Digital Transformation » AI » Amazon tells staff the AI cuts are coming

Amazon tells staff the AI cuts are coming

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has a message for the company’s corporate workforce: AI is coming for your job.

In a memo circulated to staff, Jassy made it clear that artificial intelligence—particularly autonomous agents and generative models—will soon do much of the work now handled by people.

“We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today,” he wrote, forecasting a years-ahead reduction in Amazon’s corporate headcount as AI takes root across the company.

Jassy’s comments underscore a broader shift underway in white-collar industries, where once-secure desk jobs in areas like marketing, software engineering, finance, and law are being reexamined through the lens of automation and machine learning.

Amazon, which employs around 350,000 corporate staff as part of a global workforce of 1.5 million, is bracing for an AI-powered shakeup—and it’s not alone.

At BT Group, CEO Allison Kirkby warned over the weekend that generative AI could drive deeper cuts to its workforce. And Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei recently told investors that half of all entry-level office roles could be made obsolete by advances in artificial intelligence.

Jassy sees a world populated not just by human workers but by AI agents—software tools capable of executing tasks autonomously.

“There will be billions of these agents, across every company and in every imaginable field,” he wrote. Some will streamline operations inside the enterprise. Others will act as digital concierges outside of work, handling personal errands like shopping and travel. Many have yet to be built, he noted, “but make no mistake, they’re coming, and coming fast.”

In the same breath, Jassy urged employees to get ahead of the curve. He encouraged Amazon staff to “educate yourself” about AI, signaling that those who upskill will have a better shot at shaping—and surviving—the transformation.

“Those who embrace this change, become conversant in AI, help us build and improve our AI capabilities internally and deliver for customers, will be well positioned to have high impact,” he wrote.

The remarks from Amazon’s chief executive come as anxiety deepens over the economic consequences of AI adoption.

The IMF estimates that 60% of jobs in advanced economies are exposed to AI, with roughly half at risk of disruption or elimination.

The OECD warns that even highly skilled professions—law, medicine, finance—are not immune.

Yet not all forecasts are entirely bleak. The Tony Blair Institute has argued that while AI could displace up to 3 million private sector jobs in the UK, many of those losses could be offset by the emergence of new roles powered by the same technology.

At Amazon, the shift is already underway.

After years of investing heavily in machine learning infrastructure and generative AI platforms—much of it through its AWS cloud division—the company is now pivoting from exploration to deployment.

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