The latest cuts reflect Amazon’s continued push toward efficiency, automation, and AI-led operations.
Amazon has carried out another round of job cuts, this time affecting its Selling Partner Services division, as the company continues restructuring efforts tied to cost discipline and automation.
The latest layoffs come only months after Amazon announced tens of thousands of reductions across multiple departments. According to a company spokesperson, the current round impacts a “small number” of employees, although the exact figure has not been disclosed.
The Selling Partner Services unit works closely with millions of third-party merchants operating on Amazon’s marketplace, helping sellers with onboarding, logistics, operational support, and account management.
In a statement shared with Business Insider, Amazon said the decision followed an internal organizational review aimed at improving operational efficiency.
The company added that affected employees would receive transitional healthcare support, severance packages, and external job placement assistance.
Amazon’s Efficiency Drive Continues
The layoffs highlight how Amazon’s broader restructuring strategy remains active under CEO Andy Jassy.
Since taking over leadership, Jassy has repeatedly emphasized efficiency, leaner operations, and tighter cost management across Amazon’s vast retail and technology ecosystem.
Earlier waves of layoffs were largely explained as a correction after aggressive pandemic-era hiring, when online demand surged globally. However, the continued reductions suggest Amazon is still reassessing workforce structures across different business units.
The company has already eliminated around 30,000 jobs through previous rounds announced in October and January. Smaller cuts were also made earlier this year inside Amazon’s robotics division.
AI Is Reshaping Internal Operations
The latest move also reflects Amazon’s growing focus on artificial intelligence and automation.
Across the company, AI tools are increasingly being integrated into customer service, logistics, advertising, operations, and internal workflows.
Executives have encouraged teams to adopt AI systems capable of automating repetitive or process-heavy tasks, part of a wider strategy to improve speed and reduce operational costs.
That shift has also raised concerns internally among some employees about long-term workforce reductions tied to automation.
Jassy himself previously acknowledged that AI could eventually reduce portions of Amazon’s workforce as the company becomes more operationally efficient.
A Larger Industry Pattern
Amazon is not alone in this transition.
Across the global technology sector, companies are simultaneously investing billions into AI infrastructure while continuing workforce reductions in areas considered redundant, slower-growing, or more operationally intensive.
The pattern reflects a major shift in how large technology companies are restructuring for the next phase of growth.
Rather than expanding headcount aggressively, many firms are prioritizing automation, productivity tools, and AI-assisted workflows designed to operate at a larger scale with fewer people.
For Amazon, the latest cuts suggest the company is still deeply focused on reshaping itself around that model.
Source: BI



