 5 percent of my code with Claude Code. And then in May, with Opus 4 and Sonnet 4, it became maybe like 30 percent. And now with Opus 4.5, 100 percent of my code for the last two months has been written by Claude Code. And I code every day.How are people inside of big companies using Claude differently today than they were a year ago?Most people were basically just using chat a year ago. But when we talk about Claude Code or Cowork, it's really agentic. That means it can use tools, read files on your system, and interact with Slack and Google Sheets. So it can do all of this work that's extremely useful, way more than just talking.I really think this is the golden age for people with short attention spans. The way you use these products is not like this deep focus. When I look at the most productive Claude Code users in and out of Anthropic, it's the people who jump across all these different tasks. You set Claude on its way, you start a second one, a third, and so on. Then you go back to the first tab and you check in on it.How is Anthropic reorganizing around Claude Code? You're having this viral product moment, and things are really taking off. Do you feel like there's been a swift reaction within the company to meet this moment?We talk about engineers being the early adopters; I feel like Anthropic employees are even earlier adopters. Since we released Claude Code internally back in late 2024, the adoption has just been insane. We had this product review with Dario before we released it externally. He asked, “Are you forcing people to use it? What's going on?”There's something about the user interface of Claude Code that seems especially sticky. I'd love it if you could pinpoint what that is.I just don't think there's one thing. Honestly, this is the product that we all use. If you talk to Anthropic’s technical employees, pretty much 100 percent of them use Claude Code all the time. If you look at the code that I write, 100 percent is written using Claude Code. If you look at the Claude Code team, like 95 percent of our code is written using Claude Code.We use the products so much that we make it really awesome for ourselves and for our customers. And this is just back to this culture of learning through dog-fooding, learning through feedback. Our biggest target market that we care about is enterprises. And they're actually very similar to us in terms of the kind of safety that they need and the way they interact with products.Does Anthropic plan to sell Cowork to more kinds of knowledge workers as part of its enterprise offerings?Cowork is kind of a new part of our product portfolio. It's a new bet, and we don't totally know how it's going to be used yet. Very roughly, it's Claude Code for people that aren't coding. What's surprising is I've actually been using Cowork myself for a bunch of stuff.There’s just this new way of working. This is the most fun I've ever had as an engineer because I don’t have to do all the tedious work. I think this is what's coming for all other work that people do too.I’ve talked to some engineers who were a little taken aback by Claude Code, and how they don’t need to code themselves anymore. What’s your advice for engineers who are navigating this shift?As an industry, we've always gone through transitions. My grandfather was a programmer in the Soviet Union, and he was programming on punch cards. It was a very physical thing. And then at some point, it turned into machine code, and then it turned into the first high-level languages, like C, and then eventually Java and Python.As an industry, we've gone through these evolutions before. It’s this kind of increasing abstraction, and I view agents as just a thing on this continuum.Today, there's a learning curve. People don't get it immediately. But I think the learning curve is gonna get smoother, and it's gonna become easier and easier to use tools like Claude Code and Cowork effectively.How many Claude Code agents are you spinning up in a day?This morning I woke up, I think I started three or four coding agents on my phone. When I get into work, I'll check in on what they're doing, and then I'll probably start a few more in my terminal. At any given moment, I usually have like five or ten running across the terminal, mobile, and website. And now I'm actually also adding Cowork to the mix.For example, I've been using Cowork for project management. We have a big spreadsheet of all the things engineers are working on this week. Every few days, I'll just have Cowork look at the spreadsheet for an engineer that hasn't filled out their name, and I'll have it message them on Slack to ask them to fill it out.What should people expect in the year ahead in terms of Claude’s agentic abilities?AI agents will be able to help with all the tedious things in your life. This happened for engineering this year, and I think it's gonna happen for everything else. Agents will be able to take care of things like filling out forms, moving data from one place to another, sending emails. I think it's just going to free us up to do the things that we actually enjoy.It’s gonna be disruptive, and I think this is a thing we're gonna have to navigate. But I also think it's just amazing. It lets me enjoy my job much more, and it lets me enjoy my day a lot more.This is an edition of the Model Behavior newsletter. Read previous newsletters here.CommentsBack to topTriangleYou Might Also LikeIn your inbox: WIRED's most ambitious, future-defining storiesDoes the “war on protein” exist?Big Story: China’s renewable energy revolution might save the worldThe race to build the DeepSeek of Europe is onWatch our livestream replay: Welcome to the Chinese centuryMaxwell Zeff is a senior writer at WIRED covering the business of artificial intelligence. He was previously a senior reporter with TechCrunch, where he broke news on startups and leaders driving the AI boom. Before that, Zeff covered AI policy and content moderation for Gizmodo, and wrote some of Bloomberg’s ... Read MoreSenior WriterTopicsModel Behaviorartificial intelligencecodeSilicon ValleyStartupsOpenAIAnthropicRead MoreChewy Promo Codes: $30 Off January 2026Explore Chewy coupon codes for $30 off, $20 off your first order $49, 50% off pet food, and more January 2026 discounts.Sorry MAGA, Turns Out People Still Like ‘Woke’ ArtFrom Black vampires gobbling up Oscar nominations to gay pro hockey players dominating the culture, diverse stories broke through in an environment that’s increasingly hostile to them.Legislators Push to Make Companies Tell Customers When Their Products Will DieA pair of bills in Massachusetts would require manufacturers to tell consumers when their connected gadgets are going dark. It should be a boon for cybersecurity as connected devices grow obsolete.Elon Musk Sure Made Lots of Predictions at DavosHumanoid robots, space travel, the science of aging—Musk weighed in on all of it at this week’s World Economic Forum. But his predictions rarely work out the way he says they will.What Happens When a Chinese Battery Factory Comes to TownChinese firms are building battery plants from Europe to North America, promising jobs while prompting local concerns about the environment, politics, and who really benefits.The 28 Best Movies on Apple TV Right NowF1: The Movie, CODA, and Highest 2 Lowest are just a few of the movies you should be watching on Apple TV this month.How Claude Code Is Reshaping Software—and AnthropicWIRED spoke with Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, about how the viral coding tool is changing the way Anthropic works.AI-Powered Disinformation Swarms Are Coming for DemocracyAdvances in artificial intelligence are creating a perfect storm for those seeking to spread disinformation at unprecedented speed and scale. And it’s virtually impossible to detect.One of Our Favorite Smart Plugs for Apple Users Is $15 OffThe Meross Smart Plug Mini boasts excellent compatibility and slim construction.ICE Agents Are ‘Doxing’ ThemselvesThe alleged risks of being publicly identified have not stopped DHS  and ICE employees from creating profiles on LinkedIn, even as Kristi Noem threatens to treat revealing agents' identities as a crime.Which Motorola Phone Should You Buy?Motorola phones may seem old-school, but their reasonable prices, colorful designs, and simple software make them good, wallet-friendly Android smartphones.The Best Smart Locks for Every Kind of DoorUpgrade your locks with fingerprint-scanning or a keypad, whether it’s at the front door or a sliding glass entryway.WIRED is obsessed with what comes next. Through rigorous investigations and game-changing reporting, we tell stories that don’t just reflect the moment—they help create it. When you look back in 10, 20, even 50 years, WIRED will be the publication that led the story of the present, mapped the people, products, and ideas defining it, and explained how those forces forged the future. WIRED: For Future Reference.SubscribeNewslettersTravelFAQWIRED StaffWIRED EducationEditorial StandardsArchiveRSSSite MapAccessibility HelpReviewsBuying GuidesStreaming GuidesWearablesCouponsGift GuidesAdvertiseContact UsManage AccountJobsPress CenterCondé Nast StoreUser AgreementPrivacy PolicyYour California Privacy Rights© 2026 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. WIRED may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad ChoicesSelect international siteUnited StatesLargeChevronItaliaJapónCzech Republic & SlovakiaFacebookXPinterestYouTubeInstagramTiktok

