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[The Verge] Inside Microsoft’s big Xbox leadership shake-up

Topher

Identifies as young
Xbox fans had been anticipating the retirement of Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer for years, but what most hadn't expected was the departure of Xbox president Sarah Bond too. For many outside the company, Bond seemed like Spencer's natural successor, a deputy of sorts.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Microsoft CFO Amy Hoodclearly didn't agree.

Instead of picking Bond for the role, Microsoft promoted Asha Sharma, a former Microsoft AI executive, to the top of Xbox. The decision to overlook Bond might have surprised many Xbox fans, but for the more than a dozen current and former Microsoft employees I've been speaking to, it's felt inevitable in recent months.

Phil Spencer, Microsoft's long-term Xbox chief, made the decision to resign from Microsoft last year after a tough few years for Xbox. The giant Activision Blizzard acquisition had dragged on for far longer than Microsoft had anticipated, and the need to grow the business saw Microsoft walk away from Xbox-exclusive games in favor of a multiplatform strategy. Microsoft has also been trying to reinvent the Xbox brand beyond the console, with mixed results.

Spencer's decision led to months of careful successor planning. It was announced to the world on Friday, but it was supposed to be today. Microsoft was forced to announce early because it started to leak and IGN was planning to run a story, according to sources familiar with the situation.

That kicked off a day of chaos, where teams inside Xbox were hearing the news first through reporters and news outlets, instead of via internal memos. The team running Sarah Bond's social media accounts was so unprepared that a LinkedIn postinviting people to provide feedback about Xbox accessibility features went live just before her departure was announced. It sat there for hours, until Bond's team eventually posted her own memo.

Microsoft executives shared four memos with Xbox teams on Friday, but only Phil Spencer mentioned Bond. Satya Nadella, Microsoft Gaming EVP Matt Booty, and new Microsoft Gaming CEO Asha Sharma all had kind words for Spencer, but no mention of Bond. Even Bond's own memo to her teams didn't arrive until hours after the announcement and wasn't part of Microsoft's blog.

Some Xbox employees I've been speaking with saw the writing on the wall for Bond last year. She was promoted to Xbox president in October 2023, just days after Microsoft finalized its $68.7 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard. Bond had been crucial in getting the deal over the line with regulators and slowly started to become the face of Xbox as Spencer took on the complicated duties of integrating a huge new business into Microsoft Gaming.

Six months after Bond's promotion, Xbox executive Kareem Choudhry, who reported directly to Bond, departed Microsoftand triggered another shake-up of some teams inside Xbox. Choudhry was key to Xbox's backward compatibility support and helped bring Xbox Cloud Gaming to life as xCloud in 2019.

Just weeks after Choudhry departed, former Xbox chief marketing officer Jerret West also left Microsoft in June 2024. That meant the Xbox marketing team was now reporting directly to Bond. A month later, Microsoft delivered a marketing campaign that signalled people didn't need to buy an Xbox console anymore. The message was that "you don't need an Xbox to play Xbox," because games were available through Xbox Cloud Gaming on TVs.

This was all part of the "Xbox everywhere" strategy that Bond had been pursuing, a vision to move the Xbox brand beyond its roots in console hardware. Months later the "This is an Xbox" campaign launched, with commercials that positioned a phone or a tablet as an Xbox instead of just a console. It was a confusing campaign, and I'm told it offended many Xbox employees internally.

"This is an Xbox" also debuted months after Bond appeared on stage at the Bloomberg Technology Summit and announced an Xbox mobile gaming store that was supposed to launch in July 2024. It still doesn't exist almost two years later. Although attempts to redefine Xbox were clearly tied to the mobile store efforts, Microsoft still went ahead with "This is an Xbox" after the store was delayed.

The pivot away from console, led by Bond, under Spencer's direction, hasn't gone well for Xbox. Microsoft's Xbox hardware revenue has declined for three financial years in a row, and it looks like those declining revenues are going to continue throughout fiscal 2026.

Most of the current and former Xbox employees I've spoken to in recent days are relieved that Bond is leaving Microsoft. I've heard from multiple sources that Bond has been tough to work with, and built a team structure that meant if you didn't follow the vision or questioned it, you were out. Most have praised her ability to strike partnerships with companies and developers, though.


