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Home PR Solutions

The Scoop: Amazon’s leaked internal docs soften language around automation

Josh by Josh
October 31, 2025
in PR Solutions
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Plus: King Charles sends clear message as he strips Andrew of title, home; Palantir comms chief, CEO display mixed messaging.

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Internal documents obtained by The New York Times showed that Amazon is planning to automate a huge portion of its operations over the next decade.

The leaked documents suggest the company may replace or avoid hiring up to 600,000 U.S. workers by 2033, largely through robotics and “advanced technology.”

By 2027 alone, Amazon is expected to avoid hiring about 160,000 roles, and the automation push could save the company roughly $12.6 billion between 2025 and 2027, Entrepreneur reports.

The leaked plan also showed how Amazon is thinking about shaping the narrative around this shift, using softer language like “advanced technology” and “cobot” instead of “robots.” This appears to be an attempt to humanize its tech use and reinforce its image as a good corporate citizen in communities where jobs might be lost.

In response, Amazon says the documents represent only one team’s view and don’t reflect the company’s full hiring strategy. The company also said it’s still hiring, particularly for the holiday season.

Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said:

“Leaked documents often paint an incomplete and misleading picture of our plans, and that’s the case here. In our written narrative culture, thousands of documents circulate throughout the company at any given time, each with varying degrees of accuracy and timeliness.”

Why it matters: When you’re talking about replacing jobs with machines, optics matter enormously. The language, framing and timing can make or break public perception.

Amazon’s internal thinking around its terminology already suggests they understand that.

PR pros need to be deeply strategic about how they talk automation, not just technically, but plainly sharing what their intent is and how they plan on getting there. Without this, organizations risk losing trust and credibility.

Once people feel a company is hiding behind euphemisms, credibility can erode fast. But when a brand acknowledges the tension honestly like “yes, technology is changing jobs, and yes, we’re planning responsibly for that,” it keeps the conversation grounded in integrity rather than being perceived as a spin.

The messaging should start from the perspective of how people will feel about it, not just how leadership rationalizes it. That means emphasizing safety, skill development and new opportunities, rather than just cost savings or efficiency gains.

Editor’s Top Reads:

  • King Charles has taken the unprecedented step of stripping his brother, formerly Prince Andrew, of his royal titles, honors and his residence at Royal Lodge, publicly making a clean break from the controversies tied to Andrew’s association with Jeffrey Epstein and resurfacing abuse allegations. Charles’s announcement didn’t mince words. The AP reports a statement from Buckingham Palace: “His Majesty has today initiated a formal process to remove the Style, Titles and Honors of Prince Andrew … Prince Andrew will now be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.” The statement added that “these censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him,” and ended with emphasis that “their Majesties … wish to make clear that their thoughts and utmost sympathies have been, and will remain with, the victims and survivors of any and all forms of abuse.” This is a significant maneuver. Charles is sending a very clear message that the monarchy must protect its reputation, even when it means taking dramatic steps against a family member. The public stripping of Andrew’s titles is a high-stakes act of distancing and it says the institution is willing to sacrifice personal ties to preserve legitimacy and trust. The move underscores just how sensitive image, unity and messaging are when centuries of tradition and modern media collide.
  • Palantir is facing a messaging problem after comments made at a recent summit showed tension inside the company over its increasingly political tone. As CEO Alex Karp appears to be embracing Donald Trump–era politics, recently donating to the planned White House ballroom, the company’s on head of global communications, Lisa Gordon, publicly called the shift “concerning.” She added: “I think it’s going to be challenging, as a lot of the company is moving pro-Trum-, you know, is moving in a certain direction.” The comments were soon removed from social media platforms YouTube, X and Instagram by The Information, who was covering the event, CNBC Following this, Gordon walked back her comments when she wrote in an email to the outlet that Palantir “welcomes diverse opinions.” From a comms perspective, it’s never good when leadership and top spokespeople send mixed messages. It creates confusion about the company’s identity and values, raising questions about whether employees and executives are aligned. When messaging veers more political, inconsistent communication makes it harder to tell what the company stands for and that uncertainty can undermine both credibility and trust.
  • Google is pushing back hard on recent claims that Gmail was hacked. After headlines began popping up this week about a potential breach, the company issued a statement on X that said: “Reports of a Gmail security breach impacting millions of users are false. Gmail’s defenses are strong, and users remain protected.” The company says what’s really going on is a misunderstanding tied to previously leaked credential databases and that no new breach has occurred. “The inaccurate reports are stemming from a misunderstanding of infostealer databases, which routinely compile various credential theft activity occurring across the web. It’s not reflective of a new attack aimed at any one person, tool, or platform.” Google went on to explain steps users can take to ensure two factor authentication. The concerns here are twofold: combatting misinformation and reassuring stakeholders of their safety and privacy. Google was swift to respond in plain language, emphasizing that they have not been hacked and user information is safe. They also wrote several updates and follow ups to this, explaining the misunderstanding, what actually happened and added steps users can take to protect themselves. Speed and clarity matter most in a security scare; the longer a company waits, the more the narrative gets away from them. Google wasted no time getting the message out there and clarifying the information.

Courtney Blackann is a communications reporter. Connect with her on LinkedIn or email her at courtneyb@ragan.com.

The post The Scoop: Amazon’s leaked internal docs soften language around automation appeared first on PR Daily.



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