{"id":72636,"date":"2026-05-15T16:41:38","date_gmt":"2026-05-15T16:41:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/72636\/"},"modified":"2026-05-15T16:41:38","modified_gmt":"2026-05-15T16:41:38","slug":"how-andy-jassy-is-steering-amazon-through-the-ai-boom-without-bezos","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/72636\/","title":{"rendered":"How Andy Jassy Is Steering Amazon Through the AI Boom Without Bezos"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"dsm-c24dd2315d dsm-16cf09181d dsm-851206ca24\">Businessweek | The Big Take<\/p>\n<p>Jassy was once Jeff Bezos\u2019 deputy and the head of Amazon\u2019s cloud computing arm. Five years into his tenure as CEO, he\u2019s killing projects, cutting staff, pleasing Wall Street and steering the everything store through its greatest challenge yet.<\/p>\n<p>Jassy. Photographer: Holly Andres for Bloomberg Businessweek\u2028<\/p>\n<p>May 14, 2026 at 5:00 PM EDT<\/p>\n<p>Updated on May 15, 2026 at 11:51 AM EDT<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-97809d1210\">Listen: How Andy Jassy Is Steering Amazon Through the AI Boom Without Bezos<\/p>\n<p>\u2715<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph section-break\">Thirteen miles north of Jackson, Mississippi, past the self-storage facilities, a Nissan factory and a Coca-Cola bottling plant, five enormous rectangular buildings rise from the state\u2019s mineral-rich red clay. A few years ago, this was rolling pine forest, earmarked for development by the local planning authority. Now it\u2019s part of a $25 billion cluster of state-of-the-art data centers. The company behind this mammoth undertaking once popularized the act of buying stuff online and later the corporate custom of running computer applications in the cloud: <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/AMZN%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"AMZN US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Amazon.com Inc.<\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">On a tour of the site in March, Rich LeBron, a former US Navy captain who now runs Amazon\u2019s campaign to stand up a fleet of data centers in the state, gestures past the wire fence that cordons off a bustling construction zone. \u201cThat wasn\u2019t there last week,\u201d he chuckles, pointing at one of a dozen new steel structures planned for the site, each of which costs roughly $1 billion. Inside one of them, on the other side of steel fire doors that remind employees to leave behind their cellphones and smartwatches, is the reason for that massive expense. There are hundreds of black cabinets, each more than 7 feet high, filled with pizza-box-size trays of AI accelerators, memory chips and batteries, all connected by color-coded power and networking cables and cooled by industrial fans that expel the heat generated by quintillions of math calculations each hour. The data center was constructed for Anthropic PBC, maker of Claude, the popular chatbot.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">About 3,000 construction workers toil here, and they\u2019re generally in awe of the project. They\u2019re a bit fuzzier on the exact name of the guy who commissioned and financed it, though. On the tour, a guide refers to him as Andy Jazzy.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">This July will mark five years since <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/15111610\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 15111610\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Andy Jassy<\/a> <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2021-07-02\/after-bezos-new-ceo-inherits-amazon-on-a-roll-but-roiled-by-labor-unrest\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2021-07-02\/after-bezos-new-ceo-inherits-amazon-on-a-roll-but-roiled-by-labor-unrest\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/QVM3SHT0AFB6\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN QVM3SHT0AFB6\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"After Bezos: New CEO Inherits Amazon on a Roll But Roiled by Labor Unrest\">took over the chief executive officer role<\/a> from Amazon\u2019s founder. At the corporate offices in Seattle, the workforce has grown accustomed to his brand of rigorous oversight and ongoing exhortations to act as if they were at <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1642252\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1642252\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Jeff Bezos<\/a>\u2019 <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-04-10\/amazon-s-jassy-urges-startup-mentality-in-shareholder-letter\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-04-10\/amazon-s-jassy-urges-startup-mentality-in-shareholder-letter\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/SUI5ZAT0G1KW\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN SUI5ZAT0G1KW\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon CEO Jassy Urges \u2018Startup\u2019 Mentality in Shareholder Letter\">startup, not a $2.9 trillion behemoth<\/a>. He recently placed a series of staggeringly expensive bets on artificial intelligence, audacious even by the standards of Silicon Valley\u2019s ongoing trillion-dollar AI bacchanalia. In February he agreed to invest as much as <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-02-27\/openai-finalizes-110-billion-funding-at-730-billion-valuation\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-02-27\/openai-finalizes-110-billion-funding-at-730-billion-valuation\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/TB4LMIKGCTHC\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN TB4LMIKGCTHC\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"OpenAI Finalizes $110 Billion Funding at $730 Billion Value\">$50 billion in OpenAI<\/a> in a deal that commits the rising startup to relying in part on Amazon\u2019s data centers and custom-designed microchips. Then in April he expanded a <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-04-20\/amazon-to-invest-an-additional-5-billion-in-anthropic\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-04-20\/amazon-to-invest-an-additional-5-billion-in-anthropic\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/TDTJLFKIJHAN\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN TDTJLFKIJHAN\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon to Invest an Additional $5 Billion in Anthropic\">similar partnership<\/a> with its archrival, Anthropic\u2014a $13 billion investment, with an option for an additional $20 billion. To Jassy\u2019s critics, that spending was the price of Amazon\u2019s late jump into the current AI wave. He wasn\u2019t bluffing, though: Jassy spooked investors by <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-02-05\/amazon-boosts-spending-far-ahead-of-estimates-on-ai-build-out\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-02-05\/amazon-boosts-spending-far-ahead-of-estimates-on-ai-build-out\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/TA22HJKIJHQP\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN TA22HJKIJHQP\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Falls Most Since August on $200 Billion Spending Vow\">vowing to spend $200 billion<\/a> this year on big-ticket items including warehouse robots, a far-out effort to launch satellites into space, and in particular more AI data centers, AI chips and networking equipment. \u201cI don\u2019t think the world has ever seen a technology get this much adoption and grow this quickly, at least in my lifetime,\u201d Jassy tells Bloomberg Businessweek.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou can choose to howl at the wind, but AI is not going away\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy runs the fifth-largest company in the world by market value. He takes pains, earnestly and often awkwardly, to project an everyman image, in part by constantly advertising his lifelong passion for music and sports. In the anteroom to the executive suite in Amazon\u2019s \u201cDay One\u201d headquarters on a rainy morning in April, the Who\u2019s Tommy plays on a turntable. On the wall is a display of album covers (Ramones, Pink Floyd) and baseball caps (Seattle Kraken, New York Giants).<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">He also studiously strives to embody one of Amazon\u2019s 16 leadership principles, frugality, as if to compensate for Bezos\u2019 public evolution into an icon of overindulgence. Jassy drives himself to work in a \u201998 Jeep Cherokee, even though he imagines the airbags might \u201cpulverize\u201d him if they ever deployed. His favorite beer is Manny\u2019s, a Seattle microbrew and fixture at the city\u2019s sports bars and dives. To his Businessweek photo shoot, he wears what he calls his \u201ceight-minute blazer,\u201d which he once bought in a hurry for a customer meeting. \u201cHe\u2019s customer obsessed, product obsessed and, frankly, Amazon obsessed,\u201d says his Harvard classmate <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/15119014\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 15119014\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Gina Raimondo<\/a>, the former US secretary of Commerce. \u201cIt\u2019s really the only place he\u2019s ever worked.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/-1x-1.jpg\"  alt=\"\" width=\"1471\" height=\"2000\" loading=\"lazy\" fetchpriority=\"auto\" class=\"dsm-6885c44e98 dsm-2b0c203720 ds--image\"\/>Featured in Bloomberg Businessweek, June 2026. <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/subscriptions\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/subscriptions\" data-bbg=\"\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN \" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Bloomberg Subscriptions\">Subscribe now.<\/a>  Photographer: Holly Andres for Bloomberg Businessweek; Illustration: Petra P\u00e9tterfy<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">The company is much different from the online bookseller Jassy joined in 1997. Amazon today is a corporate turducken: an advertising business and logistics company stuffed inside an e-commerce marketplace, trussed to a cloud computing powerhouse, and garnished with Alexa, Whole Foods Market and Prime Video. The behemoth infuriates critics, who lambaste its rough treatment of drivers and warehouse workers and its willingness to bully rivals. On the other hand, ordering from Amazon and seeing a cardboard box sitting on your doorstep the next day is one of the few reliable luxuries of modern life, made possible only because of the company\u2019s ruthless ability to root out inefficiencies, adopt cutting-edge robotics and hide all the messiness from our delicate eyes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy took over in mid-2021 and had to correct course from some of the excesses of the late-Bezos era, including a spurt of overhiring to meet pandemic demand. He laid off roughly 60,000 corporate personnel, forced employees back to the office and <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/features\/2023-amazon-projects-killed\/\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/features\/2023-amazon-projects-killed\/\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/RVJ1MKDWX2PT01\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN RVJ1MKDWX2PT01\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Kill List: Andy Jassy\u2019s Shift of Priorities from Jeff Bezos\u2019s Era\">shuttered dozens of projects<\/a>, such as the cashierless Go stores, Amazon Fresh supermarkets and a telehealth service. Employees grumbled, but his personal style contrasted favorably with his former boss\u2019s. He was ever-present, probing but never argumentative. (Jassy for years has urged colleagues to not be afraid to ask dumb questions.) He also has the agreeable habit of thanking everyone at the beginning and end of meetings and sending holiday cards to his senior execs. Friends vow that it\u2019s all authentic and not at all humility theater for a leery public that\u2019s become profoundly skeptical of technology overlords.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Then came the age of generative AI, inaugurated by OpenAI\u2019s ChatGPT in late 2022, which posed perhaps the first existential challenge to Jassy\u2019s own baby and Amazon\u2019s profit engine, Amazon Web Services. With AWS, Amazon invented cloud computing and went on to build a client list that included the biggest names in corporate America. It remains the market leader, though <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/MSFT%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"MSFT US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Microsoft Corp.<\/a> and <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/GOOGL%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"GOOGL US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Alphabet Inc.