AI is raising the bar for sales — and Microsoft's layoffs prove the 'relationship guy' is out, says a software investor
Microsoft began culling less than 4% of its workforce, or about 9,000 employees, earlier this month, many of them generalist sales reps. That move reflects a broader shift: Salespeople who rely on soft skills may soon be replaced with solution engineers who know the product inside out, Lemkin saidon an episode of the "Twenty Minute VC" podcast published Thursday.
"My rough sense is 30% to 40% of one-to-two call sales reps are going to be replaced by AI," he said.
Microsoft is doing what other companiesare only thinking about, he added.
"We're not going to have a guy that doesn't know our product in the age of AI show up to big deals," Lemkin said. "I would rather have a solution engineer that knows this cold, that partners with somebody, or is less good in sales."
"You better be worried if you're a generalist sales guy that thinks being a relationship guy wins today. That's Microsoft's point," he said.
Lemkin also said AI has raised the bar for customer expectations. Companies would want to "replace folks that don't know my product with folks that do," he added.
Rory O'Driscoll, a longtime general partner at Scale Venture Partners, said on the episode that Microsoft's layoffs weren't framed as the company replacing employees with AI.
"It was couched as a 'replace with better people' story," he said. "It's hard to argue with that."
"It's always impressive to me that these companies with 40% operating margins are still willing to grind another point out of it," O'Driscoll said. "It's just so capitalistic."
Lemkin and O'Driscoll did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider. A representative for Microsoft declined to comment.
Microsoft rewires its salesforce
Microsoft's latest round of layoffs comes as the company revises its strategy for selling AI tools amid increasing competition from OpenAI and Google.
The job cuts targeted traditional salespeople that the company intends to replace with more technical salespeople, Business Insider learned earlier this month from sources familiar with the plans and internal documents.
Microsoft confirmed it's replacing some specialist roles with solutions engineers to deepen the technical and industry understanding among its salesforce, and that it plans to hire more salespeople outside its headquarters to get more sellers out in the field.
The company has received feedback from customers that they had to engage with too many salespeople before getting down to the technical details and demos. "The customer wants Microsoft to bring their technical people in front of them quickly," one of the people said. "We need someone who is more technical, much earlier in the cycle."
In an internal memo viewed by Business Insider, Microsoft's sales chief, Judson Althoff, said he is revamping his unit to make it more AI-focused.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Amazon Warns AI Capacity Limits, Stock Retreats
Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) slid after its earnings call because Andy Jassy was blunt: AI demand is real, but the company can't just snap its fingers and supply enough capacity. Electricity and chip shortages are the choke points, and he said it will take several quarters to work through it, even if things slowly improve each period. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Signs with NVDA. He pushed back on the idea Amazon is losing the AI race and leaned into the spend$31.4Billion of AI-heavy capex in Q2 is the kind of run rate the back half is built on, with more going into chips, data centers and power. Tariffs haven't bitten yet in H1, he said, but who ends up paying higher U.S. rates later is still unclear. That caution rubbed some investors the wrong way. Lucas Ma of Envision Research warned the heavy investment and mounting competition from GOOG (NASDAQ:GOOG) and META (NASDAQ:META) could squeeze free cash flow, making capital allocation riskier if the AI arms race keeps accelerating. Amazon is chasing a big AI opportunity while bumping up against real limits, so growth hinges on execution and capital discipline. The next signs to watch are whether capacity actually ramps as promised and whether margin or cash flow pressure shows up once tariffs shift. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Super Micro Q4 Earnings Loom--Should You Buy, Hold, or Sell?
Aug 1 - Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) prepares to report fiscal fourth-quarter 2025 results on August 5, with analysts watching for a potential earnings surprise as the company leans on surging AI infrastructure demand. Wall Street expects revenue near $6 billion, slightly below the midpoint of management's prior outlook, and EPS estimates also reflect modest expectations. The San Jose-based server and data center solutions provider navigated a soft fiscal Q3 as revenue came in at $4.6 billion, up 19% year-over-year but just shy of forecasts. Management attributed the shortfall to customers delaying purchases amid the transition from Nvidia's (NVDA) Hopper to Blackwell GPUs, with deferred orders expected to contribute to a stronger Q4 and early fiscal 2026. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 7 Warning Signs with SMCI. Super Micro continues to expand globally, launching over 30 new Blackwell-based AI server solutions and forming a multi?year, $20 billion partnership with Saudi DataVolt to deploy ultra?dense GPU platforms in the U.S., U.K., and Saudi Arabia. With 9% share of the AI platform market and 31% in branded AI servers, the company positions itself for growth as liquid?cooled and high?density solutions drive demand. Investors now look for confirmation that Q3 was a reset, not a slowdown. Based on the one year price targets offered by 16 analysts, the average target price for Super Micro Computer Inc is $41.06 with a high estimate of $70.00 and a low estimate of $15.00. The average target implies a downside of -27.40% from the current price of $56.55. Based on GuruFocus estimates, the estimated GF Value for Super Micro Computer Inc in one year is $71.09, suggesting a upside of +25.71% from the current price of $56.55. Gf value is Gurufocus' estimate of the fair value that the stock should be traded at. It is calculated based on the historical multiples the stock has traded at previously, as well as past business growth and the future estimates of the business' performance. For deeper insights, visit the forecast page. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.


New York Post
21 minutes ago
- New York Post
Delta Air Lines tries to calm fury over ticket prices, telling lawmakers it won't use AI
Delta Air Lines said Friday it will not use artificial intelligence to set personalized ticket prices for passengers after facing sharp criticism from lawmakers. Last week, Democratic Senators Ruben Gallego, Mark Warner and Richard Blumenthal said they believed the Atlanta-based airline would use AI to set individual prices, which would 'likely mean fare price increases up to each individual consumer's personal 'pain point.'' Delta has said it plans to deploy AI-based revenue management technology across 20% of its domestic network by the end of 2025 in partnership with Fetcherr, an AI pricing company. Delta has said it plans to deploy AI-based revenue management technology across 20% of its domestic network by the end of 2025. AFP via Getty Images 'There is no fare product Delta has ever used, is testing or plans to use that targets customers with individualized prices based on personal data,' Delta told the senators in a letter on Friday, seen by Reuters. 'Our ticket pricing never takes into account personal data.' The senators cited a comment in December by Delta President Glen Hauenstein that the carrier's AI price-setting technology is capable of setting fares based on a prediction of 'the amount people are willing to pay for the premium products related to the base fares.' Last week, American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said using AI to set ticket prices could hurt consumer trust. 'This is not about bait and switch. This is not about tricking,' Isom said on an earnings call, adding 'talk about using AI in that way, I don't think it's appropriate. And certainly from American, it's not something we will do.' Delta said airlines have used dynamic pricing for more than three decades, in which pricing fluctuates based on a variety of factors like overall customer demand, fuel prices and competition but not a specific consumer's personal information. 'There is no fare product Delta has ever used, is testing or plans to use that targets customers with individualized prices based on personal data,' Delta told the senators in a letter. AFP via Getty Images 'Given the tens of millions of fares and hundreds of thousands of routes for sale at any given time, the use of new technology like AI promises to streamline the process by which we analyze existing data and the speed and scale at which we can respond to changing market dynamics,' Delta's letter said. It added that AI can 'assist our analysts with pricing by reducing manual processes, accelerating analysis and improving time to market for pricing adjustments.'