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Microsoft is reorganizing leadership after executive Rajesh Jha announced his retirement, moving Teams to report to Ryan Roslansky.
In short: Microsoft is reshuffling leadership, and Microsoft Teams will now report to Ryan Roslansky, the executive who runs LinkedIn and Office.
Microsoft is making big internal changes after Rajesh Jha, a long-time executive, announced he is retiring after more than 35 years at the company. Jha oversaw groups responsible for major products like Windows, Office, Copilot, and Microsoft 365.
According to The Verge, Microsoft Teams is moving to report to Ryan Roslansky. Roslansky is the CEO of LinkedIn and took on an expanded role as head of Office last year. He will now lead a new group called the Work Experiences Group, which is essentially the part of Microsoft focused on work tools people use every day.
Another key change involves Charles Lamanna. An internal memo seen by The Verge says Lamanna will lead a team called Copilot, Agents, and Platform. Copilot is Microsoft’s built-in AI helper (like a writing and research assistant inside Microsoft apps). This group will include parts of Microsoft 365 and Dynamics 365, plus services such as OneDrive and SharePoint, which many workplaces use for files and internal websites.
Microsoft’s Windows and Surface leader, Pavan Davuluri, will continue to lead Windows and devices. Starting June 30, Roslansky, Lamanna, Davuluri, and Perry Clarke will report directly to CEO Satya Nadella.
If you use Microsoft products at work, these org changes can shape what gets built and what gets attention. Putting Teams, Office, and other work tools under one leader could mean tighter coordination, like having one manager oversee the whole “office toolkit” instead of separate departments.
Source: The Verge AI