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Amazon Web Services

Part of Amazon

Is this your company?

You have been warned. - Technical Program Manager Amazon Web Services Employee Review

1.0
Sep 7, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary is good. Work from home seems to be becoming the norm, nobody is returning in big numbers to the office and AWS are not pushing it.

Cons

You will be massively overworked, you will be expected to achieve your goals with little to no project management tools (all in house - rubbish tooling), the teams that you work with have such a high turnover of staff that you need to reinvent the very basic project tasks over and over again. The TPM's manage far too many projects and you will burn out after 3 years.... max! The bar is dropping for TPM's and Engineers for diversity, you are not working with the best anymore. Once you are in Promotion is harder than getting into AWS, its a massive bureaucracy of reasons not to promote you.

Explore other reviews about Amazon Web Services

5.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Hybrid/ Fully remote depending on the team you get in.

Cons

Sometimes gets hectic in the beginning but you would start liking it the more you get used to it.

4.0
May 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Operated in systems that had real scale, operational constraints, and production consequences.

Cons

Working at Amazon Web Services gave me strong exposure to distributed systems, operational ownership, and production-scale infrastructure, but there were definitely tradeoffs as well. One downside was that, like many large organizations, ownership could become fragmented. You often own a subsystem or workflow rather than an entire product end-to-end, which can limit exposure to broader architectural decision-making unless you deliberately seek it out. There was also significant process overhead. Design reviews, operational processes, dependency coordination, and organizational alignment were valuable for learning rigor, but they can slow iteration compared to smaller engineering teams. Another challenge is that large internal ecosystems can abstract away infrastructure complexity. AWS has extensive internal tooling, deployment systems, and operational platforms, which are powerful, but some of that experience does not transfer directly outside the company. I also found that operational work could dominate engineering time at points. Handling production issues, retries, integration failures, and on-call responsibilities teaches reliability engineering well, but it can reduce the amount of time spent on deeper technical exploration or greenfield development. Finally, there is the perception aspect. AWS is a strong name, but experienced interviewers know there is wide variance between teams and roles. The company name opens doors, but ultimately you still need to demonstrate technical depth, ownership, and strong engineering judgment independently of the brand.

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