Close Menu
Alpha Leaders
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
What's On
OpenClaw Matures Amid Swarm Culture

OpenClaw Matures Amid Swarm Culture

2 July 2026
In A First, AI Decodes Entire Scroll Scorched In Mt. Vesuvius Eruption

In A First, AI Decodes Entire Scroll Scorched In Mt. Vesuvius Eruption

2 July 2026
The Three-Year Gamble On Custom Earbud Silicon

The Three-Year Gamble On Custom Earbud Silicon

2 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Alpha Leaders
newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Alpha Leaders
Home » Amazon’s CEO sounds alarm on complacent leaders who stop learning: ‘It’s as if some people find it too exhausting’
News

Amazon’s CEO sounds alarm on complacent leaders who stop learning: ‘It’s as if some people find it too exhausting’

Press RoomBy Press Room10 April 202512 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp
Amazon’s CEO sounds alarm on complacent leaders who stop learning: ‘It’s as if some people find it too exhausting’

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy’s most recent letter to shareholders reads less like a financial recap and more like a manifesto for leading through complexity. While acknowledging Amazon’s 11% year-over-year revenue growth to $638 billion, Jassy focuses on a deeper narrative—one of cultural evolution, operational rigor, and leadership behaviors designed to keep pace in a rapidly accelerating world. 

At the core of his message is a call to foster what he calls a “Why” culture—an environment where leaders are encouraged to question assumptions, challenge decisions, and remain intellectually engaged.

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy’s most recent letter to shareholders reads less like a financial recap and more like a manifesto for leading through complexity. While acknowledging Amazon’s 11% year-over-year revenue growth to $638 billion, Jassy focuses on a deeper narrative—one of cultural evolution, operational rigor, and leadership behaviors designed to keep pace in a rapidly accelerating world. 

At the core of his message is a call to foster what he calls a “Why” culture—an environment where leaders are encouraged to question assumptions, challenge decisions, and remain intellectually engaged.

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy’s most recent letter to shareholders reads less like a financial recap and more like a manifesto for leading through complexity. While acknowledging Amazon’s 11% year-over-year revenue growth to $638 billion, Jassy focuses on a deeper narrative—one of cultural evolution, operational rigor, and leadership behaviors designed to keep pace in a rapidly accelerating world. 

At the core of his message is a call to foster what he calls a “Why” culture—an environment where leaders are encouraged to question assumptions, challenge decisions, and remain intellectually engaged.

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com


Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy’s most recent letter to shareholders reads less like a financial recap and more like a manifesto for leading through complexity. While acknowledging Amazon’s 11% year-over-year revenue growth to $638 billion, Jassy focuses on a deeper narrative—one of cultural evolution, operational rigor, and leadership behaviors designed to keep pace in a rapidly accelerating world. 

At the core of his message is a call to foster what he calls a “Why” culture—an environment where leaders are encouraged to question assumptions, challenge decisions, and remain intellectually engaged.

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy’s most recent letter to shareholders reads less like a financial recap and more like a manifesto for leading through complexity. While acknowledging Amazon’s 11% year-over-year revenue growth to $638 billion, Jassy focuses on a deeper narrative—one of cultural evolution, operational rigor, and leadership behaviors designed to keep pace in a rapidly accelerating world. 

At the core of his message is a call to foster what he calls a “Why” culture—an environment where leaders are encouraged to question assumptions, challenge decisions, and remain intellectually engaged.

Curiosity as competitive edge

For Jassy, learning isn’t a soft skill. It helps guard against stagnation, especially at a company that moves quickly and has a sprawling portfolio of businesses. Reflecting on his nearly three decades at Amazon, Jassy emphasizes that a leader’s appetite for continuous learning is among the strongest predictors of long-term success for both companies and individuals. But that appetite, he warns, sometimes fades. “At a certain point, some leaders seem to lose their thirst to learn,” Jassy writes. “It’s hard to know the reason in each case, but it’s as if some people find it too exhausting, too time-consuming, or too threatening to not have all the answers.” 

The day a leader stops learning, he cautions, is the day they begin to lose relevance—and with it, their capacity to drive future growth. 

Intellectual rigor, not ego

Jassy also champions intellectual humility as a defining trait of strong leadership. Being right, he says, isn’t about asserting dominance. It’s about discernment, active listening, and the willingness to rethink. “The best leaders want to hear others’ views. They don’t wilt or bristle when challenged; they’re intrigued,” he explains.

That openness, however, must be balanced by conviction. At Amazon, disagreement isn’t just accepted—it’s expected.

“We don’t just empower people to challenge one another, we obligate them to do so if they disagree,” Jassy writes. But once a decision is made, alignment is mandatory. “No pocket-vetoing nor hedging between other options. That’s the only way we can preserve speed and confidence,” writes Jassy.

Speed, simplicity, and structure

Regardless of industry, speed and adaptability are the cornerstone of current business needs. 

Across industries, agility has become the currency of competitiveness. Jassy underscores that delivering customer value at speed requires eliminating friction, whether it be structural, procedural, or cultural. “We spend a lot of time identifying how to unlock these experiences for them as quickly as possible, and know if we don’t, somebody else will.”

One of the biggest barriers? Bureaucracy, says Jassy, which can result in teams with inflated headcounts.

