Skip to main content

Amazon confirms it has 10,000 employees working on Amazon Alexa

With more than 100 million Alexa devices sold so far, 10,000 Amazon employees work on the smart assistant’s development. Thousands of people focus on building Alexa’s knowledge base while others work on Alexa’s personality, machine learning, interaction, conversational skills, and other technical features, Business Insider reports.

Dave Limp, Amazon Devices senior vice president, told attendees at The Wall Street Journal’s Tech D. Live conference in November 2018 that the number of employees assigned to Alexa development doubled in a year. At the time Limp also said the digital virtual assistant would eventually work in offices, cars, and hotel rooms as well as in homes, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Recommended Videos

When he was asked about the 10,000-employee assignment figure at the Consumer Electronics Show 2019 in Las Vegas, Amazon’s vice president of Alexa Steve Rabuchin confirmed the statistic.

“That is an accurate number,” Rabuchin told Business Insider at CES 2019. “We’re so bullish on voice as the future. It’s just so early for voice, and Alexa is great, but there’s so much more that we want her to be able to do in terms of being more interactive, more conversational, and just getting better and better and better.”

Rabuchin also broke down, in general terms, the development areas on which the Alexa-focused employees are working.

In addition to groups that focus on artificial intelligence and machine learning, Amazon has significant numbers of people working on Alexa’s ability to answer user questions and on Alexa’s “personality.”

“We have a team that’s just feeding the knowledge base all the time for question and answer, and continuing to just increase what we call the knowledge graph,” Rabuchin said.

The number of customers who own multiple Alexa devices more than doubled in the last year, according to Amazon, which indicates people speak to Alexa for answers to or assistance with a variety of topics.

“I think from the beginning, we had a vision for how useful we wanted Alexa to be and someone who you felt was a bit of a companion, who you could speak naturally to,” Rabuchin continued. “There’s a team that just works on how Alexa behaves, how her personality is formed, and what her preferences are when she gets asked a question.”

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
The Amazon Echo Hub is almost the whole-home hub I’ve always wanted
Amazon Echo Hub.

I’ve long dreamed about having a proper sort of home hub. One that’s always on, always showing me the things I want to control at any given time. Not huge. Not obtrusive.

The new Amazon Echo Hub, one several new Echo devices announced at Amazon's 2023 devices event at HQ2 in Arlington, Virginia, very much seems to fit that bill. It’s a touchscreen that you’ll use to control all your things.

Read more
At long last, Amazon brings AI features to Alexa
Amazon SVP of Devices and Services Dave Limp demonstrates the Let's Chat feature of Alexa, powered by AI.

Nearly a year after ChatGPT introduced the world to the uncannily human possibilities of generative AI, Amazon has unveiled new Alexa features powered by large language models (LLM). At the annual Amazon Devices Event hosted at its new Arlington, Virginia, headquarters, the company announced some major Alexa improvements that will attempt to make replies much more conversational and lifelike, with less waiting time between your interactions and more meaningful replies.

A new feature called Let's Chat mimics the ChatGPT experience by allowing you to have a fluid conversation with Alexa, asking questions about everything from the voice assistant's football team allegiance to recipes. You can even ask it to write emails for you. In the demo with Dave Limp, outgoing senior vice president of devices and services, Alexa sometimes stalled and needed a second prompt to answer questions, suggesting the feature may still need some polish.

Read more
What is Amazon Alexa, and what can it do?
Echo 4th Gen speaker on table.

Amazon Alexa is an interactive voice assistant that can check the weather, launch your favorite playlist, and everything in between. Alexa can be found on most Amazon products, including the new Echo Pop, the iconic Echo Dot, and even a variety of smart thermostats, soundbars, lamps, and more. Aside from taking basic commands from you, Alexa can also dish out commands to the rest of your connected smart home -- making it easy to streamline your life.

Interested in learning more about Amazon Alexa? Then you’re in the right place. Here’s a closer look at where Alexa comes from, how it works, where it got its name, and just about everything else you’d want to know about the popular voice assistant and smart home savant.
Who/what is Alexa?

Read more