Starbucks named Amazon executive Anand Varadarajan as its new chief technology officer, bringing in a leader with nearly two decades of experience in Amazon’s grocery technology and supply chain operations.
Varadarajan, a 19-year Amazon veteran, will succeed Deb Hall Lefevre, who departed the company in September, according to the announcement Friday from Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol.
The hire comes as Starbucks works to overhaul technology in its stores to improve order flow and speed of service. The technology upgrades represent a critical component of the “Back to Starbucks” turnaround effort Niccol launched after becoming CEO in September 2024.
Separately, Starbucks stated in its latest 10K filing that it needs to continue improving its marketing, data analytics, and artificial intelligence tools or risk losing consumer interest and market share.
Ningyu Chen had been serving as Starbucks’ interim CTO since Lefevre’s departure in the fall.
Varadarajan “knows how to create systems that are reliable and secure, drive operational excellence and scale solutions that keep customers at the center,” Niccol wrote in the memo announcing the hire. He also praised Varadarajan for caring “deeply about supporting and developing the people behind the scenes that build and enable the technology we use.”
At Amazon, Varadarajan most recently led technology and supply chain for the company’s worldwide grocery business, including Whole Foods Market and Amazon Fresh. He previously held software engineering roles at Oracle and several startups before his nearly two-decade tenure at Amazon.
Varadarajan will join the Seattle-based coffee giant as executive vice president and CTO on January 19, reporting directly to Niccol and joining the company’s executive leadership team.
He holds an undergraduate degree from the Indian Institute of Technology and master’s degrees from Purdue University in civil engineering and the University of Washington in computer science.
Niccol noted in the memo that Varadarajan is a marathon runner working toward completing all seven World Marathon Majors and a coffee enthusiast who starts most days with a tall latte, suggesting the new CTO will bring personal passion to his professional role.
The Amazon grocery experience Varadarajan brings represents particularly relevant expertise for Starbucks’ challenges. Amazon’s grocery operations have struggled with similar issues around order fulfillment, delivery timing, and customer experience that Starbucks now faces in its mobile ordering system.
Amazon Fresh stores have experimented with various technologies to streamline the shopping and checkout experience, including Just Walk Out technology and Dash Carts. While not all experiments succeeded, the testing process generated valuable learnings about what works and what doesn’t in high-volume retail technology.
Whole Foods integration after Amazon’s 2017 acquisition required merging different technology systems, supply chains, and operational cultures. Varadarajan’s involvement in that integration provides experience relevant to Starbucks’ need to unify systems across thousands of locations.
The mobile ordering challenges Starbucks faces have created bottlenecks in stores where baristas struggle to balance digital orders with in-person customers. Long waits for mobile orders have frustrated customers and prompted some to abandon the platform.
Niccol’s “Back to Starbucks” initiative aims to recapture the coffee shop experience that made the brand successful rather than simply optimizing for transaction speed. Technology plays a crucial role in this vision by handling routine tasks efficiently so baristas can focus on customer interaction.
The 10K filing’s warning about needing to improve marketing, data analytics, and AI tools reveals concerns at the board level about competitive threats. Competitors using more sophisticated data analysis to target customers or optimize operations could steal market share.
Chen serving as interim CTO since September provided continuity during the transition but lacked permanent authority to drive major strategic changes. Varadarajan’s appointment with direct reporting to the CEO signals technology’s elevated importance in the turnaround strategy.



