Work Decoded


Want a Successful Career? Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Keeps It Simple

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has a blunt message for Gen Z: you’re not skipping the line.

If you want a strong career, you start at the bottom. You take the unglamorous work. You prove you’re reliable, detail-oriented, and willing to outwork expectations. Only then do bigger opportunities show up.

Speaking on Capital Group’s Power of Advice podcast, Jassy emphasized that early success isn’t about landing a dream job—it’s about building a reputation. The people who rise, he says, are the ones who don’t flinch at hard tasks. The ones who avoid them? They stall.

After nearly 30 years at Amazon, Jassy has seen a clear pattern: top performers are “learning machines.” They constantly adapt, pick up new skills, and reinvent themselves instead of coasting on past wins.

His own career wasn’t a straight line. In his 20s, Jassy explored sports broadcasting, retail jobs, and coaching before finding his path. That experimentation, he says, mattered more than having a perfect plan.

“It’s useful to try a lot of things,” he noted, “to figure out what you don’t like and what you do.”

That mindset eventually led him to business school, then to Amazon in its early days. From there, he helped build what became Amazon Web Services—now the company’s most profitable division—and ultimately rose to CEO.

His takeaway is simple: stop chasing the perfect starting point. Focus on learning, doing the work in front of you, and earning trust over time.

The rest tends to follow.

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