Anthropic’s Claude Code has rapidly reshaped the landscape of software development, demonstrating a significant shift in how developers approach coding tasks. This transformation is largely attributed to the insights and direction articulated by Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, who emphasized a deliberate strategy focused on anticipating the evolution of AI capabilities rather than simply reacting to current limitations. Initially, AI coding tools functioned primarily as autocomplete suggestions, offering limited assistance during the typing process. However, the emergence of agentic coding products, spearheaded by startups like Cursor and Windsurf, introduced a paradigm shift—the ability for developers to describe desired features in plain language and rely on AI to generate the code. Claude Code, launched concurrently with these advancements, quickly gained traction, fueled by Cherny’s understanding that Anthropic was betting on the broader trajectory of AI.

Early versions of Claude Code encountered challenges, characterized by errors and the generation of costly loops. Cherny acknowledged this, noting that Anthropic built Claude Code with an eye toward the future of AI, rather than pre-launch performance. This strategic foresight proved prescient as several developers reported a dramatic improvement in coding abilities, particularly with the release of Claude Opus 4.5. Kian Katanforoosh, a Stanford adjunct lecturer, highlighted this "step-function improvement," describing the tool’s abilities as feeling genuinely intuitive, as if it had discovered a more efficient method of coding.

Within a remarkably short timeframe – less than a year – Claude Code achieved $1 billion in annualized recurring revenue. By the end of 2025, this figure had grown to at least $100 million, representing approximately 12 percent of Anthropic’s total annual recurring revenue, which stood at roughly $9 billion. This success underscores the rapid adoption of agentic coding and the shift in development workflows.

The impact extends beyond simple coding assistance. Developers are now leveraging Claude Code and related tools like Cowork (also developed by Anthropic) to automate tasks, interact with operating systems, and manage complex workflows—all without directly writing code. This shift necessitates a reimagining of the developer’s role, moving from a primarily coding-focused position to one that integrates AI assistance into a broader set of operational tasks. This also highlights an important trend: the ability for projects to be completed efficiently and quickly, as an individual is able to take care of things such as project management, as well as coding.

Anthropic’s organizational response to this breakout success has been notable. Employees are, in effect, “early adopters,” with significantly higher usage rates than anticipated. The company’s initial product review, involving Dario, highlighted the astonishing uptake, leading to the immediate conclusion that a user-driven approach was essential. The user interface—a key factor in Claude Code’s popularity—appears to intuitively facilitate a rapid transition to this new way of working. Cherny emphasized that no single element is singularly responsible for the product’s success, noting that it’s simply the product that everyone uses. He articulated a culture of “dog-fooding” and feedback, where the company’s own use of the tool directly informs its development.

The growth of Claude Code has spurred a broader organizational restructuring at Anthropic, centered around embracing AI agentic technologies. This transformation extends beyond individual developer workflows, impacting the company's overall strategic direction. Furthermore, the success demonstrated by Claude Code has influenced Anthropic’s focus on creating agents for non-coding sectors, most notably with the launch of Cowork—an agent designed to manage files and interact with software across a user's computing system. This expanded utility reinforces the broader shift toward integrating AI into everyday operational tasks.