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AdvertisementAWS hired Julia White as its new chief marketing officer, replacing Raejeanne Skillern. Amazon Web Services has a new marketing chief. On Monday, AWS's CEO, Matt Garman, told employees that the company had hired Julia White, a former SAP and Microsoft executive, as its new chief marketing officer. Before that, she spent almost 20 years at Microsoft in various roles, including corporate vice president for the Azure cloud computing unit. The company recently added Colleen Aubrey, a former Amazon advertising executive, as a senior vice president of AWS Solutions, and Baskar Sridharan, an ex-Google Cloud vice president, as a vice president of AI/ML services.
Persons: Julia White, Raejeanne Skillern, White, Matt Garman, Einat Weiss White, Raejeanne, Skillern, Colleen Aubrey, Baskar, Adam Selipsky, Matt Wood, Garman, Julia, she's, Matt Organizations: SAP, Microsoft, AWS, Amazon, AWS Solutions, Google Cloud, Corporate
Amazon plans to integrate its AI chatbot Q with Microsoft's Office 365 service. Amazon Q, launched in April, faces competition from Microsoft's own Copilot AI assistant. At the moment, most Q users access the Amazon AI chatbot through its website, or messaging apps like Slack and Teams. It's part of a set of new Q features Amazon is working on, including a browser extension, the document said. This year alone, he said, Amazon Q has "resolved over 1 million internal Amazon developer questions," saving more than 450,000 hours of work.
Persons: , Patrick Neighorn, Q, Matt Garman Organizations: Microsoft's, Service, Microsoft, Business, Excel, Amazon, AWS, Gartner, LinkedIn Locations: Microsoft's
Business Insider obtained a recording of Amazon CEO Andy Jassy's latest all-hands meeting. Jassy said Amazon's RTO policy is not a 'backdoor layoff' strategy. The RTO policy aims to strengthen company culture, not cut costs, he said. This is very much about our culture and strengthening our culture," Jassy said, adding that the only city Amazon notified ahead of time about its RTO mandate was Seattle. Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman said in a staff meeting last month that 9 out of 10 Amazon employees he'd spoken with were "excited" by the change.
Persons: Andy Jassy's, Jassy, Amazon's, , Andy Jassy, Matt Garman, there's, I'm, it's Organizations: Amazon, Service, Business, Web Locations: Seattle
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy denied speculation that the company's five-day in-office mandate was made to further reduce head count or appease city officials. "We urge you to reconsider your comments and position on the proposed 5-day in-office mandate," the letter said. The letter included anecdotes from AWS staffers who detailed how the five-day in-office mandate will impact their "life and work." Jassy acknowledged Tuesday that the five-day in-office mandate will be an adjustment for employees. WATCH: AWS CEO says employees unhappy with 5-day office mandate can leave
Persons: Andy Jassy, I've, Jassy, Matt Garman, Garman, he's Organizations: New York Times DealBook, Jazz At Lincoln Center, Amazon, CNBC, Employees, Reuters, Amazon Web Services, Seattle Locations: New York City
Insider Today: Big Tech battle royale
  + stars: | 2024-11-03 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . On the agenda today:Related Video How Twitter panic took down Silicon Valley BankBut first: Takeaways from a big week in Big Tech. All about AI, all the timeGetty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIThe trillion-dollar giants of Big Tech reported earnings this week, beating estimates and committing billions to AI. The disappearing tech freebiesMint Images - David Arky/Getty, masterzphotois/Getty, Tyler Le/BIAfter years of upping the ante with everything from exercise classes to laundry services, tech companies are clamping down on freebies.
