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Topic: Jeff Bezos and many top amazon executives leave in mass exodus - page 2. (Read 276 times)

legendary
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Jeff Bezos stepping down as amazon CEO. With the departure of many top executives from amazon. Comes hot on the heels of the announcement of global 15% tax intiatives being up for consideration.

I wonder if they disapprove of global tax loopholes being closed enough to resign and search for other markets.

It could be a common trend in the business world. The Fertitta brothers sold the UFC when the push for unionization began to mobilize. Do start up founders time the market for their exit to correspond with significantly diminishing business conditions.

For those who invest or have an interest in stocks, would you recommend fading amazon stock under the expectation that whoever replaces Jeff Bezos and departing execs will be unable to fill their shoes.

Anyways historic moment unfolding here with amazon. How do people envision amazon's business model changing from here onwards. If it changes at all.

No, this has literally nothing to do with the global corporate minimum tax, which isn't even in force yet.  It's the norm in the business world for people to wrap up their stints at a company when the executive leadership undergoes a big change.

Amazon is such a behemoth and well-oiled machine that I wouldn't expect a change in leadership to have any impact on the stock price.  Betting against the stock price is asking for losses.
hero member
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Do start up founders time the market for their exit to correspond with significantly diminishing business conditions.
I doubt this is the case as some start up founder kickstart an idea inorder to sell it as they've accepted they do not have the means to scale. In this scenario, you'll need to time your exit for the best possible time inorder to get the best possible bargain out of a deal.
Unfavourable conditions could be a reason why one steps down from leadership, but I don't think it relates to most founders.

For those who invest or have an interest in stocks, would you recommend fading amazon stock under the expectation that whoever replaces Jeff Bezos and departing execs will be unable to fill their shoes.
I do not invest or have a deep interest in stocks, but I would not expect whoever replaces Bezos and the other excos to fail at filling the shoes, they could come with fresh ideas that will benefit the company positively and have had years to study the business model of their predecessors.

Jeff Benzos decided to step down way back and if I remember there was a article published back in February where he stepped down from his everyday duties and at the same time the article mentioned how they are thinking of using other technologies like delivery by drones etc . I do believe that we might see them happening soon. At the same time the new CEO have to answer to a lot of people, as you can see that the HR department of Amazon has a lot of probelms. The smaller workers have a lot of complaints since way back, maybe the new CEO can finally focus on that.

Apparently the guy who is taking over Amazon has been serving Amazon since a long time in the web service department and his name is Andy jassy, well he is someone who is not so well known but at the same time I believe the guy needs a chance, he is already very well familiar with the whole system and he can now proceed to give new ideas for the company. Let's see how well he does. Now we are entering a whole new era and I do Believe Amazon would have to continue to improve.

Benzos have everything that he ever wished for now and the guy wants to focus on new products and other new initiatives. I do wonder what will happen to stocks though. He left Amazon at a high time but the decision was made way before so I believe if we did not see a downturn we won't be seeing one now.
legendary
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Jeff Bezos stepping down as amazon CEO. With the departure of many top executives from amazon. Comes hot on the heels of the announcement of global 15% tax intiatives being up for consideration.

I wonder if they disapprove of global tax loopholes being closed enough to resign and search for other markets.
I don't know, to me it sounds like Bezos kind of just stepped back in during the pandemic to make sure things ran smoothly at Amazon, and now that everything has settled down somewhat he's stepping away again.  I don't think he's any less passionate about Amazon for deciding not to be the CEO anymore.  Howard Schultz did a similar thing with Starbucks a while back.

It also sounds like Bezos has all the money he'll ever need and wants to pursue this space venture of his, which actually sounds exciting.  If I were as wealthy as him, I might do something like that as well instead of having to be the CEO of an enormous corporation and having to deal with all the stresses that come along with the job.  Wouldn't any of you?

