Microsoft on Wednesday announced changes to its commercial business leadership as it seeks to accelerate growth in artificial intelligence (AI) and integrate its sales, marketing, operations and engineering units more closely.
The company said Chairman and CEO Satya Nadella had appointed Judson Althoff as chief executive officer of Microsoft’s commercial business, expanding his role from head of global sales. The changes were communicated to employees in an internal memo dated 1 October.
Leadership reorganisation to align with AI strategy
Nadella said in the note that the company is operating through a “tectonic AI platform shift” and aims to strengthen its position as a partner of choice for AI transformation. The reorganisation, he said, would help Microsoft manage its existing commercial business while developing new AI-driven opportunities.
Takeshi Numoto, currently chief marketing officer, and his marketing team will move under the new commercial structure, reporting directly to Althoff. Numoto will continue to report to Nadella on corporate brand, communications and overall business planning, the company said in the statement published on its corporate blog.
Microsoft’s operations division will also come under Althoff’s supervision to improve coordination between customer needs and service delivery. Carolina Dybeck Happe, who leads company-wide transformation initiatives, will continue to report to Nadella.
Althoff will lead a new commercial leadership team combining executives from engineering, sales, marketing, operations and finance. This group will be responsible for product strategy, governance and go-to-market execution, Microsoft said.
Focus on AI integration and technical execution
Nadella said the leadership restructuring would allow engineering heads and himself to focus on datacentre buildout, systems architecture, AI science and product innovation. “This isn’t just evolution, it’s reinvention,” Nadella wrote, referring to the company’s transformation around AI technologies.
Althoff joined Microsoft in 2013 and has led the company’s global sales efforts for nine years. He oversaw the development of Microsoft Customer and Partner Solutions (MCAPS), which the company described as a key growth driver within its commercial segment.
The move follows a broader trend among major technology firms increasing investment in generative AI and cloud-based infrastructure. Microsoft has been expanding its AI offerings through its Azure platform and its partnership with OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT.
Microsoft growth and outlook
The reorganisation comes as competition in the enterprise AI market intensifies. Microsoft’s primary rivals, including Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud, are also focusing on AI-driven business tools and infrastructure for corporate clients.
India is among Microsoft’s fastest-growing markets for cloud and AI services, with local enterprises and government bodies adopting digital transformation projects. Microsoft operates data centres in Mumbai, Pune and Chennai and has announced plans to expand its cloud capacity in the country to support AI workloads.
Shares of Microsoft closed at $432.12 (about ₹36,000) on Tuesday on the Nasdaq. The company reported revenue of $61.9 billion (₹5.16 trillion) for the quarter ended June 2025, with commercial cloud revenue accounting for more than half of total sales.