Persons: , we'll, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Sundar Pichai, execs, Mark Zuckerberg, Natalie Ammari, Tesla, James Yates, David Arky, Tyler Le, BI's Graham Flanagan, Matt Garman Organizations: Business, Service, Big, Big Tech, Apple Apple, underwhelmed, Apple Intelligence, Meta Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft Microsoft, United States Army, Amazon Locations: Big Tech, China, Italy, Spain, New Zealand, Hawaii
In today's big story, Big Tech is pulling back on the freebies for its employees . The perks help recruit and retain talent and keep employees working at the office. Some Amazon employees aren't buying it. It's not all bad news for Amazon employees, though. Some Amazon employees support Jeff Bezos' controversial WaPo decision.
Persons: , David Arky, Tyler Le, Insider's Lara O'Reilly, Rob Price, Hugh Langley, Sydney Bradley, It's, Matt Garman, Frederic J . BROWN, BI's Jyoti Mann, Ashley Stewart, Garman, Stave Huffman, Spencer Platt, Natalie Ammari, Tesla, Meta, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Harris, Trump, you'll, Jeff Bezos, Bezos, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Service, Microsoft, SEC, Big Tech, Meta, Citibank, Tech, Services, Getty, Amazon Web Services, Amazon, BI, Google, Semiconductor, Intel, Washington Post, Apple Locations: OpenAI, AFP, New York, London
Amazon said revenue in its cloud unit increased 19% in third quarter, just missing analyst estimates. AWS leads the cloud infrastructure market over Google and Microsoft and is an important source of profit for Amazon. On Tuesday Alphabet said revenue from Google Cloud, which includes cloud applications as well as infrastructure, totaled $11.35 billion, up 35%. Microsoft said Wednesday that revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 33%. Google Cloud reported an operating margin of 17%.
Persons: Matt Garman, Oracle, Garman, Databricks, Naveen Rao Organizations: Amazon Web Services, Tech, Amazon, Revenue, Google, Microsoft, AWS, CNBC, TechCrunch Locations: Laguna Beach , California
AWS CEO Matt Garman has been sent a letter from employees protesting his pro-RTO comments. Over 500 employees have signed a letter, sent on Wednesday, urging Garman to reconsider the plans. AdvertisementAmazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman is facing backlash from some employees over his comments about its return-to-office policy, according to an open letter obtained by Business Insider. The policy is stricter than at Amazon's peer companies and, by some accounts, stricter than Amazon's office work policy before the pandemic. The letter has been signed by 523 staff from Amazon and AWS, with 172 of those including their names.
Persons: Matt Garman, Garman, , Matt doesn't, Elizabeth Rutledge, Garman's, Andy Jassy, Margaret Callahan, we're, Amazon's, Jyoti Mann, Ashley Stewart Organizations: Service, Web, Business, AWS, BI, American Express, Amazon Locations: jyotimann
In leaked messages, Amazon employees are divided, with some supporting his call. Related storiesSome Amazon employees agreed, according to the Slack messages obtained by BI. Other Amazon employees said it was "silly" and "sad" to see so many Washington Post readers cancel their subscriptions over the endorsement issue. 'Suspicious and worrisome'Still, some of Amazon employees who weighed in on the company's internal Slack were suspicious of Bezos's true motivation. Other Amazon employees were more blunt, saying they were going to cancel their own Washington Post subscriptions.
Persons: Jeff Bezos, , Jeff Bezos's, Bezos, Slack, Donald Trump, I'd, Trump, Dave Limp, Matt Garman, he's, It's, it's Organizations: Washington Post, Amazon, Service, Business, BI, Democratic, Spokespeople, Washington, Blue, Trump Locations: Amazon, Washington
Electricity and labor headwinds slow Amazon's data center buildout. AdvertisementAmazon is spending heavily on data centers to support booming AI workloads, putting it on pace to build 240 new facilities by 2040, one estimate found. David Cahn, a Sequoia Capital general partner, recently predicted data center delays across the sector. Bernstein Research recently estimated that electricity demand for AI data centers could exceed supply in just two years without action. An Amazon data center in Oregon.
