Day: October 28, 2025
Noah Berger/Noah Berger
- Amazon plans to cut 14,000 corporate jobs, the company announced Tuesday.
- The company said the cuts are to help it operate “like the world’s largest startup.”
- CEO Andy Jassy wants a leaner company and has prioritized efficiency and cost-cutting measures.
Amazon announced Tuesday that it plans to cut 14,000 corporate jobs, marking one of the biggest rounds of layoffs in the company’s history.
Amazon’s senior vice president of people experience and technology, Beth Galetti, announced the cuts in a blog post and said the reductions are a continuation of CEO Andy Jassy’s drive to operate the company “like the world’s largest startup.”
The latest move is part of Jassy’s effort to create a leaner and more disciplined company. In recent years, Amazon cut management layers, slashed bureaucracy, tightened costs, overhauled performance and pay systems, and ordered most corporate employees back to the office five days a week.
The changes really started after the pandemic, when Amazon’s growth slowed. The company moved to rein in costs by axing unprofitable projects and cutting a bloated workforce.
Jassy said in June that AI-driven efficiency gains would shrink Amazon’s workforce. Earlier this year, the company froze the hiring budget in its massive retail division, and in July, its cloud arm, Amazon Web Services, also faced layoffs.
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Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images
- Bill Gates helped dissuade Trump from adding RFK Jr. to his first administration, a new book says.
- According to the book, Trump was set to let RFK Jr lead a task force on vaccines and autism.
- Then, Bill Gates told Trump in 2017 that it would be a “terrible mistake,” writes the book’s author, Jonathan Karl.
Bill Gates played a key role in keeping Robert F. Kennedy, Jr out of President Donald Trump’s first administration, a new book says.
When Kennedy met with the president-elect at Trump Tower in early 2017, he told reporters afterward that Trump had asked him to chair a “commission on vaccine safety and scientific integrity.”
Spokespeople for Trump later put out a statement saying that no decision had been made, and Kennedy ultimately never joined his first administration.
But according to the ABC reporter Jonathan Karl’s new book, “Retribution: Donald Trump and the Campaign That Changed America,” Trump met with Kennedy for a second time at the White House after he was sworn in, and during that meeting, he “appeared to be persuaded” to let Kennedy lead a new task force on autism and vaccines.
Trump had long been interested in a potential link between autism and vaccines. He raised the issue at a 2015 GOP primary debate, where he called for administering smaller doses of vaccines over a longer period of time.
Ultimately, it was Gates — a billionaire philanthropist who’s worked heavily to expand access to vaccines — who helped convince Trump otherwise, Karl writes.
Gates later met with Trump, telling him that allowing Kennedy to lead the panel “would be a terrible mistake,” according to the book.
Trump reportedly told Gates at that meeting that he would hold off on the idea as long as Kennedy could discuss his views with top officials at the National Institutes of Health, including Anthony Fauci, then the Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
When that nearly two-hour-long meeting took place in May 2017, Kennedy reportedly delivered a presentation on adverse health conditions that he said were caused by vaccines. Kennedy and Fauci then had a spirited discussion about the presentation.
Ultimately, Kennedy did not get a position in Trump’s first administration.
“Trump did keep his word to Gates,” Karl writes. “Kennedy was not appointed to any new task force on vaccines.”
Years later, after his own failed bid for the presidency, Kennedy endorsed Trump during the 2024 election, leading to his appointment as Health and Human Services Secretary in Trump’s second administration.
In that role, he has helped steer the health policies of Trump’s administration. Most recently, Trump himself alleged a link between Tylenol use by parents and autism in children, which drew pushback from many doctors and scientists.
A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, which Kennedy now leads, declined to comment. Fauci, the Gates Foundation, and the White House did not respond to requests for comment.
Courtesty Claudio Fuentes
- CompAI cofounder and COO Claudio Fuentes is mandating in-person work at its New York office.
- He believes that being in the same space fosters faster collaboration and innovation.
- The startup may miss out on remote talent, but it’s worth it, Fuentes told Business Insider.
This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Claudio Fuentes, 31, who is the cofounder and COO of CompAI, which develops AI software for corporate compliance. Fuentes recently posted on X that his startup will no longer hire people who can’t work in-person five days a week at its New York office. This story has been edited for length and clarity.
