The 'first significant impression' Amazon's future CEO made on Jeff Bezos was 24 years ago, when he accidentally whacked Bezos on the head with a kayak paddle

Advertisement
The 'first significant impression' Amazon's future CEO made on Jeff Bezos was 24 years ago, when he accidentally whacked Bezos on the head with a kayak paddle
Mike Blake/Reuters; Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
  • Andy Jassy accidentally hit Jeff Bezos with a paddle in 1997, Brad Stone writes in his Amazon book.
  • The interaction happened during a game of broomball, which Bezos threw himself into "with gusto."
  • Bezos announced Tuesday that Andy Jassy would take over as CEO later this year.
Advertisement

Today, Amazon's cloud chief Andy Jassy is Jeff Bezos' successor for the role of Amazon CEO. But 24 years ago, he was just a young staffer accidentally bonking Bezos on the head with a kayak paddle.

The whacking occurred during a company "broomball" game, as recounted in Brad Stone's 2013 book, "The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon." Stone also announced on Tuesday a follow-up to the best-selling book, "Amazon Unbound: Jeff Bezos and the Invention of a Global Empire," which arrives May 11 and will focus on the last 10 years of Amazon under Bezos' leadership.

On Tuesday, Bezos, Amazon's CEO, announced that he would step down and that Jassy, the CEO of Amazon Web Services, will replace him later in 2021. But back in 1997, the two men were engaged in a game that was equal parts playful and symbolic.

Complimentary Tech Event
Transform talent with learning that works
Capability development is critical for businesses who want to push the envelope of innovation.Discover how business leaders are strategizing around building talent capabilities and empowering employee transformation.Know More

The story goes that broomball was introduced by one of Amazon's vice presidents at a company conference. The setup of the game, Stone recounts, was a bit unorthodox: "players swatted a kickball on the lawn with brooms and other random implements from his garage," he wrote.

Though the image of two leaders of one of the most influential companies in the world brandishing broomsticks may be funny, Stone recounts "an undercurrent of intense competition" during the game that was typical of Bezos' expansionist worldview.

Advertisement

"In other words [broomball] perfectly expressed the temperament of Jeff Bezos, who stopped by the meeting and threw himself into the inaugural Amazon broomball contest with gusto. At one point, Andy Jassy, then a new recruit from Harvard, made his first significant impression at the company by inadvertently hitting Bezos in the head with a kayak paddle. Later, Bezos dove after the ball into some hedges and tore his blue oxford shirt," Stone wrote.

It's safe to say Bezos has since forgiven his successor for the accidental transgression.

{{}}