Amazon reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(209,091 total reviews)
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Andrew Jassy

50% approve of CEO

57% positive business outlook

Amazon has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 209,091 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Amazon employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

209K reviews
3.0
Jan 11, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Every year we will get minimum 10% hike. No formal no any restriction regarding dress. Cafeteria and other food facilities are good. Best leave policy. ...........

Cons

No OT's. Many politics. No Proper training. no growth. After 6 months u will start thinking to switch to other company.

2.0
Apr 13, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazon is a resume-maker, make no doubt about it. Within months of having updated my LinkedIn profile, I had recruiters from Google, Microsoft, Apple, and others reaching out (I ended up interviewing at several and jumping ship to Microsoft). I'm sure this is partly due to fact of Amazon's reputation as being not the most pleasant place to work (so its employees are receptive to an 'out' more than some others) and because they are known to have a high bar for hiring.. It's also full of very smart people (though many of them are not nearly as smart as they *think* they are) and you get to work on big, challenging problems. Lastly, their publicly professed focus on the customer is absolutely legitimate. It was great to see how they approached this from the inside as it's something I think Amazon gets uniquely right in the tech industry.

Cons

Amazon, like other big companies, will never present a uniform experience. Your experiences will depend on the team you join. There were a lot of people on my team who wanted nothing more than to get out but I have other friends who actually are fairly happy there. That said, there is some uniformity of the culture that has its origin in Bezos Darwinian worldview. The best advice I can give is to read the book The Everything Store as I think it nails the culture. Personally, I found it quite unpleasant. It is a harshly critical environment. Work environments that challenge you to be your best are great, but it seemed nearly pathological at Amazon. Anything I did was corrected by at least 4-5 people whether or not it merited it, partly so they could show off how they were *better* and partly because it's an ingrained part of the culture. One of the Amazon Principles are 'Are Right. A Lot'. I think the corollary to this is many Amazon employees think everyone else is always wrong and feel the need to constantly tell you. It gets pretty old fast. At first I took this personally and thought maybe I was just a screw up but when I started paying more attention I realized EVERYONE received this treatment. Amazon is also the kind of place that will use you up and spit you out if you let it. I've worked at true start-ups in my twenties and put in hours that would put most of the folks even at Amazon to shame. In doing so, I learned what my limits were, how much of my life I was willing to sacrifice to work, and that ultimately I didn't want to do that for the rest of my life. As such, I was well equipped to manage my work load and still be successful. I didn't work crazy hours or get too stressed out. But I saw those that had not had such an experience, and the often ended up worked into the ground because they didn't know how to draw the line at some point. Lastly, Amazon is an extremely chaotic place. Many people who work there like to delude themselves into thinking it functions similarly to a start-up (anyone who has worked at a real start-up will immediately tell you it isn't really like one at all). The problem is, it's a huge company. And when a company exceeds a certain size, it *gasp* actually needs a bit more uniformity in process and coordinated long-term planning. Instead, Amazon makes pretensions to process but kind of lets teams do their own thing. Frequently, there is process, but it varies by team or if you actually use the 'official' process it just means you won't accomplish what you need to as you'll be mired in some dead-end path. The idea of being 'start-up like' like or 'scrappy' is wonderful in theory for such a big company, but in practice it just doesn't work. Amazon wasn't even particularly fast in pushing out new features, which is presumably the point of such an ethos. Lastly, the comp really isn't that great. It's okay, but the benefits are mediocre at best, the base salaries are just average (I knew what a number of people were making from having discussed it) and much is locked up in stock that vests over years. It's basically a golden cage designed to keep people at the company despite how miserable most of them are. And that's the thing I'd really impress on prospective hires, it was very rare I perceived anyone to be truly *happy* to be there. For my part, I did a year and got out. Not because it was unbearably difficult or the worst job ever, it just wasn't a particularly pleasant or rewarding place to be. I think if you know what you're getting into the cost/benefit is there, you get to see the company from the inside, work on big problems, and work with a ton of smart people. But it's not a place I could ever see staying more than a couple years unless you had no other option.

1.0
Dec 11, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work from home. Equipment is provided. Supportive manager. Friendly & positive team environment.

Cons

Sink-or-Swim style of training New Hires. Training is not realistic. Does not prepare trainee for live phone calls. After two weeks of watching slides and videos remotely from home, trainee goes live with customers. Easy enough to take calls, but obtaining information to address the myriad of situations arising in calls is impossible. While customer is on-hold, trainee is expected to navigate to an online "Knowledge Center" ("KC") which is essentially a bunch of encyclopedic paragraphs in very, very small fine-print. These are not specific enough for the trainee to know exactly what step to take to assist the customer. There is much pressure to handle the call quickly, which makes sense, but is difficult if trainee does not know what to do. There is no one or no where to reach out for help. Inquiries for assistance from trainers result in the response, "look it up in the KC". Sink-or-Swim environment. Computer provided causes eyestrain due to the tiny print which cannot be enlarged or adjusted, and harsh on-screen lighting. Instructions and guidelines cannot be printed out, hence trainee must rely upon memory and hand-written notes while working. Manager is supportive but hands tied by their own chain-of-command. Manager's bosses clandestinely monitor trainee's calls and then complain to manager about the trainee's shortcomings. Manager then has to counsel trainee about performance defects. Overall a stressful, uncomfortable way to spend an 8-12 hour shift at home.

Viewing 64 - 66 of 209,091 Reviews

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