Nvidia Global AI And DGX VP Hired By Google To Lead AI Infrastructure
Nvidia’s former global AI vice president, Matthew Hull, leaves to join Google as the company’s new AI infrastructure go-to-market vice president.
One of Nvidia’s global AI leaders, Matthew Hull, has left the AI chip superstar to head Google’s AI infrastructure go-to-market.
Hull spent eight years at Nvidia, most recently as vice president of global AI solutions, tasked with driving global enterprise adoption of Nvidia’s AI solutions.
He was responsible for global sales of Nvidia’s DGX platform portfolio—including DGX data center solutions and DGX Cloud.
Hull was also responsible for Nvidia’s Financial Solutions organization, Nvidia’s Enterprise Proposal Center team and Nvidia’s data center partnerships.
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“I’m happy to share that I’m starting a new position as VP, AI Infrastructure GTM at Google!” Hull said on LinkedIn Tuesday.
The 25-year IT veteran is now Google’s vice president of AI infrastructure go-to-market.
Both Nvidia and Google are worldwide leaders in providing AI infrastructure and AI-powered solutions.
Hull’s IT Career
Hull could be seen speaking at Nvidia conferences and with the media over the past several years.
Prior to joining Nvidia in 2017, he spent around 10 years at Hewlett-Packard and then HPE, where he held various management roles in sales, product management and engineering.
Prior to HP, Hull was a top executive at Seagate Technology in charge of global sales and alliances.
Nvidia And Google Financial Earnings Results
Nvidia generated $68.1 billion in total revenue during the fourth quarter of 2025, representing an increase of 73 percent year over year.
Nvidia’s gross margin in the fourth quarter was 75 percent, up 1.7 points year over year, while net income was $39.5 billion, an increase of 79 percent year over year.
Google generated $114 billion in total sales during the fourth quarter of 2025, representing an 18 percent increase.
Google’s main cloud and AI business unit, Google Cloud, generated $17.7 billion in revenue, up 48 percent year over year.
Google Cloud’s fourth-quarter 2024 operating income was $5.3 billion, up from $2.1 billion year over year.