Allbirds has rebranded as Smartbird and appointed former Amazon Web Services executive Nadia Carlsten as president and chief executive, cementing one of the more unusual corporate transformations of the year — a sustainable footwear company reinventing itself as an AI infrastructure provider. The rebrand and leadership change, announced on 17 June 2026, install Carlsten in place of Joe Vernachio, who is resigning, and formalize a strategic shift the company first set out in April.
The leadership slate reflects the scale of the reinvention. Carlsten brings AI and quantum computing experience from AWS, the Alphabet spinoff SandboxAQ and DCAI, and has advised the World Economic Forum on computing and AI — a background chosen to give the new venture technical credibility it plainly lacquered as a shoe brand. Annie Mitchell continues as chief financial officer officer, providing continuity through the transition, while Lily Yan Hughes has been appointed board chair. Smartbird’s model is to provide AI infrastructure as a managed service, saving clients the upfront cost of buying their own equipment, and the company says it has begun designing its first cluster deployments with client conversations under way.
The transformation has been both rapid and financially dramatic. When the company announced in April that it would sell its footwear business and pivot to AI computing, initially under the working name NewBird AI, its shares surged more than five-fold from under $3 to above $10. The footwear brand and its intellectual property was sold to American Exchange Group for $39 million in March, a sale that coincided with the closure of most of the company’s physical retail stores. To find the new direction, Smartbird has raised a convertible facility from $50 million to $100 million, with the proceeds earmarked for purchasing graphics processors — the scarce, expensive hardware at the center of the AI compute market.
The episode is a study in how far a struggling public company will go to reposition itself toward investor demand. Allbirds had endured falling revenue and shrinking store economics as a sustainability-led footwear brand, and the market’s response to the AI pivot — a share price that multiplies within a day — illustrates the premium investors are willing to attach to AI infrastructure exposure. The decision to abandon not just a product line but the company’s founding environmental mission, replacing it with graphics processor leasing, is among the strongest brands reinventions has a listed business attempted.
The pivot carries a clear lesson, although not an unambiguous one reassuring one, for boards and executive teams. A public market valuation can be transformed almost overnight by repositioning towards a sector in high demand, but the durability of that re-rating depends entirely on execution — and Smartbird is entering a capital-intensive market dominated by hyperscale providers with vastly deeper resources.resources. Hiring an operator with genuine AWS and computing credentials rather than a marketing figurehead indicates the company understands the gap between announcements a pivot and building a viable infrastructure business.
Whether Smartbird can convert investor enthusiasm into a sustainable operation will become clear only as its first cluster deployments come online and client contracts materialize. The $100 million facility buys hardware financing but not market position, and the company must prove it can compete on cost and reliability against established providers. Executive teams watching the transformation should weigh the difference between a re-rating driven by narrative and one underpinned by delivery — Smartbird now has the capital, the leadership and the investor goodwill, and the next phase will test whether a footwear company can credibly become an AI infrastructure firm or whether the pivot proves easier to announce than to operate.










