I applied in-person. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Amazon (Indianapolis, IN) in Jun 2012
Interview
Met them at a social event following the first day of a 2 day career fair for Military Academy graduates. They projected the corporate image of "We're Cool, how about you?"
Their follow-up was "we gotta have you now!!!" panic/excitement/urgent/confusion. Clearly the principals were not all communicating with each other. Three different people in the firm seemed to have "found me" and did their best to urgently get me to come to an interview and nail the job down- all independently of each other. Many texts/emails with canned questions.
They flew me to IN for series of interviews. I smoked them (they told me as much, to include the math/production line question and presentation of my answer). Us older/experienced guys are good at that.
I got the impression they didnt want experience... they want ability and youth so they can wear you out and replace you (plus I heard that from several people who had worked there).
Their veteran's hiring program leaves much to be considered. They want veterans- its part of their marketing ploy as well, yet they do not consider whether you were an E-3 truck driver or an O-6 Brigade commander... everyone starts at the bottom. If you survive, you will probably move up the ladder a few notches. Problem is, if you have already climbed to the upper level elsewhere, you cannot afford to start working on the salary and "hope" that they give you. They do "hope" you'll move up, but wont really offer you a "Manager-In-Training" or an Executive level position, just the "hope" that you can get there from where they start you.
They share a dysfunction of many corporations: They do not understand the difference between "management" and "supervision." They DO understand that many job applicants can be enticed into a job by an important sounding title... without the important pay that goes with it. Not saying they dont pay well. They just dont pay well if you are already an accomplished mid or senior level career professional.
I put a stop to the non-sense by telling them what I expected in terms of compensation. They dropped me like a rock.
If you have never worked on an assembly line or in a fast paced manufacturing facility, brace yourself. That is what Amazon does. It is not an easy life, and it will wear you out. If you are a 25-30 year old, take a crack at it. If you are older than that and have not worked in a factory, you may want to save the time and aggravation of applying for their "management" positions.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
None. Study the other variations on the math problem (several are posted on GlassDoor). They will change it after you give your initial answer- they want to see if you can think on your feet and handle stressors caused by change. Be calm, think, then respond.
I applied through a recruiter. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at Amazon in Aug 2012
Interview
Hiring process is initial contact with recruiter, then set up phone interview with HR, then another phone interview with Management level, then another phone interview with HR to discuss a possible one-on-one in-person interview. The phone interviews were scheduled and the schedules were not kept (usually).
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Describe yourself and capabilities to someone who cannot see you.
I applied through college or university. The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Amazon
Interview
Interview process too long and tedious, it took around 2 months to finally arrive to the last interview. With the hiring objectives not very clear , interviews conducted in eventuality of an post being created. It was an interview for and Operations Manager post, and people recruited for the post of Regional Manager.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
An scenario to test the integrity and flexibility while dealing with on job operational relationship with governmental agencies.