<\/a> have collectively booked $600 billion more in future business than Amazon since ChatGPT came on the scene. Would companies and governments move their data off Amazon\u2019s servers to access the newest large language models? Would shoppers, for that matter, start browsing and buying with knowledgeable chatbots such as ChatGPT and Google\u2019s Gemini, instead of enduring the ad-riddled search results on Amazon.com?<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">The answers to those questions, and how Jassy navigates the AI era, will matter more than anything else in determining whether Amazon continues to thrive in its fourth decade and how posterity comes to view Bezos\u2019 successor. Some of Jassy\u2019s moves have seemed contrarian. While the world swooned over ChatGPT, Amazon executives told anyone who would listen that the market would be bigger than any one chatbot. Jassy cozied up to Anthropic, getting Amazon corporate customers access to Claude and buying time for Amazon to develop <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-03-24\/software-stocks-drop-on-report-amazon-is-developing-new-ai-tools\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-03-24\/software-stocks-drop-on-report-amazon-is-developing-new-ai-tools\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/TCF5E4KIJH9J\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN TCF5E4KIJH9J\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Software Stocks Drop on Report Amazon Is Developing AI Tools\">its own alternative<\/a>. He decided that Amazon should be, of all the crazy things, the Amazon of AI, then assured investors, employees and the public that resisting the coming changes wrought by AI would be futile. \u201cI can understand how, when there\u2019s the potential for this much change, it can make some people nervous. I just happen to think it\u2019s going to make so many things better,\u201d he says. \u201cYou can choose to howl at the wind, but AI is not going away.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/1778863295_749_-1x-1.jpg\"  alt=\"Jassy (No. 13) with his high school soccer team.\" width=\"2200\" height=\"1376\" loading=\"lazy\" fetchpriority=\"auto\" class=\"dsm-6885c44e98 dsm-2b0c203720 ds--image\"\/>Jassy (No. 13) with his high school soccer team.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph section-break\">Jassy never intended to spend his life in the Pacific Northwest. He grew up outside New York City, in a well-off household with doting parents. During business school, he agreed with his Los Angeles-raised girlfriend and now wife, Elana (via contract, scribbled on a bar napkin, of course), to spend a few years out West before returning to New York. Jassy applied for jobs over the summer and enjoys telling the story of how he ended up interviewing at <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/DIS%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"DIS US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Walt Disney Co.<\/a> Asked to name an incredibly successful product, without picking Nike or other obvious choices, Jassy blurted out Beavis and Butt-Head, touting the cartoon\u2019s creative merchandising.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy didn\u2019t get the job\u2014telling the story is perhaps more humility theater. But to fulfill the contract with Elana, he worked for a digital stock photography company one summer in Seattle and loved the city. Approaching graduation, he applied to a few other West Coast companies until an online bookseller, flying high in the first dot-com boom, plucked his r\u00e9sum\u00e9 out of a stack.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Amazon was all-hands-on-deck, with employees spending weeks over the holidays in warehouses, packaging books for customers. Colleagues remember Jassy running Amazon\u2019s first eight-person marketing team and then its fledgling CD-selling business, parroting Bezos maxims and wearing his dress shirts rolled up at the sleeves above the elbows.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Working for Bezos back then was tough. \u201cWhy should I listen to anything else you have to say the rest of this time?\u201d he once asked Jassy in a packed meeting, after identifying some incorrect numbers in a slide presentation. Jassy persevered and impressed the boss, who selected him as his first technical adviser, or shadow, a job that consisted of trailing the CEO to meetings and then huddling with him each week to consider various opportunities. During that time, Bezos and Jassy conceived Amazon Web Services, partly to relieve IT bottlenecks at the company by building heavily automated, self-service computing tools, and in 2006 Jassy split off to run it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">One can see why, 15 years later, Bezos came to view Jassy as his natural successor. AWS attracted waves of startups like <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/ABNB%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"ABNB US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Airbnb<\/a>, <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/RDDT%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"RDDT US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Reddit<\/a> and <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/DBX%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"DBX US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Dropbox<\/a>, then larger enterprises such as Netflix, Intuit and the US government, including the CIA. In 2015, Jassy and <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/17121073\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 17121073\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">James Hamilton<\/a>, a top technical exec at the company, spearheaded the <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2015-01-22\/amazon-agrees-to-buy-israel-s-annapurna-labs-for-aws-cloud-unit\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2015-01-22\/amazon-agrees-to-buy-israel-s-annapurna-labs-for-aws-cloud-unit\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/NILC4G6TTDSG\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN NILC4G6TTDSG\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Agrees to Buy Israel\u2019s Annapurna Labs for AWS Cloud Unit\">acquisition of Annapurna Labs<\/a> to kick-start the process of supplanting the pricey hardware in its data centers made by <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/INTC%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"INTC US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Intel Corp.