Amazon CEO writes to employees: AI will reduce our workforce
The Seattle-based giant relies on artificial intelligence to increase efficiency and profits. And in the next few years the corporate workforce will be reduced: AI agents will take the place of thousands of employees
3' min read
Key points
3' min read
It is not a threat. It is a formal warning. Amazon, on the other side of its 1.5 million employees scattered around the world, has announced that it will cut staff in the coming years because artificial intelligence (AI) is faster, more efficient and cheaper. Andy Jassy, CEO of the Seattle-based giant, signed the statement that many feared and few dared to utter: AI is not just a support tool. It is a replacement factor. And Amazon plans to use it to do more with fewer people.
Those who work behind a desk, analyse data, compose emails, organise sales or assist customers are warned: a conversational agent will do some of those tasks. Or, perhaps, already does.
Cuts announced, more to come
.In the internal communication sent to employees on 17 June, Jassy left no room for interpretation: 'In the next few years we expect a reduction in our corporate workforce, thanks to efficiency gains from the intensive use of artificial intelligence.
An announcement that came after more than 27,000 redundancies since 2022 in various departments, including devices, services and customer support. In 2025 alone, Amazon has already cut another 300 positions between January and May. And, apparently, it is not finished.
Intelligent agents change everything
.The reason for this acceleration has a precise name: Generative AI agents. Intelligent systems, that is, that perform complex tasks autonomously, using language models such as GPT, Claude or Gemini to interact, plan, decide and act. They do not merely generate texts or responses, but take instructions, understand them and act accordingly.

