Amazon reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(209,853 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 209,853 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 Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

210K reviews
4.0
Aug 27, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Extremely intelligent, hardworking, and collaborative environment. -I genuinely enjoy the people I work with. There are few "bad apples" and petty drama is almost non-existent -Being part of the leading cloud platform in the industry. -Career growth/opportunities

Cons

-One of the leadership principles is "Frugality" which too often translates to "cheap" In such a competitive market for talent, its remarkable that they manage to attract talent with low comp. Comp is actually built to dip after 2 years unless you get promoted. - Stack ranking forces management to treat employees as data points rather than humans. -At a certain point, the amount of work becomes brutal. Essentially, the mentality is once you've achieve a certain goal/level, you must always exceed it, which is unsustainable.

1.0
Aug 3, 2016

EAs are for gridning

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Uhm, pretty buildings? Bring your dog to work.

Cons

All I do is calendaring, +40 hours a week. No appreciation, no gratitude, and I am not treated like an equal member of the team. The internal website is basically a giant wiki, with no thought behind organization or hierarchy. Finding information on basic search terms is impossible.

1.0
Jun 22, 2016

Probably avoid

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* tremendous individual ownership and impact (e.g., your work could directly increase revenue by tens of millions of dollars) * strongly data-driven culture and good monitoring tools * excellent interview process (behavioral interviewing, bar raisers, pre-brief/de-brief, etc.) * lots of really great people * some very cool projects (generated by those people) * many great cultural tenets (at least on paper) * above median total compensation for the Seattle tech industry

Cons

* very top-down culture (a few teams manage to resist this, for awhile) * internal tech is dated and underinvested (e.g., website built on Perl) * benefits and employee equipment are substandard for the tech industry (e.g., almost no perks, 3-5yo laptop for you) * power is highly concentrated in managers, especially due to the peer review feedback process (anonymized and filtered by the manager; so the manager has total control over your performance) * employees aren't valued. You're there to do a job, for which you're compensated. That's it. "Every day is day 1." = "how you performed last year is irrelevant" * compensation is skewed and miscommunicated to the employee. To wit: * There are no signing bonuses; that's just compensation shifted from stock to cash in year 1 (and sometimes year 2). * If the stock goes up and your actual compensation exceeds your target compensation, you will get no subsequent stock grants (until you're back under target). * Vesting schedule is every 6 months after a year, at 5%, 5%, 10%, 10%, 15%, 15%, 20%, 20%. This design is intentional, because many employees attrit after the first year or two. A large fraction of employees quit after year 4, when the first stock grant has completely vested. Overall undesired attrition is > 14%. * NYT article is 85-90% true. Quite a few managers (at all levels) are really horrible to work for.

Viewing 484 - 486 of 209,853 Reviews

Glassdoor has 251,406 Amazon reviews submitted anonymously by Amazon employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Amazon is right for you.