I wrote in December 2024 that Bond had "staked her career reputation on the idea of Xbox being everywhere, across multiple platforms and devices." This also involved carefully managing her image both internally and externally, making her appear to be a gamer like Phil Spencer. In reality, she wasn't.

I understand that Bond's strategy had been failing internally and been questioned multiple times. Bond had tried to push mobile and cloud over console, to reach potentially millions more Xbox customers, but the result has been a classic case of chasing tomorrow's customers by neglecting today's.

Phil Spencer's retirement has seemed inevitable to Xbox employees, particularly over the past year. In February last year, Spencer took a long vacation, and I'm told some teams had to wait weeks for sign-off on some key changes. Shortly after this vacation, rumors started circulating inside Microsoft that Spencer was getting ready to retire. Microsoft was eventually forced to deny the rumors in July, claiming Spencer wouldn't be retiring "anytime soon."

With Spencer's retirement official, Microsoft is hitting the reset button on Bond's Xbox strategy instead of embracing it further. Microsoft Gaming CEO Asha Sharma is now promising "the return of Xbox," in a clear message to employees that the strategy over the past few years has not been working. "I want to return to the renegade spirit that built Xbox in the first place," says Sharma.

Xbox employees I've been speaking to have been concerned about the Sharma appointment, particularly because of her previous role as an AI executive at Microsoft. There is also concern about her lack of industry experience in entertainment and gaming. Sharma has been clear she's not a gamer and has spent the weekend responding to people on X and even taking game recommendations.

Some Xbox employees worry she'll force AI into everything Xbox does, but Sharma was clearly ready for that reaction. "As monetization and AI evolve and influence this future, we will not chase short-term efficiency or flood our ecosystem with soulless AI slop," said Sharma in her memo. "Games are and always will be art, crafted by humans, and created with the most innovative technology provided by us."

The other concern is that she's been appointed by Nadella as some kind of executioner of the Xbox console. Her memo doesn't suggest that, and Microsoft could have easily appointed Matt Booty into that kind of role to push game publishing instead of the Xbox console. I get the impression from sources that Microsoft wants a turnaround and is worried about losing Xbox, as it's one of its only remaining successful consumer brands.

Those who know Sharma better describe her as enthusiastic, willing to learn, and very capable of getting teams to execute on a clear vision rather than coming in as a product executioner. She also has a history at Instacart and Meta of overseeing platform launches and getting people to use products, the type of user acquisition that Xbox has failed at in recent years.

Sharma's non-gaming credentials don't mean she can't do a good job at Xbox, but it will still be a tough gig to step into the shoes of Phil Spencer, who is widely respected inside and outside of Microsoft. He will be remembered for the impact he had in turning Xbox around more than a decade ago. Xbox could have easily died after the Xbox One disaster, but Spencer made transformative decisions that have benefited the entire gaming industry.

Xbox led the way in consumer-friendly decisions like crossplay, or allowing consumers to buy a game once and play it across both PC and console. Under Spencer's watch, Game Pass has also forced competitors to offer similar subscription services.

Spencer is also departing at a time when the Xbox Series S / X generation has failed to put a dent in Sony's PlayStation sales and during a period of turmoil in the game industry and within Xbox. Layoffs and studio closures have plagued the Xbox division after the Activision Blizzard acquisition, and there are big questions about Microsoft's gaming acquisitions, the side effects of its Game Pass push, and the future of the Xbox console itself. Spencer won't be here to answer them anymore.

Sharma now has the opportunity to define the next 25 years of Xbox, and we're about to find out if she can turn Xbox around and execute on a clearer strategy. "The next 25 years belong to the teams who dare to build something surprising, something no one else is willing to try, and have the patience to see it through," says Sharma. "We have done this before, and I am here to help us do it again."



Interesting insight on Bond's "resignation". Sounds like the everything is an Xbox nonsense was her undoing.
 