For those who invest or have an interest in stocks, would you recommend fading amazon stock under the expectation that whoever replaces Jeff Bezos and departing execs will be unable to fill their shoes.
I wouldn't be all that concerned about Amazon stock if I held their shares.  CEOs change all the time, and Amazon is at a place where it's so dominant that they'd have to pick a really lousy CEO in order to tank their business.  However, I would expect some changes to take place with a new CEO, because new ones usually think they have to prove themselves and that's usually by shaking up the company.  We'll see.
legendary
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I was thinking about this same topic recently.  I think you often see high level executives stepping down from that role when they get to that point, especially Bezos who's the richest man on earth.  I think he stepped down more so due to needing to free up time for other projects he has going on.  Bezos is very interested in space exploration and I imagine his focus is on Blue Origin more so than every these days so he'd rather have someone who has the time to solely focus on being CEO of Amazon and nothing else.  I wouldn't fade this stock.  Amazon is still a massive global power that continues to grow at a rapid pace, losing their CEO wont kill them.  Just take a look at Apple after Steve Jobs passed away.
legendary
Activity: 2114
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Do start up founders time the market for their exit to correspond with significantly diminishing business conditions.
I doubt this is the case as some start up founder kickstart an idea inorder to sell it as they've accepted they do not have the means to scale. In this scenario, you'll need to time your exit for the best possible time inorder to get the best possible bargain out of a deal.
Unfavourable conditions could be a reason why one steps down from leadership, but I don't think it relates to most founders.

For those who invest or have an interest in stocks, would you recommend fading amazon stock under the expectation that whoever replaces Jeff Bezos and departing execs will be unable to fill their shoes.
I do not invest or have a deep interest in stocks, but I would not expect whoever replaces Bezos and the other excos to fail at filling the shoes, they could come with fresh ideas that will benefit the company positively and have had years to study the business model of their predecessors.
legendary
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Quote
An unusual number of vice presidents are leaving for prominent jobs at public companies or high-growth start-ups.

SEATTLE — When Andy Jassy is elevated to chief executive of Amazon on Monday, taking the reins from its founder, Jeff Bezos, it will be one of the most closely watched executive handoffs in years.

But a much less heralded — though still deeply meaningful — change has already been underway at the company. Dozens of executives in Amazon’s upper ranks have departed in the past 18 months, many after working there for over a decade.

It is an unusual level of disruption inside the business. The departing executives don’t represent a huge slice of the top ranks, with hundreds of vice presidents now. But for years, Amazon’s leaders were considered lifers. Many had been there since the company’s earliest days. They were loyal to Amazon, whose rising stock price often made them wealthy.

Mr. Bezos epitomized that relationship. So did Jeff Wilke, who led the global consumer business, and Steve Kessel, who ran its physical stores, and others who introduced and ran key programs, including Alexa, free delivery and large parts of its cloud business. Now those leaders are gone.

Having Mr. Wilke and Mr. Bezos leave so close together amounts to “epic, tectonic shifts,” said David Glick, a former Amazon vice president who is now the chief technology officer at Flexe, a logistics start-up.

Mr. Wilke and Mr. Kessel both retired, but many vice presidents are leaving for top jobs at public companies or high-growth start-ups. Teresa Carlson, who over a decade built Amazon’s government cloud business, in April became the chief growth officer of Splunk, which provides data software, and Greg Hart, who once shadowed Mr. Bezos for a year and then launched Alexa and Echo, is now the chief product officer at the real estate firm Compass. Maria Renz, another former Bezos shadow who started at Amazon in 1999, is now a senior executive at SoFi, the personal finance company.

“Amazon has done a better job than anyone in the history of the world at staying Day 1 longer,” said Mr. Glick, referring to a phrase Mr. Bezos used regularly to encourage employees to act as if they were at a start-up. “But you get to a point where you are so big, it can be hard to get things done. People want the fun of getting a little bit closer to the metal.”

He talks “every day,” he said, with Amazon leaders debating if they should make a jump.

“You have this set of people who got to V.P. and it’s like ‘OK, what do I do now?’” he said.

Amazon is facing a shift that earlier generations of tech companies experienced as they grew and their strong founders stepped aside, said David Yoffie, a professor at Harvard Business School who served on Intel’s board for 29 years. Amazon’s overall work force has doubled in the past year, to more than 1.3 million.

“Intel, Microsoft, Oracle — you see this pattern,” he said.

Even before a founder leaves, executives sense a business is approaching a new era, he said.

“People get the idea that Jeff is going to be transitioning, and that leads people to start thinking about other options,” he said, adding that as companies get large, executives can often find less bureaucracy and more financial upside if they leave.

“We’ve had and continue to have remarkable retention and continuity of leadership at the company,” said Chris Oster, an Amazon spokesman. The average tenure is 10 years for vice presidents and more than 17 for senior vice presidents, he added.