Persons: , It's, David Cahn, Marc Wulfraat, MWPVL, we've, Bernstein, Amazon's, Matt Garman, JOSH EDELSON, Garman, Manuel Pineda, Pineda, Owens Corning Organizations: Service, Sequoia Capital, Energy, Amazon, Boston Consulting Group, Bernstein Research, Business, Web, San Francisco 49ers, BI, AWS, Uptime Institute, Center, Survey Locations: AMER, Americas, Oregon , Ohio, Northern Virginia, Amazon's Portland, Arizona, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Silicon Valley, Santa Clara , California, Santa Clara, Levi's, City, Santa, Oregon
Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman defended the company's return-to-office mandate for January. AdvertisementAmazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman reiterated on Monday night why the recently announced return-to-office mandate is right for the company. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy announced last month that most corporate employees would be required to return to the office five days a week starting in January. When BI reached out about Garman's comments last week, an Amazon spokesperson declined to comment but pointed to Jassy's RTO announcement in September. BI's Ashley Stewart viewed internal messages after the policy was announced, showing that some Amazon employees were unhappy with the change.
Persons: Matt Garman, Garman, , Andy Jassy, BI's Ashley Stewart Organizations: Amazon Web, Service, Web, Amazon, Business, BI
Nine out of 10 employees are 'excited' by the change, Garman said, but those who disagree are welcome to leave. AdvertisementThe majority of Amazon employees favor the company's new five-day return-to-office policy, Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman has told staff during an all-hands meeting. Garman addressed the RTO policy introduced by Amazon in September, which has faced strong pushback from some employees. It is Garman's first official response to Amazon's new RTO policy and comes after the company received backlash from some employees. Related storiesDuring the all-hands meeting, Garman said employees will not always need to be in the office.
Persons: Matt Garman, Garman, , we're, Andy Jassy's Organizations: Business, Service, Amazon, Web, AWS
In today's big story, Taylor Swift has a new book coming out, but how she's doing it might create some bad blood with publishers . On Tuesday, Swift announced plans to self-publish "The Eras Tour Book," a behind-the-scenes look at her record-breaking tour that'll be released exclusively at Target on Black Friday. News of a Taylor Swift book should have sent a publisher jumping for joy at the potential revenue. AdvertisementBig stars like Swift are exactly who book publishers are banking on these days. But even so, Miami, New Orleans, and Indianapolis — her remaining US tour dates — won't mind Swift coming to town.
Persons: , Meta, Taylor Swift, Chelsea Jia Feng, Taylor, Swift, Samantha Grindell, Madeline Berg, George Walker IV, we're, Natalie Ammari, it's, Goldman Sachs, Kalshi, Donald Trump, Trump, Blackstone, Jon Gray, Walid Berrazeg, It's, Lebaredian, Uber, Dara Khosrowshahi's, Tyler Le, Matt Garman, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi, Amanda Yen Organizations: Business, Service, Target, AP, Indianapolis, Super Bowl, UBS, Getty, Financial, Wall, Blackstone, Trump, Investors, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, TSMC, Optimus, Financial Times, Netflix, American Express Locations: Miami, Miami , New Orleans, Glendale , Arizona, Hsinchu, ASML, Texas, California, New York, London
Amazon 's cloud boss on Thursday gave employees a frank message about the company's recently announced five-day in-office mandate. Staffers who don't agree with Amazon's new policy can leave, Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman said during an all-hands meeting at the company's second headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. "If there are people who just don't work well in that environment and don't want to, that's OK, there are other companies around," Garman said, according to a transcript viewed by CNBC. The company's previous return-to-work stance required corporate workers to be in office at least three days a week. The move has spurred backlash from some Amazon employees who say they're just as productive working from home or in a hybrid work environment as they are in an office.