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Some Xbox employees I've been speaking with saw the writing on the wall for Bond last year. She was promoted to Xbox president in October 2023, just days after Microsoft finalized its $68.7 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard. Bond had been crucial in getting the deal over the line with regulators and slowly started to become the face of Xbox as Spencer took on the complicated duties of integrating a huge new business into Microsoft Gaming.
Six months after Bond's promotion, Xbox executive Kareem Choudhry, who reported directly to Bond, departed Microsoft and triggered another shake-up of some teams inside Xbox. Choudhry was key to Xbox's backward compatibility support and helped bring Xbox Cloud Gaming to life as xCloud in 2019.
Just weeks after Choudhry departed, former Xbox chief marketing officer Jerret West also left Microsoft in June 2024. That meant the Xbox marketing team was now reporting directly to Bond. A month later, Microsoft delivered a marketing campaignthat signalled people didn't need to buy an Xbox console anymore. The message was that "you don't need an Xbox to play Xbox," because games were available through Xbox Cloud Gaming on TVs.
This was all part of the "Xbox everywhere" strategy that Bond had been pursuing, a vision to move the Xbox brand beyond its roots in console hardware. Months later the "This is an Xbox" campaign launched, with commercials that positioned a phone or a tablet as an Xbox instead of just a console. It was a confusing campaign, and I'm told it offended many Xbox employees internally.
"This is an Xbox" also debuted months after Bond appeared on stage at the Bloomberg Technology Summit and announced an Xbox mobile gaming store that was supposed to launch in July 2024. It still doesn't exist almost two years later. Although attempts to redefine Xbox were clearly tied to the mobile store efforts, Microsoft still went ahead with "This is an Xbox" after the store was delayed.
The pivot away from console, led by Bond, under Spencer's direction, hasn't gone well for Xbox. Microsoft's Xbox hardware revenue has declined for three financial years in a row, and it looks like those declining revenues are going to continue throughout fiscal 2026.

Most of the current and former Xbox employees I've spoken to in recent days are relieved that Bond is leaving Microsoft. I've heard from multiple sources that Bond has been tough to work with, and built a team structure that meant if you didn't follow the vision or questioned it, you were out. Most have praised her ability to strike partnerships with companies and developers, though.

I wrote in December 2024 that Bond had "staked her career reputation on the idea of Xbox being everywhere, across multiple platforms and devices." This also involved carefully managing her image both internally and externally, making her appear to be a gamer like Phil Spencer. In reality, she wasn't.

I understand that Bond's strategy had been failing internally and been questioned multiple times. Bond had tried to push mobile and cloud over console, to reach potentially millions more Xbox customers, but the result has been a classic case of chasing tomorrow's customers by neglecting today's.
 
I wrote in December 2024 that Bond had "staked her career reputation on the idea of Xbox being everywhere, across multiple platforms and devices."

Goodbye GIF
 
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The console was dying before Bond took over, it seems like Xbox Internal is upset she didn't try to cut off the infected legs, thighs, right arm, and left hand in an effort to save it. 🤷🏾‍♂️
 
Very convenient.

MS journalist doing the dirty job, Sarah bond is the devil and Phil stupid.

Of course natella who was the boss is a poor víctim or what.
 
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Are we really meant to believe that Sarah Bond was the true villain here?

Nutella was begging her to stop chasing the cloud. "Please Sarah, no! Xbox is a console!"

lol
 
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And the press got their scapegoat to explain the "sudden resignation" of Bond that just happened to coincide at the exact same time with the "planned retirement" of Phil that was announced on a Friday but effective the following Monday but was totally planned. For months.

Spencer and Bond were both shit, but the official story is a fucking joke of a lie. They were both shit canned for years upon years of ineptitude and to pave the way for the heavily AI future of the brand with a new CEO with zero experience in the games industry to oversee the transition.

The fact the press is dancing to this spin without question is disgusting.
 
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The console was dying before Bond took over, it seems like Xbox Internal is upset she didn't try to cut off the infected legs, thighs, right arm, and left hand in an effort to save it. 🤷🏾‍♂️
you cant save something by giving people incentives not to buy it.

Her strategy was retarded. Plain and simple. Consoles need to be sold to consumers as devices that do things their competitors dont or cant. It's no different from any other product. She didnt understand this basic fact. If you put all your games on your competitors platforms, you dont sell your own platform. You dont make money from your own store. You dont make money from your own subscription services. You dont make money from third party games.

It's console business 101 and she failed at that. under Phil's direction but Phil is a failure and she shouldve had the common sense to say no, phil you are a fucking retard and you are killing xbox.
 
"This is an Xbox" also debuted months after Bond appeared on stage at the Bloomberg Technology Summit and announced an Xbox mobile gaming store that was supposed to launch in July 2024. It still doesn't exist almost two years later. Although attempts to redefine Xbox were clearly tied to the mobile store efforts, Microsoft still went ahead with "This is an Xbox" after the store was delayed.