Mr. Bezos long played up the longevity of deputies. At a forum in 2017, an employee asked him about the lack of diversity on his senior team, known as the S-Team, which was almost exclusively white and male, and Mr. Bezos said it was a benefit that his top deputies had been by his side for years.

Any transition on the team, he said, would “happen very incrementally over a long period of time.”

In recent years, Mr. Bezos has stepped back from much of Amazon’s day-to-day business, focusing instead on strategic projects and outside ventures, like his space start-up, Blue Origin, giving his deputies even more autonomy.

Mr. Bezos, 57, re-engaged on day-to-day matters early in the pandemic. But in February, he announced that he planned to step down from running Amazon and would become executive chairman of the company’s board. On July 20, he is scheduled to fly aboard the first manned spaceflight of his rocket company.

Mr. Bezos’ handoff came not long after Mr. Wilke, long seen as a potential successor, announced his departure.

“So why leave?” Mr. Wilke wrote in an email to staff in August announcing his plan to retire. “It’s just time.” His last day was March 1.

Mr. Bezos anointed Mr. Jassy, 53, a long-serving deputy who built and ran the cloud computing division, to take over as chief executive. Mr. Jassy has worked so closely with Mr. Bezos that he has been viewed as a “brain double,” helping conceive and spread many of the company’s mechanisms and internal culture.

Shifts at the top have trickled down. With Mr. Jassy’s ascent, Amazon Web Services needed a new chief executive. It hired Adam Selipsky, who ran Tableau, a data visualization company that Salesforce acquired in 2019. Mr. Selipsky had worked at AWS until 2016, when the cloud business was a less than a third the size it is now.

Dave Clark, who had run Amazon’s logistics and warehousing operations, was promoted to Mr. Wilke’s former role, running the company’s entire consumer business. He had already taken over responsibility for Amazon’s physical stores after Mr. Kessel, an S-team member who started at Amazon in 1999, retired early last year.

Many of the senior leaders it has brought in from the outside have run large, mature businesses.

Alicia Boler Davis, a former General Motors executive and a protégé of G.M.’s chief executive, Mary Barra, joined Amazon in 2019 to run its vast fulfillment operations. Last year, she became the first Black member of the company’s senior leadership team. A former Boeing executive, David Carbon, now runs Amazon’s drone delivery team, and its video and studio business is led by Mike Hopkins, the former chairman of Sony Pictures Television.

Many other jobs are opening up, too. In April, the online business news site Insider tallied at least 45 vice presidents and other executives who had left Amazon since the start of 2020, and since then, at least a half-dozen more have departed.

Some have gone to leadership roles in public companies or well-funded start-ups, like American Airlines, Redfin, Stitch Fix and Stripe.

This week, Dorothy Li joined Convoy, a digital trucking network, after more than 20 years at Amazon. She said the pandemic had made her rethink her priorities. She saw how critical logistics were to serving people, and she was optimistic that making trucking more efficient could reduce emissions.

“There is a desire to go back to build, and the mission for Convoy really resonated with me,” she said.

As Convoy’s technology chief, she said, she viewed herself as a key part of the strategic leadership team. Three days into the new role, she said, “It’s exciting, exhilarating and a little nerve-racking, which is frankly part of what attracted me.”

Mr. Yoffie, the former Intel board member, said to expect even more shifts in the months ahead, as Mr. Jassy begins making changes as chief executive.

“They want to put their stamp on it,” Mr. Yoffie said. “They always do.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/02/technology/amazon-leadership-exits-bezos.html


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Jeff Bezos stepping down as amazon CEO. With the departure of many top executives from amazon. Comes hot on the heels of the announcement of global 15% tax intiatives being up for consideration.

I wonder if they disapprove of global tax loopholes being closed enough to resign and search for other markets.

It could be a common trend in the business world. The Fertitta brothers sold the UFC when the push for unionization began to mobilize. Do start up founders time the market for their exit to correspond with significantly diminishing business conditions.

For those who invest or have an interest in stocks, would you recommend fading amazon stock under the expectation that whoever replaces Jeff Bezos and departing execs will be unable to fill their shoes.

Anyways historic moment unfolding here with amazon. How do people envision amazon's business model changing from here onwards. If it changes at all.
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