Persons: Matt Garman, Garman, Adam Selipsky, he's, didn't Organizations: Amazon Web, CNBC, Reuters, Amazon, Employees, Microsoft, Google, AWS Locations: Arlington , Virginia
One of Amazon's top AI executives is out
  + stars: | 2024-10-09 | by ( Eugene Kim | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +2 min
Matt Wood, the vice president of AI at Amazon Web Services, is leaving after 15 years. Wood's departure comes amid fierce AI competition from Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI. AdvertisementMatt Wood, the vice president of artificial intelligence at Amazon Web Services, is leaving. He worked on AWS's machine-learning and AI technology, laying some of the groundwork for the company's latest growth initiatives. Related storiesIt's also the latest exit amid AWS's notable executive turnover in recent years.
Persons: Matt Wood, , Wood, he's, didn't, It's, Adam Selipsky, Matt Garman, Richard Puccio, Rachel Thornton, Chris Vonderhaar Organizations: Amazon Web, Microsoft, Google, AWS, Service Locations: Amazon
Read previewSo far, the generative AI race has been about who can build the most powerful models. Almost two years later, there are so many powerful AI models out there, it's no longer that special. Advertisement'Important but not critical'AWS CEO Matt Garman appears to be fine not having a fancy, home-grown AI model. "It'll be important but not critical," Garman said when asked about the importance of offering a top-performing first-party AI model. AGI teamThis doesn't mean Amazon has given up on building its own powerful AI model.
Persons: , Claude, Meta's, Matt Murphy, Anthropic, Murphy, ChatGPT, Patrick Neighorn, Amazon's, Andy Jassy, Matt Garman, Garman, Matt McIlwain, Brent Thill, Jefferies, Thill Organizations: Service, Google, Business, Microsoft, OpenAI, Gemini, Menlo Ventures, AWS, Intuit, Toyota, New York Stock Exchange, BI, Asia, Madrona Venture Group, Amazon Locations: Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific, Japan, North America
AdvertisementThese AWS staffers were asked to find at least one sales opportunity each month for Q, Amazon's AI assistant, and Bedrock, the company's AI platform. AdvertisementMany AWS sales teams have new performance targets tied to AI products. AdvertisementHitting these goals is important for Amazon employees because that can result in higher performance ratings, a key factor in getting a raise or promotion. The "Find One, Launch One, Ramp One" initiative includes AWS sales architects. More pressure but also more rewardsAmazon is also doling out bonuses and other forms of potentially higher pay for AI sales success.
Persons: , Matt Garman, salespeople, AWS's, Garman, Microsoft Satya Nadella, Justin Sullivan, Q, hasn't Organizations: Service, North, Business, AWS, Messaging, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, BI, there's, Amazon Connect Locations: North America
Amazon Q, a big new AI product, faces issues such as high costs and lack of features. Neighorn told BI that Amazon had clear pricing for Amazon Q and that customers could use the AWS Pricing Calculator to calculate Amazon Q charges. "Amazon Q only launched in April, and we continue to add new features based on customer feedback," Neighorn said. "Amazon Q has a rapidly growing customer base that is using Q for a variety of use cases." AdvertisementFor now, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy may be the biggest salesperson for Amazon Q.
Persons: , Q, It's, Slack, Q's, AWS's, Microsoft's Copilot, Patrick Neighorn, Neighorn, Matt Garman, Garman, Andy Jassy, Jassy Organizations: Amazon, Service, Web Services, Business, Microsoft, Google, ChatGPT, BI, Microsoft's Exchange, Bayer, Smartsheet, National Australia Bank, AWS, Q, LinkedIn Locations: North
AWS wants to focus on cloud infrastructure and AI foundation models, not AI chatbots. The guidelines, which Business Insider obtained, also list nine important factors customers consider before purchasing generative-AI models and services. Amazon; InsiderHere are the nine factors:AdvertisementCustomization: The ability to tailor AI models for specific requirements (e.g., the style of a model's outputs). The ability to tailor AI models for specific requirements (e.g., the style of a model's outputs). Advertisement"AWS has more generative AI services than any other cloud provider, which is why our AI services alone have a multi-billion dollar run rate," the spokesperson added.
