Leaked Microsoft organizational chart shows the 16 executives helping Satya Nadella in the AI race

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella speaks during a company presentation
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella

  • Microsoft's senior leadership team includes Satya Nadella and 16 executives.
  • Nadella has made changes in the past year to the company's top ranks.
  • A leaked organizational chart reveals the CEO's closest lieutenants.

Microsoft's transition to AI could be one of the most pivotal moments in its 50-year history, and CEO Satya Nadella is making changes to the company's top ranks to seize the moment.

A leaked organizational chart showing Nadella's 16 direct reports, along with other internal documents, show how he's reshuffled executives and their duties over the past year to compete in the AI race.

Here are Nadella's direct reports:

Brad Smith, vice chair and president

Brad Smith
Microsoft President Brad Smith testified to the Senate last week that the company's JEDI cloud contract had been stuck because of Amazon's legal protest, and advocated for updated protest rules.

Brad Smith is the face of Microsoft when it comes to public affairs.

He's built a reputation as "the statesman of the technology industry," and become one of the most influential voices on tech policy, particularly on issues related to AI, cybersecurity, data privacy, and human rights.

Smith's diplomatic approach has at times kept Microsoft out of regulators' crosshairs. He runs the Corporate, External, and Legal Affairs, or "CELA," team in charge of legal and regulatory matters, government affairs, and corporate responsibility.

Smith's role is especially crucial for Microsoft now as the company navigates regulation, geopolitics, data-governance and reputational risks to expand its cloud and AI global footprint.

Smith is also often the executive called upon to publicly address the company's toughest controversies, such as internal protests over government contracts.

Kevin Scott, chief technology officer

Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott talks about the growth of AI agent use at the Build 2025 developer conference.
Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott talks about the growth of AI agent use at the Build 2025 developer conference.

Kevin Scott is one of the most influential AI executives at Microsoft.

As chief technology officer and executive vice president of AI and research, it's Scott's job to define the company's long-term technology strategy.

Nadella named Scott CTO in early 2017. His mandate was initially broad, and he remained relatively low-profile at Microsoft.

By the next year, he started focusing on AI and brokered Microsoft's initial investment in OpenAI, which became one of the most consequential partnerships in the tech industry.

Takeshi Numoto, chief marketing officer

Takeshi Numoto, commercial chief marketing officer
Takeshi Numoto, commercial chief marketing officer

Microsoft Chief Marketing Officer Takeshi Numoto runs the company's global marketing efforts.

Numoto's bio on Microsoft's website calls out his role in creating new business models and modernizing Microsoft's marketing by making it more data-driven.

Recently, Numoto and his team joined a new organization under Judson Althoff, whom Microsoft just named as its CEO of commercial business. Numoto now reports to Althoff in his duties as chief marketing officer, but to Nadella on companywide matters.

Nadella described those matters as "all-up business models, planning, consumer marketing, and corporate brand and communications," according to an internal memo viewed by Business Insider.

Judson Althoff, Microsoft commercial CEO

Microsoft Chief Commercial Officer Judson Althoff
Microsoft Chief Commercial Officer Judson Althoff

Microsoft recently promoted longtime sales chief Judson Althoff to an expanded role as CEO of the company's commercial business.

Althoff's new organization combines sales, marketing, and operations into one unit for all of Microsoft's commercial products. He also leads a new commercial leadership team that includes executives from engineering, sales, marketing, operations, and finance.

Althoff's promotion is intended to give Nadella and the company's engineering leaders more time to focus on AI, according to an internal memo viewed by Business Insider.

"This will also allow our engineering leaders and me to be laser focused on our highest ambition technical work—across our datacenter buildout, systems architecture, AI science, and product innovation—to lead with intensity and pace in this generational platform shift," Nadella wrote.

Carolina Dybeck Happe, chief operations officer

Microsoft hired Carolina Dybeck Happe, previously GE's finance chief, in August 2024 in a newly created role of chief operations officer.

Nadella explained in an email announcing Dybeck Happe's hiring that her role would be to partner with Microsoft's leadership team to accelerate the company's AI transformation.

When Althoff was named commercial CEO, Dybeck Happe's operations organization moved to report to Althoff.

"Carolina Dybeck Happe will continue to report to me, as she works on our overall company transformation and continues to closely partner with Judson," Nadella wrote in the memo.

Amy Hood, chief financial officer

Amy Hood, Microsoft's chief financial officer, standing on a stage and speaking.
Amy Hood, chief financial officer at Microsoft.

Amy Hood is Microsoft's longtime finance chief and an influential figure in the company's AI strategy.

Hood works closely with Nadella and is the gatekeeper of Microsoft's multibillion-dollar AI infrastructure buildout. The company reported a record $34.9 billion in capital expenditures during its most recent quarter and said spending will increase.

Hood also recently told employees in an internal email viewed by Business Insider that the current fiscal year 2026 will demand "intensity, clarity and bold execution," signaling her role in setting the tone for Microsoft's culture.

Scott Guthrie, Cloud + AI executive vice president

Scott Guthrie Microsoft Build 2018
Microsoft Executive VP Scott Guthrie wearing his signature outfit at Microsoft Build 2018.

Scott Guthrie is one of Nadella's top lieutenants and the executive who has led Microsoft's cloud business since at least 2011.

Known for his signature red polo, Guthrie runs the Cloud + AI group, which Nadella created through a reorganization in 2018. That business unit is one of Microsoft's largest and most important, including the Azure cloud-computing business.

Nadella recently tapped one of Guthrie's reports as a new advisor to "rethink the new economics of AI," according to an internal memo.

Amy Coleman, EVP, Chief People Officer

Amy Coleman, a longtime Microsoft HR executive, took over as the company's chief people officer in March.

