Principal Product Manager - Technical, AWS Life Sciences
Amazon · Seattle, WA · Project/Program/Product Management--Technical
About this role
Amazon is hiring a principal-level Product Manager based in Seattle, WA. The posting calls out experience with AWS, LLMs, Machine Learning, Cloud Computing. Compensation is listed at $179,900–$243,400 per year.
- Role
- Product Manager
- Function
- product
- Level
- principal
- Track
- Individual contributor
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- Seattle, WA
- Department
- Project/Program/Product Management--Technical
- Posted
- May 29, 2026
More roles at Amazon
Job description
from Amazon careersAs part of the AWS Applied AI Solutions organization, we have a vision to provide business applications, leveraging Amazon’s unique experience and expertise, that are used by millions of companies worldwide to manage day-to-day operations. We will accomplish this by accelerating our customers’ businesses through delivery of intuitive and differentiated technology solutions that solve enduring business challenges. We blend vision with curiosity and Amazon’s real-world experience to build opinionated, turnkey solutions. Where customers prefer to buy over build, we become their trusted partner with solutions that are no-brainers to buy and easy to use. Are you passionate about leveraging AI to revolutionize life sciences? AWS Life Sciences Applied AI is seeking a visionary Principal Product Manager to lead the development of applications that reimagine how clinical trials are designed, executed, and delivered. Key job responsibilities As Principal Product Manager, you'll lead pioneering product development for AI-driven clinical trials transformation. You'll guide a team of builders (product managers, developers, and scientists) to invent and simplify on behalf of pharmaceutical companies, biotech firms, and clinical operations teams—defining novel, generative AI agent-based experiences that help them accelerate the path from discovery to treatment. You will drive innovation by reimagining how clinical evidence is…