National Post

AFTER NEARLY 30 YEARS, JEFF BEZOS WILL STEP DOWN AS CEO OF AMAZON.

Company’s sales rocket past us$100 billion

- Jay Greene Tony romm and

SEATTLE • Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon.com Inc., will step down as chief executive of the e-commerce giant, turning over the reins to the company’s longtime cloud-computing boss Andy Jassy.

bezos, who also owns The Washington Post, will transition to the role of executive chair in the third quarter, the company said as it announced fourth-quarter earnings.

“If you do it right, a few years after a surprising invention, the new thing has become normal. People yawn. That yawn is the greatest compliment an inventor can receive,” bezos said in an earnings release Tuesday.

The looming transition marks the most radical shakeup in Amazon’s corporate ranks in its nearly 30-year history. under bezos’s stewardshi­p, Amazon evolved from an upstart online bookseller into one of the world’s most popular internet marketplac­es able to quickly deliver a vast catalogue of products and services. It also developed a massive, profit-driving cloud computing business that now powers websites around the world.

The company’s meteoric growth delivered massive riches to shareholde­rs and made bezos — depending on the day — the richest man on the planet. For all the praise on Wall Street, however, bezos and his brass-knuckled tactics also carried great cost. regulators increasing­ly viewed Amazon as a threat to competitio­n, and the company’s own workers at times told grim tales about their mistreatme­nt, as they sought to carry out bezos’s mission as the consumer-first “everything store.”

bezos, who turned 57 last month and is one of the world’s wealthiest people, set up the transition to Jassy last summer, when the company announced that one of its likely successors, Jeff Wilke, would soon retire. That paved the way for Jassy to take the CEO job.

bezos’s own interests have changed over the years as he personally pushed into new industries. That included launching his own space-travel company, blue Origin, and funding new philanthro­pic efforts. He said in a note to employees Tuesday that he would focus on these other gambits, including The Post, which he purchased in 2013.

“When you have a responsibi­lity like that, it’s hard to put attention on anything else,” he said.

Amazon’s finance chief brian Olsavsky said bezos will remain “very involved” even after he moves into his new role.

“We expect a lot of continuity with this transition,” Olsavsky said in a call with journalist­s Tuesday afternoon. bezos, he added, is “is going to have his imprint on new product developmen­ts and also key leverage (in) areas of innovation.”

Olsavsky declined to say when bezos first approached the board about the transition to a new role, except to say that it had been planned and was done in consultati­on with Amazon’s directors. Five years ago, Amazon changed its management structure, naming both Jassy and Wilke division chief executives, and Olsavsky said this transition was similar.

“We see the same thing happening here,” Olsavsky said. “Jeff is going to remain with Amazon in a very important role as executive chair.”

What’s more, bezos remains Amazon’s largest individual shareholde­r.

“Jeff is really not going anywhere,” Olsavsky said. “This is more of a restructur­ing of who’s doing what.”

The announceme­nt came as the company reported a third-consecutiv­e record profit and quarterly sales above us$100 billion for the first time.

Net sales rose to us$125.56 billion as consumers turned to the world’s largest online retailer for their holiday shopping, beating analyst estimates of us$119.7 billion, according to Ibes data from refinitiv.

Amazon shares were up less than one per cent in after-hours trading.

Jassy’s AWS, traditiona­lly a bright spot, fell slightly short of expectatio­ns in the fourth quarter. While the cloud computing division announced deals in the quarter with viacomcbs, the BMW Group and others, it posted revenue of us$12.7 billion, short of the us$12.8 billion analysts had estimated.

Amazon said it was not announcing an AWS replacemen­t for Jassy at this time.

Meanwhile Amazon’s e-commerce business has never been as big. Since the start of the u.s. coronaviru­s outbreak, consumers have turned to Amazon for delivery of home staples and medical supplies. While brick-and-mortar shops closed their doors, Amazon, recruited over 400,000 more workers to keep up with demand.

That has placed the Seattle-based company at the centre of workplace tumult. More than 19,000 have contracted COVID-19 as of September, and some staff have protested and demanded facility closures. Others, at Amazon’s bessemer, Ala., warehouse, are seeking to be the first at the company to unionize in the united States, with an election to begin next week.

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 ?? JIM WATSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? “If you do it right,” Jeff Bezos said in an earning release Tuesday, “a few years after a surprising invention, the new
thing has become normal. People yawn. That yawn is the greatest compliment an inventor can receive.”
JIM WATSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES “If you do it right,” Jeff Bezos said in an earning release Tuesday, “a few years after a surprising invention, the new thing has become normal. People yawn. That yawn is the greatest compliment an inventor can receive.”

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