In September, Amazon mandated corporate workers return to the office five days a week beginning January 2. The Seattle-based tech giant is just one of the many companies calling their employees ...
MONTGOMERY — Amazon workers in Alabama will decide for the third time in three years whether to unionize after a federal ...
SEE MORE “Saturday Night Live” is poking fun at Amazon again. Monica, a “happy Amazon employee” played by Ego Nwodim, joined the latest “Weekend Update” to talk about her job ...
Amazon’s delivery system depends on third ... But Mr. Neskahi said he and a couple of fellow employees had encouraged others to join them in talking to a Teamsters representative.
The Amazon executive recently told employees who don’t like the new five-day in-person work policy that, “there are other companies around,” presumably companies they can work for remotely ...
Amazon employees are currently allowed to work remotely twice a week. A memo from CEO Andy Jassy announcing the policy change said that “it’s easier for our teammates to learn, model ...
One of Amazon’s top executives defended the new, controversial 5-day-per-week in-office policy on Thursday, saying those who do not support it can leave for another company. Speaking at an all ...
Advertisement Justice Department documents show that between the summer of 2020 and June, 2022, Vo held a job with Amazon in which she administered virtual employee programs during the COVID-19 ...
More than 500 employees from Amazon’s cloud-computing division have asked the company to reconsider its five-day in-office mandate set to take effect in January. In a letter sent to Amazon Web ...
Amazon's CEO Andy Jassey revealed plans to cut about 14,000 manager roles among corporate employees to combat bureaucracy and enhance decision-making speed. This restructuring aims to save up to $ ...
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy announced plans to cut 14,000 manager positions to boost efficiency, saving up to $3 billion annually. This restructuring aims to reduce bureaucracy, empower employees ...
“Hide those tattoos!” Employee complaints are common at any company, but the public forum made this week’s outpouring on LinkedIn unusual. Amazon spokeswoman Margaret Callahan declined to ...