Wednesday, April 15, 2020
What Its Like to Work at Amazon During Prime Day
What It's Like to Work at Amazon During Prime Day For Amazon employees, Prime Day isnât about severely discounted Insta Pots, uber-cheap Echo speakers or half-off LED TVs. To many warehouse workers, the massive online sales event means mandatory overtime, aching muscles and 60-hour workweeks. Prime Day 2019 kicked off Monday and runs through Tuesday. Itâs a sweet deal for both Amazon customers and the company itself. Boasting more than 1 million deals for more than 100 million Prime members, the extravaganza is on track to generate an estimated $5.8 billion in sales. But itâs putting a lot of pressure on staffers at the fulfillment centers who have to pump out all those those packages. For them, Prime Day is Prime Week â" several days of rigorous labor to keep up with the frenetic pace of orders. Whatever you call it, Prime Day is compounding the stress from another recent initiative: free one-day shipping, which the company has been actively expanding for Prime members since spring. âAmazon fulfillment workers were already facing speeds of 200-300 orders per hour in 12-hour shifts before the new policy,â Stuart Appelbaum, president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, said in a statement last week. âTesting hundreds of thousands of workers physical limits as though they were trained triathletes is the wrong approach.â On social media, Amazonians are posting memes about the MET, or mandatory extra time, theyâve been asked to work in preparation for Prime Day. Several have shared a recent John Oliver video criticizing the harsh work environments in Amazonâs warehouses. Others have complained about their unpredictable schedules and discussed a warehouse in Minnesota thatâs planning a six-hour strike during Prime Day. Amazon has pushed back against these complaints. A spokeswoman told MONEY employees are âworking smarter, not harderâ this summer. âAmazon is able to safely meet customer demand on Prime Day because of our great workforce and state-of-the-art technology,â she added. âSafety is our top priority every day of the year, but especially during Prime Week with more people in the buildings. We have a focus on ensuring area organization and readiness to contribute to our success in being safe.â MONEY spoke with an Amazon fulfillment center employee who agreed to talk on the condition of anonymity. Hereâs what she said about whatâs it like to work at Amazon right now, during Prime Week. [Initially, Amazon] was so exciting. It was something new. It was something I had never done before. I was placed into roles that really boosted my confidence. I became a Problem Solver, then I became an Ambassador. I was responsible for training people. I took pride in that. Everything was good, then we came upon Prime Week. We came upon this one-day shipping. We were not warned ahead of time about one-day shipping. We were not warned about Prime Day â" nothing. It was just handed to us. Then, like the second week of June, they start calling mandatory 60-hour, six-day overtime. Do you have any idea how exhausted we all are? Itâs getting to the point that everybody is fighting with each other. Weâre just short-tempered. Honestly, [with] the line of work we do and the amount of work that we do, I feel that we should be making $20 an hour. Your $15 an hour [announced last year by CEO Jeff Bezos] is nothing to me. I work from the time I get in there in the morning until I leave. You know those rubber balls â" you slam them on the ground and you donât know where theyâre going? Thatâs me. Last summer was nothing. This summer is crazy. I really believe itâs because of one-day shipping. When we had Prime Day last year, it was nothing compared to what it is today. [Theyâre] making us work this 60-hour mandatory overtime. We are all short-fused. Everybody is so frigginâ tired. [Executives] donât get it. Youâre not the ones working 60 hours a week doing what weâre doing. I donât give a sâ"t about what charts you have, what numbers you have, this cannot be productive. Iâm not blaming Jeff Bezos. Iâm not blaming Amazon as a whole. Iâm just blaming the way that Amazon is designed. I donât know who came up with this whole thing, but to value numbers more than you value humanity â" this is not the line of business I will retire in. To work for a company like this is very disheartening. This story has been updated to include a comment from Amazon.
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