It’s a homecoming of sorts at Amazon this week. Jamie Siminoff, the scrappy entrepreneur who turned a garage-born idea into the doorbell empire known as Ring, is back at the tech giant—just two years after stepping away. According to a report from Bloomberg, Siminoff has returned as a vice president, taking the reins of not just Ring but also Blink, Amazon Key, and Sidewalk, Amazon’s ambitious neighborhood connectivity project. For those who’ve followed Siminoff’s journey from a Shark Tank reject to a household name, this feels like a full-circle moment.
Siminoff steps into the role previously held by Liz Hamren, who took over after his departure in 2023. Hamren, by all accounts, kept the ship steady—something Siminoff himself acknowledges. In an internal Amazon Q&A shared with employees this week, he praised her leadership, saying, “Liz and the team have done an awesome job driving the business, delivering strong results, and bringing a lot of delightful experiences to neighbors.” But now, it’s his turn again, and he’s got big ideas about where to take things next.
So, why now? Siminoff points to the seismic shifts happening in tech. “The AI transformation happening right now is a once-in-a-generation opportunity,” he said in the Q&A. It’s not hard to see why that might lure him back. Ring, with its cameras and doorbells, has long been about more than just catching porch pirates—it’s a data-gathering machine, perfectly positioned to tap into the AI boom. Add in Blink’s affordable security cameras, Amazon Key’s smart lock system, and Sidewalk’s mesh network, and you’ve got a suite of tools ripe for an AI-powered overhaul. Siminoff seems to think so, anyway.
He’s not doing this alone, either. Siminoff hinted at a close collaboration with Panos Panay, Amazon’s senior vice president of devices and services (and a former Microsoft bigwig who helped shape the Surface line). The two have apparently been geeking out over “experiences we can create with devices that are awesome on their own, but even better together.” Translation? Expect more of that signature Amazon synergy—think Ring doorbells talking seamlessly to Alexa, or Sidewalk tying your whole neighborhood into a smart, connected web. “Helping customers stay safe, connected, and informed as part of a magical connected experience” is how Siminoff puts it. It’s ambitious, and maybe a little utopian, but that’s always been his style.
To understand why this return matters, you’ve got to rewind a bit. Siminoff’s story is the kind of underdog tale that Silicon Valley loves to mythologize. Back in 2013, he pitched his then-fledgling company, DoorBot, on Shark Tank. It was a Wi-Fi-enabled video doorbell—a novel idea at the time—but the sharks weren’t biting. He walked away empty-handed, only to bootstrap his way to success. By 2018, Amazon saw the potential and scooped up Ring for a cool $1 billion. Siminoff stayed on to lead the division, turning Ring into a cornerstone of Amazon’s smart-home ecosystem.
But in 2023, he stepped away. The day after leaving Amazon, Siminoff sold a new venture, Honest Day’s Work, to Latch, a smart-lock company he then helped rebrand as Door.com. It was a whirlwind move—classic Siminoff hustle. Late last year, Door.com announced he’d shift to an advisory role in 2025, freeing him up for… well, something. Turns out that something was a return to Amazon.
What’s he been up to in the interim? Honest Day’s Work was a platform aimed at connecting homeowners with service pros—think landscapers, plumbers, the folks who keep your house humming. Door.com took that vision and ran with it, blending smart tech with real-world services. It’s not hard to imagine Siminoff bringing some of that practical, customer-first mindset back to Amazon’s device teams.
Siminoff’s return comes at a pivotal moment. Ring has faced its share of scrutiny in recent years—privacy concerns over footage sharing with police, questions about data security—but it’s also continued to grow. Blink, meanwhile, has carved out a niche as the budget-friendly alternative to Ring’s premium offerings. Amazon Key, which lets delivery drivers unlock your door, remains a quirky but intriguing piece of the puzzle. And Sidewalk? It’s still a wild card—a low-bandwidth network that could one day link entire communities via Amazon devices.
AI could be the glue that ties it all together. Imagine a Ring doorbell that doesn’t just spot a package but uses facial recognition to greet your regular delivery driver by name. Or a Blink camera that learns your dog’s bark and filters out false alarms. Sidewalk might even evolve into a hyper-local AI network, predicting everything from traffic jams to lost pets. Siminoff’s track record suggests he’s not afraid to dream big—he once turned a rejected pitch into a billion-dollar business, after all.
For now, Siminoff sounds energized to be back. “I’m excited to roll up my sleeves and work with the teams,” he said in the Q&A. And why wouldn’t he be? He’s stepping into a role tailor-made for his strengths: building gadgets people love, weaving them into daily life, and dreaming up what’s next. Panay’s involvement only sweetens the deal—together, they could redefine what “smart home” means.
As for Amazon, bringing Siminoff back feels like a bet on a proven winner. Ring’s success under his watch wasn’t just luck—it was vision. Now, with AI as the wind at his back, he’s got a chance to write a second act that’s just as bold as the first. Whether it’s a “magical connected experience” or just a really good doorbell, one thing’s clear: Jamie Siminoff isn’t done tinkering yet.
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