<\/a> and other companies. By 2016, AWS was generating $12 billion in sales a year. \u201cJeff was pretty hands-off,\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/22379326\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 22379326\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Peter DeSantis<\/a>, a Jassy deputy who now runs Amazon\u2019s AI, chips and quantum computing group. \u201cHe audited us, he poked on us, [but] that relationship has been fairly consistent over time.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Several Amazon board members say Jassy was the clear choice even before Bezos decided he wanted to spend more time with his boat (and other endeavors like <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/newsletters\/2021-06-14\/jeff-bezos-is-leaving-amazon-for-adventures-in-space\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/newsletters\/2021-06-14\/jeff-bezos-is-leaving-amazon-for-adventures-in-space\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/QUOTVGT1UM0W\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN QUOTVGT1UM0W\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Jeff Bezos is Leaving Amazon for Adventures in Space\">his space company<\/a>, Blue Origin LLC). \u201cIt was always obvious that Andy was the right person,\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1849769\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1849769\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Wendell Weeks<\/a>, CEO of Corning Inc. and a board member since 2016. \u201cYou could not have a higher regard than Jeff has of Andy\u2019s builder skills, and that is the Good Housekeeping Seal of approval.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy claims improbably that he had never thought about getting promoted and says that he took a few days to consider it. \u201cI think there was a low chance he was going to say \u2018no,\u2019\u2009\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/20500233\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 20500233\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Beth Galetti<\/a>, Amazon\u2019s human resources chief. \u201cBut I also think that he was taking the time to make sure that when he said yes, he was ready to go do all the things that then meant.\u201d The week Jassy officially became CEO in July 2021, at the Allen &amp; Co. mogul fest in Sun Valley, Idaho, Bezos worked the room, asking attendees to congratulate Jassy and support him.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Since then, Bezos has been an active chairman of Amazon\u2019s board of directors. He speaks last in board meetings and pitches enthusiastic ideas about emerging technologies like humanoid robots. \u201cAmazon is my baby, and I will always be a parent,\u201d Bezos said in a statement. \u201cI will never, ever stop worrying about, having love for, having heart for Amazon. And I work on it every day. And one of my jobs is to make sure that Andy and his leadership team are successful.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Bezos has also helped Amazon navigate Washington, DC, as when he took a <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-04-29\/white-house-calls-amazon-hostile-for-reported-tariff-displays\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-04-29\/white-house-calls-amazon-hostile-for-reported-tariff-displays\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/SVHTWWT0G1KW\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN SVHTWWT0G1KW\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Denies Tariff Label Plans After Trump Called to Complain\">call from the president<\/a> when Amazon considered disclosing some tariff costs to shoppers. Jassy (a donor to mostly Democratic candidates and causes) says with equanimity that he, too, has relationships with the White House and that \u201cI find that a lot of times people actually all want the same things.\u201d Members of the board say the company puts Bezos to good use in managing a transactional and vituperative White House. \u201cHe gets access to audiences that some people don\u2019t always get access to,\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/6294100\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 6294100\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Brad Smith,<\/a> the former CEO of Intuit and an Amazon board member since 2023. \u201cNo one is confused that Andy\u2019s the CEO and Jeff is in there as an incredible asset.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/1778863298_807_-1x-1.jpg\"  alt=\"Peter DeSantis\" width=\"1650\" height=\"2200\" loading=\"lazy\" fetchpriority=\"auto\" class=\"dsm-6885c44e98 dsm-2b0c203720 ds--image\"\/>DeSantis, who runs Amazon\u2019s AI, chips and quantum computing group, says Bezos was \u201cpretty hands-off\u201d when Jassy was building AWS. Photographer: Kelsey McClellan for Bloomberg Businessweek<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph section-break\">Jassy now had an unfathomably large surface area to oversee\u2014not only cloud services and chips but also perishable groceries, films and TV shows, consumer electronics, and all the other meats in the Amazon turducken. Although he sat on Bezos\u2019 leadership \u201cS-team\u201d for years, much of the new territory felt unfamiliar. So Jassy scheduled what he called \u201clearning sessions\u201d and what colleagues euphemistically dubbed \u201cinspections\u201d\u2014deep dives into different parts of the business, with sometimes combative results.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">During his first year as CEO, Jassy walked through Amazon warehouses and transportation hubs around the country. He examined Amazon\u2019s massive HR group and the highly automated tools it uses to manage 1.5 million employees. He came into the office a few days after Christmas one year to record 16 videos extolling, seemingly off the cuff (and wearing a close cousin to the eight-minute blazer), each of Amazon\u2019s leadership principles. He traveled to LA to visit Amazon\u2019s Hollywood arm and called its leaders back to headquarters to ask broad but discussion-provoking questions about how commissioning TV shows and films helped Amazon\u2019s overall business.