KEY POINTS
  • Dave Limp, Amazon's hardware chief, said the company remains committed to its Alexa voice assistant and other projects.
  • Alexa and other parts of Amazon's devices and services organization were a major target of the company's recent layoffs.
  • CEO Andy Jassy said earlier this week the company aims to let go more than 18,000 employees as it looks to rein in costs amid a worsening economic outlook.

In this article

David Limp, senior vice president of devices and services at Amazon.com Inc., presents the Amazon Echo Dot smart speaker during an unveiling event at the company's Spheres headquarters in Seattle, Sept. 20, 2018.

Amazon hasn't given up on its Alexa voice assistant, hardware chief Dave Limp said Friday, even though the team behind the technology was a prime target of the largest layoffs in the company's history.

Amazon last year began laying off employees in its corporate workforce as part of CEO Andy Jassy's broader move to curtail expenses amid a worsening economic outlook and slowing revenue growth. The company's devices and services organization, which oversees the development of products such as Alexa, Echo smart speakers and Kindle e-readers, was among the groups affected.

In this article