The pivot away from console, led by Bond, under Spencer's direction, hasn't gone well for Xbox. Microsoft's Xbox hardware revenue has declined for three financial years in a row, and it looks like those declining revenues are going to continue throughout fiscal 2026.

Most of the current and former Xbox employees I've spoken to in recent days are relieved that Bond is leaving Microsoft.
That pivot away from the console will continue without Sarah Bond in charge if the new nextgen Xbox is just a PC in disguise. This is Microsoft's only chance at rescuing the Xbox brand and competing with Steam/SteamOS.
 
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Regardless of how well she was liked or not, trying to shift the "everything is an Xbox" solely to her is silly.

"In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Xbox CEO Phil Spencer discussed the future of the Xbox brand as well as the advertising campaign. "It's an interesting topic because as we look at the brand, as we're changing the brand, [it] means something different," Spencer said. "It literally was a box when it first launched. It was the Direct X box. What it's grown into now is more accessibility. Xbox isn't just one device, Xbox is on your smart TV, Xbox is on your PC, Xbox is on your phone, and we're in the middle of that transition."

I guess next she will be responsible for just four games coming to PlayStation?
 
If I recall correctly there was an internal battle as to whether Call of Duty should be a Day 1 on Game Pass and Bond was the one pushing for it
 
I just checked the pulse of an Xbox forum I used to inhabit, a decade ago. Crazy levels of delusion going on there.

Phil was great, he did wonderful things for Xbox, Xbox is in a great position, the future of Xbox has never looked brighter. lol
 
" Despite numerous failings over the years and receiving (even stating in a humorous way himself) a substantial salary, we won't hold a certain individual responsible for anything significant , the accountability only comes into effect when there is positive outcomes"
 
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Sarah Bond being responsible for killing Xbox exclusives and not Phil or Satya is crazy
Maybe she wanted Xbox to move away from hardware? That would have 100% pissed off console hardware purists, though, because that just signals you're moving to become a publisher eventually instead.
 
I just checked the pulse of an Xbox forum I used to inhabit, a decade ago. Crazy levels of delusion going on there.

Phil was great, he did wonderful things for Xbox, Xbox is in a great position, the future of Xbox has never looked brighter. lol

I still see some of those delusions here from some.
 
How are they planning to get Xbox hardware relevant again when you can play all its titles on a PlayStation? Unless they are planning to completely reverse course on multiplatform than all of this "the return of Xbox" talk is pointless, the damage is done.
 
How are they planning to get Xbox hardware relevant again when you can play all its titles on a PlayStation? Unless they are planning to completely reverse course on multiplatform than all of this "the return of Xbox" talk is pointless, the damage is done.

It's marketing. "Return to Xbox" is the inverse of "this is an Xbox". So yeah, as others are pointing out, Microsoft is laying all the ills of Xbox at Sarah Bond's feet, whether it is justified or not.
 
Sure blame it all on Sarah 😂
Are we really meant to believe that Sarah Bond was the true villain here?
The departing scapegoat has been set just like Don Mattrick. Will people ever learn?
Sarah Bond being responsible for killing Xbox exclusives and not Phil or Satya is crazy
This article is hilarious. Bond gets all the blame for the bad decisions at Xbox while Phil gets the praise for the good ones.
Reads like a well-prepared corporate hit-piece, lol. We've read the mails, it's not on Bond.

She's fulfilling the role she was appointed to. Be the face of the deeply unpopular stuff, and take the fall when they become so unpopular we have to disown them.

Not saying She's blameless in any of this, but this shitshow started years before she joined Microsoft
 
This article is a hit piece.

They make it seem like Phil Spencer was a gamer, and Bond wasn't, but the truth is NEITHER were gamers. Does anyone really think the CEO of a multi-national games platform has time to grind in WoW? And even given Bond's responsibilities, she was still operating under Phil's watch, same as Matt Booty was, given Phil's rank superseded both of theirs.

I expect nothing less from a corporation that has used media to astro-turf and spin narratives to protect their favorites (and attempt absolving them of any blame). Is it really that hard to blame Phil Spencer and Satya Nadella for being the main reasons Xbox console hardware has declined to a near-death state over the past five years? And if the "This is an Xbox" campaign was so bad (which it was) and pitched by Sarah Bond, why didn't Spencer or other higher-ups squash that before it ever got traction? It almost smells like Microsoft intentionally let a value-eroding marketing shift take place that worked against the best interests of what shareholders would've wanted, simply to set someone up for....why, exactly?