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">The deepest dive was reserved for Amazon\u2019s original business of e-commerce and its decades-long push to speed up delivery by building warehouses ever closer to customers and obsessing, maniacally, over the cost of operating them. Not everyone took his prodding well. Over that first year, at least a half-dozen senior execs left Amazon. <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/17359324\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 17359324\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Dave Clark<\/a>, who oversaw the rapid expansion of Amazon\u2019s logistics network and led the retail business, was among the most high-profile departures, after Jassy tunneled into a debate over the cost to deliver products from warehouses to customer doorsteps. \u201cFrom mid-\u201922 onwards, I think the organization actually took [the inspections] quite well,\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/23171708\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 23171708\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Udit Madan<\/a>, who sits in the logistics czar chair once held by Clark. Madan adds that Jassy\u2019s probing led his group to reconceive Amazon\u2019s US warehouse and transportation network as a series of separate regions, rather than a single whole, which moved products closer to customers and accelerated delivery times. \u201cThe teams had gotten quite comfortable with linear progress. [Jassy\u2019s] questions forced us to go back and spend a few weeks thinking,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAndy inherited a frigging mess. And it was a mess that we all were part of, including Jeff\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy concedes that the friction surprised him. \u201cAll the people that I was going to manage in my new job\u2009\u2026\u2009were peers for a long time, and I had good relationships with them,\u201d he says. After becoming CEO, \u201cevery relationship reset. Some of them reset really quickly, some of them took a bit longer to reset, and some never reset. And the ones that don\u2019t reset, both parties have to move on.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy also declared war on the bureaucracy of Amazon\u2019s corporate staff, which had grown to more than 300,000. He asked teams to increase the ratio of individual contributors to managers by 15%, decreed that each manager had to oversee six people or more and introduced a \u201cbureaucracy mailbox\u201d to let workers complain about sclerotic processes. Many employees privately confide that this fight hasn\u2019t yet been won (and that the mailbox just forwards to the whistleblower\u2019s most senior boss).<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Members of Amazon\u2019s board, though, seem satisfied. \u201cAndy inherited a frigging mess. And it was a mess that we all were part of, including Jeff,\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1492213\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1492213\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Jamie Gorelick<\/a>, a former US deputy attorney general and an Amazon board member since 2012. \u201cAt the end of Covid, we had more capacity than we needed. We also had a myriad of potential and actual investments. Andy was meticulous in addressing both of those and got us to the point after about two years where we knew\u2009\u2026\u2009he\u2019d righted the ship.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">But for a company on track to become the first to hit $1 trillion in revenue, slashing bureaucracy and shutting down moonshots was not going to deliver a new wave of reliable growth. So while Jassy canceled some projects, he sprinkled investments elsewhere, like the autonomous Zoox robotaxis that offer rides to the public in San Francisco and Las Vegas, a set of healthcare initiatives branded Amazon Health Services\u2014and Amazon\u2019s Leo satellite effort.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">The brainchild of former Starlink engineers who left SpaceX and joined Amazon in 2018, Leo is an attempt to offer <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-11-13\/amazon-rebrands-kuiper-leo-as-it-scales-up-satellite-service\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-11-13\/amazon-rebrands-kuiper-leo-as-it-scales-up-satellite-service\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/T5ODSUT9NJLT\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN T5ODSUT9NJLT\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Rebrands Kuiper \u2018Leo\u2019 as It Scales Up Satellite Service\">satellite internet access<\/a> anywhere on Earth. It has faced delays as rocket makers, including Bezos\u2019 Blue Origin, struggle to launch on time and deliver payloads to the right orbit. Nevertheless, in April, Jassy bolstered the project with his biggest acquisition yet: an <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-04-14\/amazon-globalstar-deal-is-poised-to-boost-apple-s-satellite-ambitions\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-04-14\/amazon-globalstar-deal-is-poised-to-boost-apple-s-satellite-ambitions\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/TDHWC2T96OSG\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN TDHWC2T96OSG\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon-Globalstar Deal Is Poised to Boost Apple\u2019s Satellite Ambitions\">$11.6 billion deal to buy Globalstar Inc.<\/a>, a satellite outfit best known for providing emergency connectivity to iPhone users.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">About 300 Leo satellites are in low-Earth orbit, providing access to beta customers. <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/features\/2023-12-18\/amazon-s-project-kuiper-to-challenge-elon-musk-s-starlink-satellite-internet\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/features\/2023-12-18\/amazon-s-project-kuiper-to-challenge-elon-musk-s-starlink-satellite-internet\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/S5UYI5DWX2PT\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN S5UYI5DWX2PT\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon&#039;s Project Kuiper to Challenge Elon Musk&#039;s Starlink Satellite Internet\">Amazon\u2019s satellite plant<\/a> in Kirkland, Washington, is a testament to Jassy\u2019s even grander ambitions. In a former video game hardware factory tucked behind a car dealership, hundreds of engineers wearing electrostatic discharge smocks and safety goggles churn out multiple satellites a day. Individual components such as flight computers, solar panels and radio arrays are shaken, baked and frozen in large testing chambers, to simulate the conditions of spaceflight. Completed satellites are turned on for testing then put to sleep, laid on a custom steel pallet with shock absorbers and shipped by truck to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where they\u2019ll wait to be loaded onto a rocket to extend the inescapable influence of Amazon\u2014and Andy Jassy\u2014into outer space.