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After forcing workers back to the office, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are now letting their staff work remotely—but only for the World Cup

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C-SuiteNext to Lead

What Amazon’s Fortune 500 rise teaches about experimenting beyond the core business

By
Ruth Umoh
Ruth Umoh
Editor, Next to Lead
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By
Ruth Umoh
Ruth Umoh
Editor, Next to Lead
Down Arrow Button Icon
February 23, 2026, 7:32 AM ET
Amazon claimed the top spot on the Fortune 500, surpassing longtime No. 1 Walmart.
Amazon claimed the top spot on the Fortune 500, surpassing longtime No. 1 Walmart.NurPhoto / Contributor
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Amazon appears poised to take the top spot on the Fortune 500, edging out Walmart for the first time in more than a decade. It’s a symbolic changing of the guard in corporate America, writes my colleague Phil Wahba in this must-read feature.

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For years, the rivalry between Amazon and Walmart looked like a fight over retail: e-commerce versus stores, software versus logistics, disruption versus incumbency. But Amazon’s rise to the top of the Fortune 500 points to a deeper leadership lesson, one that goes well beyond who sells the most goods.

Amazon did not overtake Walmart by simply becoming a better retailer. It won by refusing to rely on retail economics alone. While competitors focused on squeezing more efficiency from their core business, Amazon gradually built additional engines with entirely different financial dynamics. Amazon Web Services, originally created to power internal operations, became a high-margin cloud giant that now generates a disproportionate share of the company’s operating profit. That profitability gave Amazon something many large companies struggle to achieve: strategic freedom, the ability to invest aggressively, absorb failed experiments, and keep evolving.

The companies pulling ahead often grow through one business and earn through another. Case in point: Microsoft used cloud to reshape the economics of software. Apple used services to extend the value of hardware. Amazon used cloud profits to fund its retail reinvention.

For leaders, this is not just a story about customer obsession or innovation culture, ideas now familiar to every executive team. It is about how companies structure profit and growth. The companies that win are not merely optimizing their core businesses but are, instead, building adjacent profit engines that fund their future.

 Scale alone no longer protects incumbents. Economic flexibility does.

Today, the real risk for leaders at large-scale companies is becoming trapped inside a business model that limits how boldly they can move. Perhaps the question every leader should ask themselves is: What business are we building today that will give us room to innovate for tomorrow?

Ruth Umoh
ruth.umoh@fortune.com

Smarter in seconds

Rookie CEOs. Companies are cycling through CEOs—and replacing them with first-timers

Boardroom blitz. CEO hopefuls have a new rival for the top job: their own board directors

Boss bot. Sam Altman says not even the CEO’s job is safe from AI as it will soon perform the work better than ‘certainly me’

Leadership lesson

Google DeepMind founder and CEO Demis Hassabis on the innovator’s dilemma: “ If we don’t disrupt ourselves, someone else will. So you’re better off being ahead of that and doing it on your terms.”

News to know

The Supreme Court ruled that President Trump lacked authority to impose tariffs using emergency powers, but left unanswered whether companies can recover the roughly $200 billion already paid. Fortune

As political winds shift, companies are appointing fewer women and minority candidates to corporate boards. WSJ

In one turbulent month, xAI merged with SpaceX, lost two cofounders, and adopted a more Musk-driven, war-room culture, employees say. BI

Microsoft gaming chief Phil Spencer is leaving after 38 years, with former Instacart exec Asha Sharma taking over amid mounting challenges for Xbox. CNBC

A Federal Reserve study says migrant inflows eased labor shortages, but renewed crackdowns may slow construction and push up wages and home prices. Fortune

Donald Trump said Netflix should remove board member Susan Rice or face unspecified consequences, following her remarks about corporate responses to the president. Fortune

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.
About the Author
By Ruth UmohEditor, Next to Lead
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Ruth Umoh is the Next to Lead editor at Fortune, covering the next generation of C-Suite leaders. She also authors Fortune’s Next to Lead newsletter.

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