Microsoft's AI Employees Hit Pay Dirt. Their Colleagues? Not So Much. Experts in deep learning and other AI fields are in short supply, so companies are competing fiercely.

By Ashley Stewart

Key Takeaways

  • Hundreds of Microsoft employees recently shared details about their pay and promotions.
  • The data shows employees in Microsoft's new AI organization make a lot more than their colleagues.
  • Check out the details from hundreds of Microsoft employees below.
PATRICK T. FALLON via Business Insider
Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman

This article originally appeared on Business Insider.

Hundreds of Microsoft employees recently shared their compensation in an internal spreadsheet viewed by Business Insider. An analysis of this data shows how much workers in the tech giant's new AI organization are getting paid compared with their colleagues.

The AI group got started in March with Mustafa Suleyman, a cofounder of DeepMind, at the helm. It's responsible for consumer AI products such as Microsoft's Copilot AI chatbot and Bing search engine.

BI analyzed more than 500 submissions from people who identified themselves as Microsoft employees in the US. The spreadsheet includes salaries, performance-based raises, promotions, and bonus percentages.

The main takeaway: Microsoft is paying a lot more for artificial-intelligence talent. This is part of a race to build what could become the next major computing platform. Experts in deep learning and other AI fields are in short supply, so companies are competing fiercely, mostly through offering juicy salaries and hefty stock awards. Pricey acquihires are valuing some engineers at as much as $4 million a pop.

Azure AI co-innovation Microsoft Build

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. Microsoft via BI

Here are some highlights from the exclusive Microsoft data:

  • Average compensation across all roles in the Microsoft AI group was about 37% more compared with the companywide average in the US, according to the information shared in the spreadsheet.
  • Compensation among those who identified themselves as software engineers within Microsoft AI was about 48% more compared with all software-engineering roles across the company in the US.
  • The average compensation among data scientists was about 11% more than the overall US average.

The chart below lays out averages for various Microsoft units, based on the internal spreadsheet obtained by BI. It also shows average compensation for all roles and for software engineers and data scientists, specifically. (The Microsoft AI group had fewer types of roles to compare with other organizations.)

Business Insider

Microsoft employees typically share this information anonymously through spreadsheets to promote pay transparency, but they are not official Microsoft corporate documents. The spreadsheet viewed by BI includes only information employees voluntarily decided to share and isn't comprehensive.

A Microsoft spokesperson declined to comment.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Side Hustle

This Husband and Wife's 'Happy Accident' Side Hustle Hit $467,000 Revenue Fast — Now It Makes Over $1 Million a Year: 'We're Scrappy'

Charlene and Vince Li couldn't find the snack they wanted to see on the shelves, so they created it themselves.

Growing a Business

'Boring' Businesses Are Making Millionaires — and You Can Borrow Their Strategies For Success

The silent growth strategy reveals how understated, steady businesses are quietly creating wealth for entrepreneurs in 2025. By focusing on long-term consistency and incremental progress, these "boring" industries are proving to be gold mines for those willing to embrace stability over hype.

Social Media

With This LinkedIn Algorithm Change, Your Best Posts Could Reach New Readers for Months

It's one of many new features rolling out on the platform in 2024.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Business News

YouTuber MrBeast Makes More Money From His Side Hustle Than From His YouTube Videos

The 26-year-old creator has racked up hundreds of millions of views and subscribers on YouTube, but it isn't his main moneymaker.

Business News

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon Says Only One Group Is Complaining About Returning to the Office

In a new interview, Dimon said remote work "doesn't work" and noted some JPMorgan employees were checking their phones while he was speaking in a meeting.