HomeNewsTrendsSatya Nadella reveals what he would do if he ever quit Microsoft: 'Would love to find some domain...'

Satya Nadella reveals what he would do if he ever quit Microsoft: 'Would love to find some domain...'

Despite working with Microsoft for 34 years, CEO Satya Nadella said that each year he feels more excited at the prospect of working with the tech giant with a sense of purpose and mission.

February 24, 2025 / 14:00 IST
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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella spoke about using a metric used to measure efficiency of AI models to improve healthcare and education sectors.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella spoke about using a metric used to measure efficiency of AI models to improve healthcare and education sectors.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has spent 34 years working with the tech giant. And each year he said he felt more excited about being at Microsoft as opposed to thinking of himself as just an employee of the company. But, if he ever had to quit the company, what would he do next? When Nadella was asked this question at a recent podcast hosted by Dwarkesh Patel, his first instinct was to reply that he would never leave Microsoft.

A couple of seconds later, however, he reconsidered and said that he would work with "tokens per watt per dollar"--a metric that’s reshaping AI efficiency--in sectors such as health, education, and public sector institutions.

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"If you did leave Microsoft, what company would you start?" Patel asked. "Company I would start...? Man, that's where the company man in me says that I'll never leave Microsoft," Nadella said, before adding that technology is the greatest democratising force.

"I feel like finally, we have that ability. If you say those tokens per dollar per watt is what we can generate, I would love to find some domain in which that can be applied, where it is so underserved. That's where healthcare, education... Public sector would be another place," the Microsoft CEO said. "If you take those domains, which are the underserved places, where my life as a citizen of this country or a member of this society or anywhere, would I be better off if somehow all this abundance translated into better healthcare, better education, and better public sector institutions serving me as a citizen? That would be a place."