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Amazon Web Services has recently announced significant job cuts in areas such as training, sales, and physical stores technology. However, the company has clarified that it is still actively hiring in core areas of its business, with thousands of job postings available globally. The largest number of job posts are in operations, IT, and support engineering, followed by software development, solutions architect, and sales and account management.

The majority of AWS job posts are in the United States, with a significant number in states like Washington, Virginia, California, Texas, New York, Ohio, and Oregon. Internationally, there are job postings in countries such as Ireland, India, Germany, Japan, UK, Australia, Canada, Israel, and China. AI is a common theme in many of the current job postings, with references to artificial intelligence in job titles, descriptions, qualifications.

The recent job cuts at AWS are part of ongoing trends in the tech industry since late 2022. Despite these cuts, the company is working to support affected employees by offering internal opportunities, severance packages, and other separation benefits. Amazon is committed to helping employees transition to new roles, both within and outside of the company. The decisions to cut jobs are seen as difficult but necessary as AWS continues to invest, hire, and optimize resources to deliver innovation for customers.

In the Sales, Marketing, and Global Services organization within AWS, the majority of cuts are in training, certification, and sales operations. The company is shifting its focus towards self-serve digital training and external training programs. In addition, cuts were made in the team responsible for technology development in Amazon’s physical retail stores, following reports of a shift away from the “Just Walk Out” technology in larger Amazon Fresh grocery stores.

Despite the recent job cuts, AWS remains a leader in the cloud computing market, surpassing competitors like Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud in terms of market share. In the fourth quarter, AWS reported profits of $7.2 billion on revenue of $24.2 billion, contributing significantly to Amazon’s overall business growth. The company’s continued focus on innovation and customer service is evident in its ongoing hiring efforts, even amid organizational changes and job cuts.

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