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph section-break\">But Jassy\u2019s biggest bet, by dollar value and the share of the eight or so meetings he\u2019s in every day, is AI.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Even though Bezos was pushing machine learning tools on employees over the last 10 years of his tenure, Amazon was late to the AI frenzy. It never developed as large a fundamental research group as rivals like Google and missed obvious hints about what was coming. Anthropic, founded in early 2021, originally relied exclusively on AWS and churned through so much processing power that some inside Amazon wanted their company to invest in the San Francisco startup. Executives weren\u2019t convinced there was a real business model and passed on Anthropic\u2019s early funding rounds. But Google invested in early 2023 and shrewdly wove its homegrown Gemini model across its services. Microsoft, meanwhile, backed OpenAI.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">After ChatGPT and Claude took off, Amazon rushed to catch up. Its first LLM-powered products were rough around the edges, and managers across Amazon told employees to dig in for a long and difficult engineering effort.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Alexa, which Jassy and colleagues disconcertingly insist on referring to as \u201cshe,\u201d needed a total overhaul to compete with new chatbots and an inevitable flood of AI-infused devices. Jassy engaged personally in the effort, rewriting its PRFAQ, the document framed as a press release that\u2019s crafted at the start of every project inside the company, and firing off bug reports on early versions of the software. Engineers in Boston and Seattle recall working 80 hours a week for two years to make Alexa more conversational and to surpass what they described as an internal target of 97% correct answers.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\"><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-02-04\/amazon-launches-ai-enhanced-alexa-for-prime-subscribers-in-us\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-02-04\/amazon-launches-ai-enhanced-alexa-for-prime-subscribers-in-us\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/T9WGOXKK3NY9\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN T9WGOXKK3NY9\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Launches AI-Enhanced Alexa for Prime Subscribers in US\">Alexa+<\/a>, as the company calls it, was unveiled at a Manhattan press conference in February 2025, with Jassy\u2019s parents sitting in the front row. Over the next year, the refurbished assistant was automatically downloaded onto tens of millions of the Echo speakers out in the world, giving them an instant brain boost. It (ugh, she?) now banters with users, sometimes gratingly, and can respond to complex commands by turning on the lights, hailing an Uber and making a restaurant reservation. Jassy asserts that users are talking to Alexa+ twice as much as they did with the original and says, \u201cIt\u2019s still early with respect to how good Alexa is going to be over time.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Both Alexa and an online tool called Alexa for Shopping, which helps shoppers find and compare products on Amazon, are powered in part by a homegrown suite of AI models called Nova. But they\u2019re not widely regarded as a credible competitor to the most capable LLMs. So Jassy opened his checkbook. He invested in Anthropic in September 2023, seven months after Google\u2019s own stake became public, and then this spring in OpenAI, which this year made versions of its models available as an option on the diner menu of AI tools on AWS\u2019s Bedrock service. Both companies have promised to use chips from Annapurna, cutting into the dollars the companies send to the hugely profitable chipmaker <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/NVDA%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NVDA US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Nvidia Corp<\/a>. Amazon claims its <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-12-02\/amazon-rushes-latest-ai-chip-to-market-to-take-on-nvidia-google\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-12-02\/amazon-rushes-latest-ai-chip-to-market-to-take-on-nvidia-google\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/T6NSVEKK3NY8\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN T6NSVEKK3NY8\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon Rushes Out Latest AI Chip to Take On Nvidia, Google\">AI chip, Trainium<\/a>, is more energy-efficient and runs more cheaply than comparable silicon from Nvidia. (On a recent podcast, Nvidia CEO <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1782546\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1782546\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Jensen Huang<\/a> rejected that claim and said, \u201cNobody can demonstrate to me that any single platform in the world today has a better performance.\u201d)<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Asked whether he trusts OpenAI chief <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/16408119\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 16408119\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Sam Altman<\/a>\u2014who\u2019s often characterized in the press and by critics as a master strategist who <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2026\/04\/13\/sam-altman-may-control-our-future-can-he-be-trusted\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2026\/04\/13\/sam-altman-may-control-our-future-can-he-be-trusted\" data-bbg=\"\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN \" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Sam Altman May Control Our Future\u2014Can He Be Trusted?