Amazon reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(209,088 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 209,088 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 Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

209K reviews
2.0
Nov 24, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working as an AWS account manager, you are selling some of the most exciting and bleeding edge solutions in IT infrastructure. Prospects are extremely interested in speaking with you and most customers are ones looking to disrupt their respective businesses by going to the cloud. You are forced to stay up to date on the latest products and enhancements. Also, AWS typically pays well given a qualified background.

Cons

Too many to mention. A good summary: -You end up managing your manager when you focus should be on generating revenue -Some managers prioritize their own tasks and deadlines over your own customers' priorities -Confrontational management: highlights your mistakes and shortcomings in front of other team members. Pits team members against each other by asking what you think of your team members -Commission cap: the variable component is limited and accelerators are capped. The bulk of your pay is in salary. Little chance of knocking it out of the park -Microsoft + Oracle culture: leadership and senior team members are hired from these companies and therefore all the negative aspects of company culture exist - bureaucracy, stack ranking, managing up, etc.

1.0
Mar 14, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-brand name (for now) -being associated with the #1 Ecommerce company in the world -bring pets to work -casual dress -#3 company admired by customers

Cons

-Confrontational environment, nothing is ever good enough...always grow grow grow. Exponential growth. -It's a marathon, except that you're not jogging but always sprinting it. -Pay sucks, they give you a below market salary but entice you with RSUs, but get this, the vesting period is not the traditional 25% over 4 years. Because the company has an employee retention problem majority of your RSUs don't vest until Years 3 & 4. It's a horrible carrot & stick. -Average Amazon employee lifespan is 2yrs and declining. Why else would they have RSU vesting towards Yrs. 3 & 4 instead of evenly during Yrs. 1 & 2. -Company treats vendors and employees the same...like crap. -Mgmt rules by fear...employees are terrified to make a mistake because people get "called out" during Weekly meetings. -Forget about being in a lean company. This place is anorexic. Mgmt doesn't care that there's only 1 person doing a 5 person job, but God forbid you make 1 mistake and you're dead. -You would think a technology company would have systems to pull data much easier. What would take a few minutes with competent systems, employees have to use SQL & ETL queries to pull their own data. And trust me when I say the data never matches. -Skills learned here are not very transferable to the outside world, because our systems are all homegrown. -We have acronyms and abbreviations up the ying yang -Mgmt is not consistent with goals and lacks processes. Everything is ad hoc and "winging it" -Mgmt does not celebrate or showcase "wins" only losses. You would think the company is sinking when you walk around and see the stress and mood. But the company is doing well. But it's always spotlight on the negatives. -While the rest of the world is growing 1-2% or declining, mgmt complains 45% growth YoY is not good enough -Mgmt states we think long term, but every category leader is short term focused to hit their own metric goals. Many times 1 person's metric goals contradict another person's metric goals. -Everyone is looking out for themselves with ulterior motives to meet their goals. -Lastly, the company does nothing to develop employees. They hire the best & the brightest and expect them to run & run & run and eventually burn out.

Viewing 70 - 72 of 209,088 Reviews

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