Coleman's promotion came after nearly 2,000 employees deemed low-performers were fired by Microsoft as part of a overhaul of its performance review and management process. She also took the role amid an overall shift in the tech industry toward more rigor and less coddling of employees.

Under Coleman, Microsoft introduced a new three-day return to office policy. She made the case for the new policy in a recent internal meeting reviewed by Business Insider, saying in-person staff are "thriving" based on internal data.

Kathleen Hogan, EVP of strategy and transformation

Kathleen Hogan
Kathleen Hogan

One of Nadella's first big leadership moves after he became CEO in 2014 was to name Hogan as Microsoft's chief people officer.

In her more than 10 years in that role, Hogan helped Nadella craft a new workplace management system around the concept of a "growth mindset."

Nadella announced Hogan would leave the chief people officer position in March and take on a new role as executive vice president of the "Office of Strategy and Transformation."

"As we've seen time and again throughout our 50-year history, times of great change for the world and for our industry require us to have a mindset that enables us to continually adapt and transform ourselves," Nadella wrote an internal email announcing the change. "There's no question that we are at the forefront of another such moment, with the rapid changes across every industry and business function in this AI era."

Rajesh Jha, EVP, Experiences + Devices

Rajesh Jha Micrsoft Build
Microsoft's Rajesh Jha.

Rajesh Jha runs Experiences and Devices, a major unit within Microsoft responsible for products including Office, Windows, and Teams. He's one of Nadella's most influential lieutenants.

Jha is also one of Microsoft's longest-serving executives. He rose through the ranks from software engineer to a top executive who led Office through its transition to the cloud-based Microsoft 365 suite of applications, and now into AI.

Jay Parikh, CoreAI and engineering manager

Jay Parikh at Microsoft Build.
Microsoft's Jay Parikh.

In January, Nadella put Jay Parikh in charge of a new AI unit called CoreAI, central to Microsoft's ambition to help developers build digital assistants capable of taking over tasks from human workers.

Parikh joined Microsoft in October 2024 after running cloud-security company Lacework. He previously was vice president and global head of engineering for Meta. Mark Zuckerberg credited Parikh for many technological achievements during his 11-year tenure at the social-media company.

Business Insider recently wrote about Parikh's internal weekly update memos, which revealed his goals for the CoreAI unit, its early accomplishments, and his advice to address what he sees as problems within the company.

Parikh's internal org chart, recently revealed by Business Insider, shows who's helping him run the new AI unit. Parikh recently shared a plan to ward off AI coding rivals by overhauling GitHub in an internal meeting reviewed by Business Insider.

Charlie Bell, EVP, Microsoft Security

Microsoft's Charlie Bell
Microsoft's Charlie Bell

Charlie Bell, considered a cofounder of the cloud giant Amazon Web Services, joined Microsoft in 2021 in a move that shook the industry.

Nadella put Bell in charge of a new $20 billion, 10,000-person cybersecurity group called Security, Compliance, Identity, and Management, and made security the company's No. 1 priority.

Microsoft recently expanded its Secure Future Initiative, making security the top priority for every employee, including making security a metric on which employees are evaluated during performance reviews.

The company has had some security struggles. The Department of Homeland Security, for example, last year condemned Microsoft for what it called "a cascade of security failures" that allowed Chinese hackers to access emails from thousands of customers.

Mustafa Suleyman, Microsoft AI CEO

Mustafa Suleyman
Mustafa Suleyman

Last year, Microsoft appointed Mustafa Suleyman—cofounder of AI pioneer DeepMind and former head of startup Inflection AI—as CEO of a new Microsoft AI division. The organization is responsible for consumer AI products such as Microsoft's Copilot chatbot and the Bing search engine.

Suleyman recently unveiled a superintelligence team at Microsoft focused on building a "world-class, frontier-grade research capability in-house," he told Business Insider in a recent interview.

Suleyman has added nine direct reports in the past year or so, according to internal organization charts viewed by Business Insider. Five of those previously worked for Google or DeepMind.

Jason Zander, Microsoft Discovery & Quantum executive vice president

jason zander microsoft
Microsoft's Jason Zander.

Zander previously ran Azure since 2012, overseeing everything from product management to engineering within Azure, under Guthrie.

After that, he started running a team called Strategic Missions and Technologies. The organization was formed to house initiatives like quantum computing and space technologies. These days, Zander's team focus includes AI.

"Our clear focus as a company is to define the AI wave and empower all our customers to succeed in the adoption of this transformative technology," Zander wrote in an internal email viewed by Business Insider last year.

Zander's current job title suggests he's running Microsoft Discovery, its new AI agent platform.

Ryan Roslansky, LinkedIn CEO and EVP of Office

Linkedin CEO Ryan Roslansky in 2025.
LinkedIn CEO Ryan Roslansky.

Ryan Roslansky has been CEO of the Microsoft-owned professional social network LinkedIn since 2020.

Microsoft recently expanded Roslansky's role to include Outlook, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and the Microsoft 365 Copilot application, according to an internal announcement from Nadella in June.

Roslansky started reporting to Jha for his new duties as executive vice president of Office, and to Nadella in his capacity as LinkedIn CEO, according to organizational charts viewed by Business Insider.

Phil Spencer, Microsoft Gaming CEO

phil spencer microsoft xbox
Microsoft Xbox head Phil Spencer

The gaming business became so important to the company that Nadella made gaming boss Phil Spencer one of his direct reports in September 2017, and the executive started regularly speaking at all-employee town hall meetings.

Spencer runs Xbox, Xbox Game Studios, ZeniMax Media, and Activision Blizzard. Those last two businesses were acquired through multibillion-dollar deals. Microsoft's Activision Blizzard acquisition was the largest in its history.

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