\">tailors his message<\/a> to such a degree that it can border on deception\u2014Jassy responds by saying he spoke with Altman multiple times a week for four months straight. \u201cWe were pretty open with one another about what was important to us in building a partnership,\u201d he says. \u201cIn my own interactions with Sam, I do trust him.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">The deals have made AWS a safe space for companies looking to enjoy the AI fairy dust\u2014as evidenced by the unit\u2019s fastest sales growth in more than three years. In late April, AWS started selling a broader suite of software for office tasks, a bet that AI-powered tools could grab customers in a market dominated by <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/CRM%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"CRM US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Salesforce Inc.<\/a>, <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/SAP%20SE%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"SAP SE Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">SAP SE<\/a> and other companies. \u201cThey\u2019re so good at creating affordable innovation,\u201d says <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/2528873\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 2528873\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Adena Friedman<\/a>, the CEO of Nasdaq, an AWS customer since 2008. Jassy\u2019s strategy is straight from the book of Bezos\u2014offer vast selection, undercut fat-margin rivals and eliminate any reason for customers to even think about leaving.<\/p>\n<p>Mapping a Giant\u2019s Sales<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-9f3bb64904 ds--chart-subtitle\" data-component=\"toaster-subtitle\">Amazon revenue, 2025<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">That success has put AWS, once the insurgent pirate ship that tore through the established giants of corporate computing, in a strange new position: an incumbent defending its turf in an age of disruption. Most companies \u201cwant to run their AI where the rest of their data and applications are,\u201d Jassy says. \u201cAnd a lot more of that lives in AWS than anywhere else.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph section-break\">Every fall for the past few years, 40 business leaders head to Seattle for what Jassy calls the Amazon CEO Summit, a private daylong conference to talk about technology trends and share personal tips on the grind of leading through a turbulent business environment. Execs such as NBA Commissioner <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1835482\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1835482\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Adam Silver<\/a> and Accenture CEO <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/16615787\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 16615787\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Julie Sweet<\/a> say they never miss it, thanks to the low-pressure face time with peers and guests. At night, Jassy hosts the group for cocktails and dinner in his own backyard (or, if it\u2019s raining, in helMet Head, the sports bar he\u2019s installed in his basement). The evening is capped by a private concert by one of Jassy\u2019s favorite musicians. <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1810061\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1810061\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Dave Matthews<\/a> and <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/17668156\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 17668156\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Brandi Carlile<\/a> have performed for the group. So has <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1970692\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1970692\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Dave Grohl<\/a>, who sang a new song for attendees. Each received a custom-pressed album of the performance.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">This is the environment in which Jassy thrives: hobnobbing with other CEOs, with his S-team or one-on-one with an Amazon partner at a sporting event. NFL Commissioner <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1817738\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1817738\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Roger Goodell<\/a>, another summit regular, recalls watching a game with Jassy soon after Amazon started broadcasting <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2021-03-18\/nfl-signs-historic-tv-deal-with-amazon-taking-thursday-rights\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2021-03-18\/nfl-signs-historic-tv-deal-with-amazon-taking-thursday-rights\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/QQ6NWTDWRGGD\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN QQ6NWTDWRGGD\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"NFL Signs $105 Billion TV Deal, With Amazon Taking Thursdays\">Thursday Night Football<\/a> and asking how the league could use AI to improve officiating. Jassy paused, started nodding his head and, by the end of the quarter, was reeling off ideas. \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a detail too small for him,\u201d Goodell says. \u201cIt\u2019s what makes him such an effective CEO, because you can insulate yourself to a point where you\u2019re not hearing what\u2019s happening on the ground. But he\u2019s a tremendous listener and asks incredibly good questions.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">That sort of personal diplomacy has also smoothed Amazon\u2019s incursions into areas where relationships and an ability to cut massive checks might matter more than the company\u2019s technological prowess. Amazon last year raced to refit a vacant production studio in Culver City, California, into a gleaming, LED-paneled sports set in time for the company\u2019s first NBA broadcasts. The 11-year deal expanded an already-growing portfolio of sports rights meant to keep Prime members happy and juice Amazon\u2019s booming advertising business. Inside control-room trucks parked in a garage around the corner from the studios, NBA games are produced for global consumption. It\u2019s all a short walk away from the headquarters of <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-02-20\/amazon-mgm-studios-takes-creative-control-over-james-bond-films\" data-web=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2025-02-20\/amazon-mgm-studios-takes-creative-control-over-james-bond-films\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/news\/stories\/SS028IDWRGG0\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"NSN SS028IDWRGG0\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"story\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"Amazon MGM Studios Takes Creative Control of James Bond\">Amazon MGM Studios<\/a>, where producers are plotting the next iteration of James Bond after the $8.5 billion deal to buy the storied Hollywood studio.