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Amazon trims corporate ranks amid push for genAI efficiency

The news: Amazon is cutting 14,000 roles from its corporate workforce as it reshapes its organization to prepare for an agentic AI future.

  • The total number of layoffs could be as high as 30,000, or around 10% of the total workforce, according to Reuters. That would make the cuts the largest in company history, surpassing the 27,000 people let go in 2022.
  • However, those reductions will be partly offset by hiring in other areas, the company said.

How we got here: The layoffs are unusual for a company still posting strong growth, and positioned to outpace rivals this holiday season. But Amazon framed them as part of a broader move to gain efficiencies from generative AI (genAI), rather than signs of weakness.

CEO Andy Jassy told employees in June that he expected increasingly capable AI agents would ultimately result in a smaller corporate workforce by automating routine tasks and bolstering innovation, a bullishness reflected in the layoff announcement.

More with less: Amazon is not the only company that sees genAI as an opportunity to do more with fewer resources.

  • Walmart—whose CEO, Doug McMillon, shares Jassy’s conviction that “AI is going to change literally every job”—expects global headcount to stay flat over the next three years, even with sales projected to grow at a healthy clip.
  • Airbnb is keeping hiring to a minimum with the expectation that AI will help its team get “considerably more work done,” CEO Brian Chesky told The Wall Street Journal.

While these statements are likely to thrill investors seeking bigger returns, they also reflect the more difficult operating environment that companies now face. Productivity gains from AI could help offset some tariff costs for Amazon and Walmart, as well as mitigate the expense of developing genAI tools.

Our take: While AI has been cited as justification for tech layoffs, that has not been the case in retail—with Amazon being the notable exception.

  • Just 1 in 5 employers expect to reduce headcount due to AI in the next 12 months, per a recent survey of retail executives by Amperity. In fact, a larger share (26%) plan to add employees due to AI, which could indicate that most retailers are at a fairly early stage in their genAI journey.
  • Companies could also be wary about degrading the customer experience—particularly after cautionary cases like Klarna, which is now reassigning engineers, marketers, and other employees to customer service roles after its AI experiment underperformed.

However, as retailers’ genAI strategies mature and the operational benefits become embedded into their organizations, more companies are likely to follow Amazon’s example and look for ways to trim headcount.

  • 41% of companies worldwide expect to downsize their workforces in areas where AI can replicate existing work, according to a survey by Qualtrics for the World Economic Forum.
  • Tariffs and uncertainty could accelerate those moves as companies look for ways to free up cash and improve efficiency.

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