I’ve been in tech for the last 10 years. I spent the last four in Silicon Valley and relocated to New York in February. We started CompAI in January and launched a product in April. We’ve had a pretty explosive growth curve.
We initially started remote. My cofounder is based in the UK and is planning on relocating to New York. We have a sales guy in France, and we have someone running customer success in Illinois. Our goal has always been: How do we actually get people in the same office? You just work faster.
I’m getting absolutely roasted by most of the remote tech worker community for my post in favor of the office. It shouldn’t be controversial that a company decides to hire locally, but somehow it is.
In the four years I spent in the Bay Area, I was fortunate enough to be surrounded by a lot of companies that I saw grow from nothing to Series A, Series B, Series C — absolutely crush it. These are companies like Cursor and Bland. The culture in San Francisco is hire your best friends, get them in the same room, and let’s build great software.
Before moving to the Bay Area, I spent six years in New York. In 2016, I was working for WeWork. So, you can imagine, peak Adam Neumann — hyper growth. I look back very fondly on what he was able to create around culture.
The economics and business strategy aside, if you think about the workplace and employee loyalty and productivity that they were able to extract from their workforce, it was bigger than life. To whatever degree I can try to replicate an environment like that in the companies that I build, I absolutely will do so.
‘Something not natural’
When COVID hit, I moved from New York to Miami because I grew up there. I spent a year remote in Miami and one year remote in the Bay Area before I went the full entrepreneurship route. I look back at those years as some of the most depressing of my life.
It’s really convenient to be able to make your own hours and be home. But, over time, the lack of human connection really begins to get to you. If you spend two years locked in a room, barely seeing sunlight, there’s something not natural about that experience.
At the end of the day, we’re not just building a workplace, we’re building a life that’s centered around our work. People used to actually meet their spouse at work. For many reasons, I think it makes sense for us to be in the office.
For our existing workers, some will relocate. With others, we’ll try to make it work, but we are definitely prioritizing that every hire from here on is in New York.
Unstructured riffing
Aside from all the extracurricular activities we do as a team that build trust and rapport, which then help productivity, one instance stands out. It was about 8:30 in the morning, and one of our guys showed up early to the office, walked up to my cofounder, and said, “What if we implement an AI agent for our customer support? Is there something you can hack together?”
About 20 minutes later, he had already spun up an automation in our Slack that auto-replies to customers when they ask a question by searching our knowledge base. That has cut down our customer-support requests by 95%.
That came through this very casual conversation, where the alternative is typically, “Oh, let’s hop on a call because it’s kind of hard to explain.” It’s not something you send in a single message. It’s like, let me riff with you on this in an unstructured way.
In a remote world, there are also things that don’t get said because of that friction that exists. Therefore, you prioritize the ideas that are more well-formed, as opposed to riffing.
That’s what innovation is: It’s ill-formed ideas that, through this organic communication, become fully formed and then flourish.
I completely get it if your job is working out of a cubicle, and it’s just depressing and you hate your life. Go remote. Workers get more value out of that.
We’re trying to build the opposite. We’re trying to make the statement that having everyone together is important right now. The in-person candidates that we do find tend to be the more committed ones. We probably will lose on some people who are maybe more qualified. I’m OK with that trade-off, because I think the net benefit is going to be worth it.
Do you have a story to share about your workplace? Contact this reporter at tparadis@businessinsider.com.
Luke Pollard suggested using barracks would be worth it given public opposition to housing asylum seekers in hotels
Good morning. The Home Office confirmed last night that it wants to use two barracks, in Scotland and southern England, to house around 900 male asylum seekers. The two sites are Cameron Barracks in Inverness and Crowborough Training Camp in East Sussex and ministers want the men to start moving in from the end of next month. Kevin Rawlinson has more details here.
In some respects, this announcement can be added to the list of government U-turns; only last summer the government was saying it wanted to end the use of military sites for asylum seekers.
Some bases are small, some bases are larger in terms of numbers, but I think the conversation around the bases that are in the news today is about proving this concept, is about seeing whether this works. We believe that these bases can provide adequate accommodation for asylum seekers.
We’re looking at what’s possible and, in some cases, those bases may be a different cost to hotels, but I think we need to reflect the public mood on this asylum hotels need to close.
