Startups & Technology

Smartbird’s AI Pivot: A Corporate Transformation Without Employees

Smartbird’s AI Pivot: A Corporate Transformation Without Employees

The transition represents a stark departure from the company's retail origins. Carlsten, an AWS veteran with an engineering PhD, is currently tasked with assembling a leadership team and securing office space, effectively treating the public company like a well-funded startup. While the shoe business officially shuttered yesterday, the firm’s new mandate centers on providing managed AI compute services for clients prioritizing data sovereignty over public cloud scalability.

Smartbird aims to carve out a niche among pharmaceutical, energy, and financial firms that require direct control over their server infrastructure. Unlike competitors chasing massive scale, Carlsten intends to focus on agility and bespoke clusters. She expects to deploy infrastructure for several customers by year-end, though the firm faces competition from established players like Hewlett Packard and Equinix. Despite the skepticism surrounding the pivot, Carlsten maintains the strategy is a long-term play, bolstered by a $700,000 salary and a $9 million stock award to lead a transition that also saw the company abandon its former public benefit corporation status.

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