# Anthropic 分析：Claude Cowork 半数用量用于行政与文案等"工作周边"事务

- 来源：The Decoder：AI News（RSS）
- 作者：Jonathan Kemper
- 发布时间：2026-07-12 17:36
- AIHOT 分数：64
- AIHOT 链接：https://aihot.virxact.com/items/cmrhmej3y01kibimnn79t6vcw
- 原文链接：https://the-decoder.com/claude-coworks-biggest-use-case-is-the-mundane-office-work-nobody-wants-to-own-anthropic-says

## AI 摘要

Anthropic 对 2026 年 5 月 11 日至 31 日期间 120 万次 Claude Cowork 会话的分析显示，约半数用量集中于两类任务：业务流程与运营（33.4%）和内容创作与文案（16.4%），包括生成报告、构建入职清单、准备演示文稿等“工作周边”事务。软件开发仅占 8.7%，Anthropic 认为界面差异是关键——开发者仍使用 Claude Code 处理编程，而 Cowork 负责沟通协调类工作。

## 正文

Key Points

An analysis by Anthropic shows that half of all usage of its AI agent Claude Cowork goes toward administrative business processes and text-based tasks, making office work the dominant use case.

The tool is most frequently used for organizational tasks such as generating reports, building checklists, and preparing presentations: routine work that typically consumes significant employee time.

Software development makes up only a small share of Claude Cowork's usage, as developers tend to rely on Claude Code, Anthropic's specialized programming tool, for their coding needs.

An analysis of more than one million Cowork sessions shows that about half of all usage falls into two categories: business operations and text-based work.

Anthropic has broken down how people actually use its chat agent, Claude Cowork. The analysis draws on a sample of 1.2 million anonymized sessions from May 11 to 31, 2026, spanning more than 600,000 organizations. An automated system assigned each session to one of 20 work categories. According to Anthropic, about half of Cowork usage goes toward what the company calls "the work around the work," tasks that are rarely anyone's core responsibility but come with virtually every office job.

Two categories make up half of all usage

The largest category is "Business process and operations" at 33.4 percent. Anthropic says this includes things like pulling scattered status updates into a single report, building onboarding checklists, or reconciling spreadsheets. Second is "Content creation and copywriting" at 16.4 percent, covering drafts, slide decks, posts, and proposals. Together, these two broad categories account for the "roughly half" Anthropic describes.

Business processes and operations make up the largest share of all Claude Cowork sessions at 33.4%, followed by content creation and copywriting at 16.4%. The data shows AI is used most often for structuring and communication tasks in knowledge work. | Image: Anthropic

Anthropic describes these activities as "connective in nature." Spreadsheets pull scattered data into one place, slide decks translate a decision for audiences with varying levels of background knowledge, and onboarding checklists give new hires access to an organization's institutional knowledge.

The remaining categories are much smaller. Software development accounts for 8.7 percent, DevOps and infrastructure for 7 percent, research for 6.4 percent, data analysis for 5.8 percent, document processing for 4.1 percent, and sales operations for 4 percent. Personal assistance sits at 3.8 percent, education at 2.4 percent, and meeting analysis at 1.8 percent.

Cowork handles the peripheral stuff while Claude Code does the technical work

The low share of coding confirms Anthropic's thesis that the interface plays a major role in how people adopt AI models. Developers still use Claude Code to build, debug, and ship software, according to Anthropic. In Cowork, they handle the communication tasks that surround their work instead.

This pattern tracks with experience. After Claude Code launched in 2025, a surprisingly large number of non-technical users showed up in the terminal, organizing folders, removing duplicate files, and writing spreadsheet formulas. For others, the terminal stayed a black box. Cowork was designed to bring those same agent-like capabilities to a familiar chat interface.

Anthropic illustrates the idea with three examples. A lawyer can have documents formatted and filed to free up more time for legal analysis. A hiring manager uses it to schedule interviews and summarize feedback so they can spend more time on candidates and work samples. A team lead can have slides built to explain a tough decision, buying them more time to actually make it. The blank screen is often the first hurdle, and Cowork helps turn thoughts and information into a first draft, Anthropic says.

The taxonomy has gaps

Anthropic itself notes that Business Ops classifies activities, not professions, and that there are no separate categories for marketing, finance, or HR. Those functions are likely folded into Business Operations, which Anthropic says probably helps explain why the category accounts for a third of all usage.

The study has other limits. The sample captures only a fixed maximum number of sessions per hour, so peak times are underrepresented. The figures are percentages, not absolute volumes. About five percent of sessions involve personal use like hobbies or chatting, so the dataset doesn't exclusively reflect work. Anthropic says it will keep updating the analysis.

Anthropic recently expanded Cowork from the desktop app to the web and smartphones. Before that, the company had already given the agent the ability to directly operate Mac and Windows desktops.

A review paper by Meta, Stanford, and the University of Illinois places systems like these in a broader trend. Code is no longer just the end product but the operational layer AI agents run on. Claude Code and Cowork, along with OpenAI's Codex (also known as ChatGPT Work), are considered prominent examples of this shift.