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy has bigger challenges mollifying Amazon\u2019s 350,000 white-collar employees and its million-plus warehouse workers, some of whom privately confide that morale at the company is poor. In dozens of conversations, many remain skeptical of Jassy\u2019s tenure and express consternation with the current environment at Amazon, where job cuts and pressure to flatten organizations mean fewer opportunities for promotion. Top AI talent is decamping to rivals and startups. Employees fear their jobs will be replaced by automation and complain about a culture of constant reorganizations, rotating bosses, nonstop meetings and a cumbersome path to getting big decisions approved when no one feels empowered to put their name on the line.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">The bottleneck, they assert, is Jassy himself, who never let go after the \u201cinspections\u201d of that first year and wants to make every major decision. One way he manages the never-ending carousel of approvals is by taking home a translucent, colored folder of documents each evening and weekend, reading through them and firing off emails every morning from an elliptical machine. Some employees contend it\u2019s a dangerous way to run a company, with calls debated and second-guessed on their way to the boss, while the next transformative idea is at risk of getting overlooked.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Amazon says most employees report that they\u2019re satisfied with their jobs, and that thousands of decisions are made regularly without Jassy\u2019s involvement. Still, the CEO is unapologetic about the scrutiny he gives Amazon\u2019s operations. \u201cNone of the decisions are made at 30,000 feet,\u201d Jassy says. \u201cAt a place like Amazon, if you don\u2019t actually understand some of the details of the business, you\u2019re not going to be very helpful to those teams.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Employees complained plenty about Amazon\u2019s culture during the Bezos years too. But they seemed proud of the ostentatious technology gambles, like Alexa, the Kindle and delivery drones, and the way the company was always pushing the frontier of what was possible. Bezos owned more than 20% of the stock at one point, so he could take more risks and flout convention. He showed up to his last quarterly earnings call with analysts in 2009, for example, and for the rest of his tenure left that unsavory responsibility to his chief financial officer. Jassy is on the call every quarter. <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/people\/profile\/1503614\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"BIO 1503614\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"person\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">David Solomon<\/a>, the Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO who\u2019s known Jassy for years, says his friend \u201chas evolved into more of what I call an established public company CEO.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">Jassy understands the importance of starting experiments that are more visible than abstract AI algorithms, chips in data centers or satellites way up in space. The company is building a 225,000-square-foot facility outside Chicago, a combination superstore and warehouse, where it will blend robotics and AI to sell general merchandise, groceries and prepared food, according to permitting documents and people familiar with the plans. It\u2019s classic Amazon: The company has failed repeatedly at developing new store formats and is way behind rivals like <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" data-web=\"\" data-bbg=\"bbg:\/\/securities\/WMT%20US%20Equity\" data-classname=\"\" data-terminal=\"WMT US Equity\" data-terminal-subcommand=\"\" data-terminal-link-type=\"security\" class=\"ds--link\" title=\"\">Walmart<\/a> in the business of selling fresh food. None of that matters. Jassy says the company will simply keep trying new things until something sticks. \u201cWe\u2019re doing an ungodly amount of invention right now,\u201d he says. \u201cAnd I think that will be true for as long as I can foresee in the future. It\u2019s just part of our DNA.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-testid=\"trashline\" class=\"dsm-738bcaf988 ds--col-main ds--paragraph\">(Updates quote in penultimate paragraph.<br \/>\n)<\/p>\n<p>Editors<\/p>\n<p class=\"dsm-64a2618925\">Robin Ajello and\u00a0Jim Aley<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Businessweek | The Big Take Jassy was once Jeff Bezos\u2019 deputy and the head of Amazon\u2019s cloud computing&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":72637,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[161],"tags":[1008,10035,8354,552,41549,9337,864,16197,734,16196,16198,4732,16195,16194,997],"class_list":{"0":"post-72636","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-jeff-bezos","8":"tag-amazon-com-inc","9":"tag-andy-jassy","10":"tag-anthropic-pbc","11":"tag-artificial-intelligence","12":"tag-bloomberg-businessweek","13":"tag-chief-executive-officer","14":"tag-cloud-computing","15":"tag-franchise-the-big-take","16":"tag-jeff-bezos","17":"tag-page-graphic","18":"tag-region-global","19":"tag-seattle","20":"tag-secondary-brand-business","21":"tag-secondary-brand-businessweek","22":"tag-startups"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/pubeurope.com\/@people\/116579590719738670","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/72636","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=72636"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/72636\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/72637"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=72636"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=72636"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/people\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=72636"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}