Hopefully shareholders press Nadella on why he let the strategies Sarah Bond was supposedly responsible for, if they did not approve of those strategies, knowing they would erode value in the Xbox brand? Because all things considered, Nadella's an even bigger screw-up for Microsoft given the AI gambit's shed almost $400 billion of their market share out of the picture (with more shedding to come). That's a lot more impactful than anything Sarah Bond "supposedly" did to harm the Xbox brand (which, again, would implicate Phil Spencer as ultimately responsible since he was her boss and had to approve of everything).
 
This article is hilarious. Bond gets all the blame for the bad decisions at Xbox while Phil gets the praise for the good ones.
I bet Phil's a cool guy to be around at the office, I'd cover for him too.

Shitting on him would hurt the brand's image ("You fired the fucking Hexen T-shirt guy, do you hate gamers?!"). This Bond lady seemed nice, but I think she was hired to be a fall person or something, someone gamers wouldn't identify with. Office politics, or not. These people sign NDAs that could probably put you out on the streets for the rest of your lives if you slip up, so press can basically come up with whatever if they wanted to.

It's why these people get paid a lot, because sometimes you don't get paid a lot for very long.
 
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It's marketing. "Return to Xbox" is the inverse of "this is an Xbox". So yeah, as others are pointing out, Microsoft is laying all the ills of Xbox at Sarah Bond's feet, whether it is justified or not.
Agreed,it's hilarious tho "all the things you hate about Xbox is Sarah Bonds fault…we won't change it…but blame her"
 
Lol. How convenient now. I swear, do all corporations use the same playbook? She literally didn't do anything as an Xbox executive, either good or bad. All we ever got from her, was a bunch of corpo word salads.
 
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So now the marching orders are:

- Let's try to convince PS retirement was planned... it clearly wasn't
- 100% of xbox fault was Sarah's... that is cowardice in this most pure state.
- Let's return to the past, using someone that clearly does not even KNOW what the past really is...
 
She's fulfilling the role she was appointed to. Be the face of the deeply unpopular stuff, and take the fall when they become so unpopular we have to disown them.

Not saying She's blameless in any of this, but this shitshow started years before she joined Microsoft
I mean, the most meaty and inept quotes from FTC email leak were from recently promoted Matt Booty.
 
Xbox was already a walking corpse long before Sarah was hired.

Using her as a scapegoat doesn't negate the fact that Xbox was shit for years before she was hired.

She was shit at her job and didn't understand the gaming business or culture which is on par with most MS executives that they hire to run Xbox.

What Xbox needs is someone like J Allard or Peter Moore running the show but they keep bringing in all these clueless suits who keep fucking everything up. Sharma is the latest example of this, she's never worked in the industry before and she's being hired to probably streamline their business and incorporate more AI into it to bring costs down. I'm predicting the results of her tenure still won't bring the changes gamers want to Xbox and we'll be back here again if Xbox is still around in another round of years.
 
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Funny how none of these "journalists" say who was ultimately responsible for allowing that disastrous Halo Infinite showing or the roster of mediocre games being allowed to release way before Sarah Bond joined Xbox.

Something really stinks about Spencer's relationship with the media.
 
Reading this, I can see it all playing out. Is it true, who knows. But this is how shit goes down in business. Phil was tasked with sorting Acti / Blizzard out. That will have been a complete head fuck. Sarah goes with an idea that Phil signs off. He is pretty much done with it all at this point.

She goes for the Xbox is everywhere campaign, leading the marketing team....Game Over.

This is a very positive article from the Verge. Lots of answers to why it was handled why it was though.

Phil, wasn't kicked out immediately like some have guessed on here.

Greg, at Kinda Funny is going to feel like an idiot me thinks!
 
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Some Xbox employees worry she'll force AI into everything Xbox does, but Sharma was clearly ready for that reaction. "As monetization and AI evolve and influence this future, we will not chase short-term efficiency or flood our ecosystem with soulless AI slop," said Sharma in her memo. "Games are and always will be art, crafted by humans, and created with the most innovative technology provided by us."
Bullshit.

You don't put a chief AI architect there unless the goal is to infect everything with it.

Proof? Their entire OS and application systems as well as the focus of the company.

Bet on it.
 
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