“Historically, we’ve had periods where we’ve allowed this thinking to hold sway. But it’s not the way we fundamentally think about building teams and products,” says Jassy. Instead, he advocates for lean, high-output teams that move with focus and urgency. To reinforce this, he’s committed to increasing Amazon’s ratio of individual contributors to managers by at least 15% by the first quarter of 2025, a structural shift aimed at reducing managerial bloat and streamlining decision-making.

That initiative is part of a broader internal recalibration. Jassy even launched a “bureaucracy mailbox,” inviting employees to flag red tape and inefficiencies. So far, it has resulted in more than 375 operational improvements. It’s proof that simplification is not just a philosophy, but a mechanism for continuous refinement.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Amazon Andy Jassy Business Leaders business leadership Company Culture corporate leadership Innovation leadership advice leadership lessons Learning Next to Lead work culture
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link

Related Articles

Trump’s 927-page disclosure is just a normal Tuesday for direct indexing and crypto wealth managers

Trump’s 927-page disclosure is just a normal Tuesday for direct indexing and crypto wealth managers

2 July 2026
Inside Trump’s .4 billion crypto Empire: altcoins, Bitcoin—and a stake in Michael Saylor’s Strategy

Inside Trump’s $1.4 billion crypto Empire: altcoins, Bitcoin—and a stake in Michael Saylor’s Strategy

1 July 2026
Anthropic restores access to its most powerful AI models after two-week U.S. government standoff

Anthropic restores access to its most powerful AI models after two-week U.S. government standoff

1 July 2026
Melania Trump NFT earnings surge 28x in 2025 as first lady rakes in nearly  million in total earnings, filing shows

Melania Trump NFT earnings surge 28x in 2025 as first lady rakes in nearly $17 million in total earnings, filing shows

1 July 2026
Iran war cost U.S. households ,000 each, top economist says

Iran war cost U.S. households $1,000 each, top economist says

1 July 2026
Trump got a k pension from the Screen Actors Guild in 2025 because he appeared in Home Alone 2 in 1992

Trump got a $78k pension from the Screen Actors Guild in 2025 because he appeared in Home Alone 2 in 1992

1 July 2026
Don't Miss
Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

By Press Room27 December 2024

Every year, millions of people unwrap Christmas gifts that they do not love, need, or…

Exclusive: DeFi platform Azura launches after raising .9 million from Initialized

Exclusive: DeFi platform Azura launches after raising $6.9 million from Initialized

22 October 2024
Sam Altman’s World Wants To Scan Your Eyes To Prove You’re Human

Sam Altman’s World Wants To Scan Your Eyes To Prove You’re Human

22 October 2024
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Latest Articles
Tesla’s Electric Semi Has Its First Fatal Crash

Tesla’s Electric Semi Has Its First Fatal Crash

2 July 20262 Views
Trump’s 927-page disclosure is just a normal Tuesday for direct indexing and crypto wealth managers

Trump’s 927-page disclosure is just a normal Tuesday for direct indexing and crypto wealth managers

2 July 20262 Views
NYT ‘Pips’ Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Thursday, July 2

NYT ‘Pips’ Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Thursday, July 2

1 July 20262 Views
Inside Trump’s .4 billion crypto Empire: altcoins, Bitcoin—and a stake in Michael Saylor’s Strategy

Inside Trump’s $1.4 billion crypto Empire: altcoins, Bitcoin—and a stake in Michael Saylor’s Strategy

1 July 20262 Views

Recent Posts

  • OpenClaw Matures Amid Swarm Culture
  • In A First, AI Decodes Entire Scroll Scorched In Mt. Vesuvius Eruption
  • The Three-Year Gamble On Custom Earbud Silicon
  • Today’s Wordle #1839 Hints And Answer For Thursday, July 2
  • Tesla’s Electric Semi Has Its First Fatal Crash

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
About Us
About Us

Alpha Leaders is your one-stop website for the latest Entrepreneurs and Leaders news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
OpenClaw Matures Amid Swarm Culture

OpenClaw Matures Amid Swarm Culture

2 July 2026
In A First, AI Decodes Entire Scroll Scorched In Mt. Vesuvius Eruption

In A First, AI Decodes Entire Scroll Scorched In Mt. Vesuvius Eruption

2 July 2026
The Three-Year Gamble On Custom Earbud Silicon

The Three-Year Gamble On Custom Earbud Silicon

2 July 2026
Most Popular
Today’s Wordle #1839 Hints And Answer For Thursday, July 2

Today’s Wordle #1839 Hints And Answer For Thursday, July 2

2 July 20262 Views
Tesla’s Electric Semi Has Its First Fatal Crash

Tesla’s Electric Semi Has Its First Fatal Crash

2 July 20262 Views
Trump’s 927-page disclosure is just a normal Tuesday for direct indexing and crypto wealth managers

Trump’s 927-page disclosure is just a normal Tuesday for direct indexing and crypto wealth managers

2 July 20262 Views

Archives

  • July 2026
  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • March 2022
  • January 2021
  • March 2020
  • January 2020

Categories

  • Blog
  • Business
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Global
  • Innovation
  • Leadership
  • Living
  • Money & Finance
  • News
  • Press Release
© 2026 Alpha Leaders. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.