Apple Inc. revealed a significant reorganization of its artificial intelligence operations as John Giannandrea, senior vice president for Machine Learning and AI Strategy, prepares to step down. Giannandrea will transition into an advisory role before retiring in spring 2026, ending a tenure that reshaped Apple’s machine-learning capabilities and internal research structure.
Giannandrea joined Apple in 2018 and built the teams behind Apple Foundation Models, Search and Knowledge systems, ML Research, and core AI Infrastructure. His portfolio will now be divided between Sabih Khan and Eddy Cue, aligning machine-learning operations with Apple’s broader product and services divisions.
Subramanya Takes Charge of Apple Foundation Models
In the same announcement, Apple confirmed that Amar Subramanya has been appointed vice president of AI, reporting directly to software chief Craig Federighi. Subramanya will oversee Apple Foundation Models, ML research initiatives, and AI Safety and Evaluation—pillars increasingly central to the company’s long-term strategy.
His background includes serving as corporate vice president of AI at Microsoft and holding a 16-year tenure at Google, where he led engineering for the Gemini Assistant. Apple executives say his experience strengthens the company’s positioning as it races to deepen its generative AI capabilities.
Key additions under Subramanya’s leadership include:
- Oversight of Apple Foundation Models
- End-to-end responsibility for ML research
- Direction of AI Safety and Evaluation processes
Apple CEO Tim Cook praised both leaders, stating that Giannandrea was instrumental in “advancing our AI work,” while welcoming Subramanya into a role central to Apple’s next stage of innovation.
AI Strategy Realigns Amid Intensified Competition
The restructuring follows mounting scrutiny over Apple’s slower rollout of generative AI features compared with rivals including OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft. The company has also faced delays in delivering its Apple Intelligence enhancements initially promised for 2024.
Federighi—now assuming expanded oversight—has been a driving force behind Apple’s upcoming AI integrations, including efforts to deliver a more personalized Siri experience next year. Apple views the shift as a strategic consolidation aimed at accelerating development timelines and reinforcing the company’s position in the rapidly evolving AI landscape.
Industry pressures shaping Apple’s move:
- Intensifying competition from major AI-first companies
- Delays in releasing Apple Intelligence features
- Rising expectations for next-generation Siri and device-level AI
As Apple restructures its leadership and doubles down on foundational AI technologies, the company signals a renewed focus: move faster, unify development efforts, and close the competitive gap in advanced machine intelligence.


