Jeffrey Preston Jorgensen was born on January 12, 1964, in Albuquerque, New Mexico. His father Ted Jorgensen was a circus performer and bike shop owner who abandoned the family when Jeff was three; his mother Jacklyn remarried Miguel Bezos, a Cuban immigrant who had come to the United States at fifteen with Operation Pedro Pan, worked at Exxon as an engineer, and adopted Jeff, giving him the name he would carry to extraordinary achievement. Jeff's relationship with his grandfather Lawrence Preston Gise — a regional director of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and self-sufficient rancher in Texas — was formative: summers spent on the ranch, fixing equipment and solving practical problems, gave him the hands-on engineering sensibility that would characterize his approach to everything.
Bezos studied electrical engineering and computer science at Princeton, graduating summa cum laude in 1986, and moved through Wall Street finance positions before joining D.E. Shaw, one of the most analytically sophisticated hedge funds in the world. In 1994, he quit his six-figure job after learning about the rate of internet growth — 2,300% per year — and drove across the country with his wife MacKenzie to Seattle, writing the business plan for Amazon in the car. He started the company in his garage and sold his first book online in July 1995. His method — the 'regret minimization framework,' asking himself which choice he would regret more at eighty — has become one of the most widely cited decision-making principles in business.
Amazon's growth from online bookstore to 'everything store' to cloud computing giant (AWS) to streaming service (Prime Video) to physical retail (Whole Foods) to healthcare, advertising, and logistics constitutes perhaps the most extraordinary business expansion in history. Bezos's management principles — the 'two-pizza rule' for team size, the 'working backwards' memo culture, the six-pager in lieu of PowerPoint, the obsessive customer focus, the long-term thinking that willingly sacrificed short-term profitability for years — have been studied and replicated throughout the technology industry. He stepped down as Amazon CEO in 2021 to focus on Blue Origin, his rocket company, and other ventures.
Bezos's ISTJ nature is the engine of Amazon's culture: the insistence on data over intuition, the systematic application of proven principles at ever-larger scale, the extraordinary attention to operational detail, the willingness to patiently build toward long-term outcomes even when short-term costs are very high. His famous shareholder letters — written in the same analytical, principle-driven style for twenty-plus years — are ISTJ documents: clear, systematic articulations of the same consistent philosophy applied to new situations. The ISTJ's characteristic gift is the ability to build systems that work — and Amazon is the most impressive system-building achievement of the internet era.