Amazon reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(209,253 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 209,253 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
Mar 14, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will be given the chance to work out interesting problems with some great people. If you have the motivation to drive your own deadlines and you can sell yourself to an MBA everything is pretty much great.

Cons

Long hours, average pay, upper management is perfectly happy with horrific hacks because they are never paged. Pager duty.

4.0
Mar 14, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

During peak season there is opportunity to work a large amount of overtime. The pay is reasonable for the job. Although not all of the bosses are good, my boss is amazing. I feel a sense of accomplishment when I leave work.

Cons

During peak they sometimes require mandatory overtime, and this can interfere with personal obligations. People steal, so there is tight security. Lots and lots of walking.

2.0
Mar 14, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazon is a brand-name company which looks excellent on a resume. It will probably give you an inside shot at joining a good startup when you're ready to move on. You get a fair amount of freedom in how you do your job. The base pay is decent for the Seattle area, if perhaps not so much nationally. And most of the non-management people I've come across will go out of their way to be helpful.

Cons

Employee retention is bad, which should give you a lot of clues. In fact, sometimes I wonder if management doesn't want to retain employees beyond two years so that they don't have to pay out all of the restricted stock. I mean, there are no cash bonuses anymore that I know of, and the raises -- if you're fortunate enough to get one -- probably won't even keep pace with inflation. As others have said, the non-salary benefits are poor in comparison to other large companies. Your actual workspace is very spartan, and good luck getting a fast laptop or desktop and a monitor that does better than 1280x1024. There is a vast amount of crufty old code sitting around the backend databases and systems that nobody wants to touch, the original perpetrators of which are long gone, and management often does not have the foresight to rewrite. If you take a job here, keep in mind that you might suddenly find yourself assigned to maintain this pile, even if you have never done Perl or C++ in your life and you were supposedly hired to work on something else. For the most part, developers double as operators, so have fun wearing the pager while you're at it. Getting paged while on call should be the exception, but at Amazon, it's the rule. There is a lot of homebrew and non-standard technology in use which is usually poorly documented and difficult to use in any case, and if you're familiar with doing things the way that the rest of the industry does, you might find yourself frustrated.

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