Persons: , Matt Garman, It's Organizations: Service, AWS, Web
Amazon said Thursday that revenue in its cloud division increased 19% in the second quarter, beating analysts' estimates. The company reported revenue for Amazon Web Services of $26.28 billion. While AWS continues to lead the cloud infrastructure market, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud have been gaining momentum, due in part to early deployments of AI models. On Tuesday, Microsoft said revenue from Azure and other cloud services jumped 29% in the quarter, and last week Google said its cloud revenue, including cloud infrastructure and Workspace productivity subscriptions, also rose 29%. Companies have started consuming cloud services to deploy generative AI models that power technologies such as OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot.
Persons: StreetAccount, Matt Garman, Adam Selipsky, Andy Jassy, Garman Organizations: Amazon, Amazon Web Services, Google, Microsoft, Oracle, Companies
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAI is more than just chatbots, we need to offer a range, says AWS CEO Matt GarmanAWS CEO Matt Garman joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk Amazon's AI offerings, how he is finding his new role, working with startups and more.
Persons: Matt Garman
AWS CEO Matt Garman breaks down the company's AI strategy
  + stars: | 2024-07-01 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAWS CEO Matt Garman breaks down the company's AI strategyCNBC's Jon Fortt goes one-on-one with AWS' new CEO Matt Garman to discuss the company's plan to implement AI.
Persons: Matt Garman, Jon Fortt Organizations: AWS
Amazon will double the value of credits it offers some startups to use its cloud infrastructure, CNBC has learned, as the company faces heightened competition from Microsoft in artificial intelligence services. Seed-stage startups will still be eligible for $100,000 in credits, AWS said. But Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud are growing more quickly, and are benefiting from rapidly advancing AI models. During Selipsky's time at the helm, Microsoft and Google increased their share of the cloud infrastructure market. Participants will be able to access up to $1 million in cloud credits, according to the website.
Persons: Matt Garman, Garman, Garman's, OpenAI, Anthropic, Adam Selipsky, Grant, Amazon's, Rohit Prasad, David Luan Organizations: Amazon Web, CNBC, Microsoft, AWS, Google, Gemini Locations: Las Vegas, Silicon, Silicon Valley
The front desk of the Amazon office is pictured in New York, May 1, 2019. Amazon is ramping up its development of artificial intelligence technology, hiring top talent from AI agent startup Adept and licensing the company's technology. Luan will oversee Amazon's "AGI Autonomy" division, and report to Prasad, he wrote in the memo, which CNBC obtained. Amazon's cloud unit has launched a range of AI services, including its own models, which are generally viewed as lagging behind the top competitors. Last month, Amazon announced Adam Selipsky, the head of Amazon Web Services, would be stepping down and succeeded by Matt Garman, the head of sales at marketing at AWS.
Persons: Rohit Prasad, David Luan, Luan, Prasad, Geekwire, Anthropic, Adam Selipsky, Matt Garman Organizations: CNBC, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Alexa, Amazon Web Services, AWS Locations: New York
Read previewAmazon Web Services made major changes to its data-deletion process after Apple alerted the cloud giant about a potential security risk, according to an internal document obtained by Business Insider. However, the AWS cloud services involved store information such as software, text, audio, video, images, resource identifiers, metadata tags, and permissions. These people asked not to be identified discussing a sensitive cloud security issue. Security is a top priority for AWSAmazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman AmazonFor AWS, security has always been a top priority. The AWS security team suggested taking actions to "meaningfully improve" the quality of the data-deletion process and "define a clear guideline" around it.
Persons: , It's, Patrick Neighorn, Neighorn, didn't, it's, Justin Cappos, Fabrice Delhoste, Ken Elefant, Matt Garman, Brad Smith Organizations: Service, Services, Apple, Business, Amazon, AWS, BI, Employees, NYU, Sorenson Ventures, Security, Web, US Homeland Security, Microsoft, Committee
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