Amazon reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(209,825 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 209,825 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 Tecnologia da informação industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

210K reviews
1.0
Mar 20, 2020
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

You get stabbed in the back so often, you'll develop a sixth sense You've hit rock bottom, but on the bright side you will never work anywhere as bad as this place ever again 100% guaranteed to work for the worst manager of your life. So the only way is up after this point.

Cons

L7 and L8's are clueless. They give of a facade of knowledge but it's paper thin. Once you drink the Kool aid there's no going back. Metrics mean nothing if they're not accurate, sadly noone cares so long as they paint a pretty picture Managers who get poor scores in connections do org restructures to try and hide their ineptitude Pay is abysmal. Be warned they suck you in with shares but because of the shares performance you get no salary increase No interest in development Really inward looking, little interest in developing collaborative relationship with suppliers Great people being forced out or treated maliciously by fools, means you learn very quickly that have backbone disagree and commit is just words. They don't want any disagreement, just fawning sycophants They constantly look to cut corners which will be dangerous at some point very soon

1.0
Oct 25, 2018
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good for new starters in IT like Grads and Interns - Most of colleagues are nice but some can be extremely political and sabotage others to move forward - Free Fruits, Drinks and Nuts - First few months are pretty exciting learning new tech, but gets boring after a while - Heaven for newbies, if they can be good with managers and do hardwork, they can progress in their career pretty quick, sometimes even surpassing salary of seasoned IT professionals. The keyword is the employee have to be their manager's favorite.

Cons

- Not industry standard remuneration, below average remuneration - Stock is heavily used to compensate the base salary, which in many cases just gets lost if you leave the company in first 2 years. Most of the stock are vested between year 2 and 4. - High pressure work environment and highly political work environment - Micro management to the max - Lots of new managers only focused in progressing their own career and sacrificing the lower level staffs for their own gains. - Metrics, metrics, metrics and more metrics, if metrics are not met, good bye in annual review period. - If you are not in good books with your manager, your career is over. Manager will stop you from progressing anywhere despite your genuine talent. - Hiring manager always listens to the employee's current manager. Manager's mafia style ruling is highly evident. - Hellish place for Seasoned IT pros as they will be treated as school kids similar to new graduates who all work on the same floor. Do the same job and also get almost same pay. - Extreme focus on KPIs and metrics that are beyond engineer's control (like Customer ratings) - Short visioned managers sabotaging engineer's life and career. - Extreme favoritism, the same engineers who is close to manager and manager's favorite gets opportunities everywhere, flying across the globe and doing whatever they want to do. Hence misuse of corporate funds.

1.0
Aug 25, 2015
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

The Seattle office has a casual atmosphere and convenient urban location, surrounded by dozens of restaurants, bars, and cafes within walking distance. They have a cafeteria with many different food options, including a number of healthy choices, and have vending machines with healthy snacks as well. There is no dress code - "wear whatever you want" - and dogs are allowed at work. There are no fixed core hours, and nobody cares when you are at your desk, as long as you can get work done. Amazon employees are given a lot of latitude and freedom, and they are not micromanaged. Amazon is extremely generous with relocation assistance and will move you to Seattle all expenses paid. Once there, you'll have the chance to work with smart people and on interesting technical problems, and you'll have the latitude to solve them any way you like.

Cons

Amazon recruiters may claim that their employees enjoy reasonable work/life balance, but don't believe a word of it! Amazon is a high-pressure environment designed to pile impossible demands on employees and get them to complete with their coworkers in order to squeeze out as much productivity as possible. You are just a disposable cog in the machine. Once you're burnt out, you're easily replaceable, and will be replaced by constant stream of new hires.... The whole system is designed to work that way. Expect to work 60-80 hours a week. If you move across the country to work for Amazon, expect to be saddled with tens of thousands of dollars of debt in relocation repayment obligations, if you have any thoughts of quitting. The one good piece of news is that if you hold your ground and insist on maintaining good work/life balance, nobody will tell you that you have to work certain hours - you will just be put on a performance improvement plan and fired for "poor performance" - and then you will probably be offered a severance agreement where you are released from your repayment obligations.... Expect to be put through hell in the meantime though. Oh, and as far as learning anything from your smart coworkers goes, don't count on it. Amazon has a deliberately culture Darwinian that encourages competition and discourages knowledge-sharing and collaboration.... Don't expect to receive any training to perform the functions of your job or any assistance from your coworkers, and expect most of your questions to be met with "go read the Wiki" - which by the way will probably be out of date, and was probably written by somebody who no longer works there - because Amazon has one of the highest employee turnover rates of any large, successful company. The entire time I was there I spent half of every day fighting a broken build system that could go wrong in any one of 100 different ways, all of which were listed on a Wiki with arcane instructions for resolving them – and every once in a while, it would break in some other way that wasn't listed.... Nobody bothered to put in the effort to fix any of this, because everyone was more focused on completing their own projects than on common infrastructure – and as far as management was concerned, who cares if developers have to work long hours to deal with this? They're smart - they can figure it out. You might develop innovative solutions to difficult technical problems at Amazon, but you're equally likely to bang your head against the wall until you somehow manage to reinvent the wheel – perhaps in one of the least efficient ways possible, one which may be barely adequate.... Expect to have to reinvent the wheel over and over again, due to the lack of knowledge-sharing and brain drain from having so many people move on after barely working there for over a year. With so many people so poorly trained for the duties of their job, competing with each other instead of working together, making the kinds of bad design decisions that come from working at a death-march pace, it's amazing that anything works at Amazon at all.... The only reason it may work at all is the constant stream of new college hires. They do not offer nearly high enough pay to justify putting up with this (I was not making any more than at my previous position in a smaller, less expensive city). I was sorely disappointed after moving to Seattle for this. I not only learned twice as much, but also got twice as much done in half as much time at both my previous job and the next one after Amazon – all the while enjoying better work/life balance and a consistent 40-hour workweek. Amazon is destroying the culture and fabric of Seattle, a city I used to like. Seattle used to be a laid back, counter-cultural city, with liberal attitudes but a cost of living much lower than San Francisco. Amazon is creating a housing crunch that has caused rents to spike to the point where they are almost not even affordable to tech workers and its antisocial attitudes are seeping into the general culture of city now. Ironically, the company I moved here to work for is destroying many of the things that drew me to move here in the first place.

Viewing 454 - 456 of 209,825 Reviews

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