"Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace" (AMZN)
Mr. Bezos may be planting the seeds for a white collar union.
Not deliberately, of course.
From the New York Times:
The company is conducting an experiment in how far it can push white-collar workers to get them to achieve its ever-expanding ambitions.
SEATTLE
— On Monday mornings, fresh recruits line up for an orientation
intended to catapult them into Amazon’s singular way of working.
They
are told to forget the “poor habits” they learned at previous jobs, one
employee recalled. When they “hit the wall” from the unrelenting pace,
there is only one solution: “Climb the wall,” others reported. To be the
best Amazonians they can be, they should be guided by the leadership principles,
14 rules inscribed on handy laminated cards. When quizzed days later,
those with perfect scores earn a virtual award proclaiming, “I’m
Peculiar” — the company’s proud phrase for overturning workplace
conventions.
At Amazon, workers are encouraged to tear apart one another’s ideas in
meetings, toil long and late (emails arrive past midnight, followed by
text messages asking why they were not answered), and held to standards
that the company boasts are “unreasonably high.” The internal phone
directory instructs colleagues on how to send secret feedback to one
another’s bosses. Employees say it is frequently used to sabotage
others. (The tool offers sample texts, including this: “I felt concerned
about his inflexibility and openly complaining about minor tasks.”)
Many
of the newcomers filing in on Mondays may not be there in a few years.
The company’s winners dream up innovations that they roll out to a
quarter-billion customers and accrue small fortunes in soaring stock.
Losers leave or are fired in annual cullings of the staff — “purposeful
Darwinism,” one former Amazon human resources director said. Some
workers who suffered from cancer, miscarriages and other personal crises
said they had been evaluated unfairly or edged out rather than given
time to recover.
Even as the company tests delivery by drone and ways to restock toilet paper at the push of a bathroom button,
it is conducting a little-known experiment in how far it can push
white-collar workers, redrawing the boundaries of what is acceptable.
The company, founded and still run by Jeff Bezos, rejects many of the
popular management bromides that other corporations at least pay lip
service to and has instead designed what many workers call an intricate
machine propelling them to achieve Mr. Bezos’ ever-expanding ambitions.
“This
is a company that strives to do really big, innovative, groundbreaking
things, and those things aren’t easy,” said Susan Harker, Amazon’s top
recruiter. “When you’re shooting for the moon, the nature of the work is
really challenging. For some people it doesn’t work.”
“Nearly every person I worked with, I saw cry at their desk.”
Bo Olson, worked in books marketing
Bo
Olson was one of them. He lasted less than two years in a book
marketing role and said that his enduring image was watching people weep
in the office, a sight other workers described as well. “You walk out
of a conference room and you’ll see a grown man covering his face,” he
said. “Nearly every person I worked with, I saw cry at their desk.”
Thanks
in part to its ability to extract the most from employees, Amazon is
stronger than ever. Its swelling campus is transforming a swath of this
city, a 10-million-square-foot bet that tens of thousands of new workers
will be able to sell everything to everyone everywhere. Last month, it
eclipsed Walmart as the most valuable retailer in the country, with a
market valuation of $250 billion, and Forbes deemed Mr. Bezos the
fifth-wealthiest person on earth.
Tens
of millions of Americans know Amazon as customers, but life inside its
corporate offices is largely a mystery. Secrecy is required; even
low-level employees sign a lengthy confidentiality agreement. The
company authorized only a handful of senior managers to talk to
reporters for this article, declining requests for interviews with Mr.
Bezos and his top leaders.
However,
more than 100 current and former Amazonians — members of the leadership
team, human resources executives, marketers, retail specialists and
engineers who worked on projects from the Kindle to grocery delivery to
the recent mobile phone launch — described how they tried to reconcile
the sometimes-punishing aspects of their workplace with what many called
its thrilling power to create.
In
interviews, some said they thrived at Amazon precisely because it
pushed them past what they thought were their limits. Many employees are
motivated by “thinking big and knowing that we haven’t scratched the
surface on what’s out there to invent,” said Elisabeth Rommel, a retail
executive who was one of those permitted to speak.
Others
who cycled in and out of the company said that what they learned in
their brief stints helped their careers take off. And more than a few
who fled said they later realized they had become addicted to Amazon’s
way of working.
“A
lot of people who work there feel this tension: It’s the greatest place
I hate to work,” said John Rossman, a former executive there who
published a book, “The Amazon Way.”
“It would certainly be much easier and
socially cohesive to just compromise and not debate, but that may lead
to the wrong decision.”
Tony Galbato, Amazon vice president for human resources
Amazon
may be singular but perhaps not quite as peculiar as it claims. It has
just been quicker in responding to changes that the rest of the work
world is now experiencing: data that allows individual performance to be
measured continuously, come-and-go relationships between employers and
employees, and global competition in which empires rise and fall
overnight. Amazon is in the vanguard of where technology wants to take
the modern office: more nimble and more productive, but harsher and less
forgiving.
“Organizations
are turning up the dial, pushing their teams to do more for less money,
either to keep up with the competition or just stay ahead of the
executioner’s blade,” said Clay Parker Jones, a consultant who helps
old-line businesses become more responsive to change.
On
a recent morning, as Amazon’s new hires waited to begin orientation,
few of them seemed to appreciate the experiment in which they had
enrolled. Only one, Keith Ketzle, a freckled Texan triathlete with an
M.B.A., lit up with recognition, explaining how he left his old,
lumbering company for a faster, grittier one.
“Conflict brings about innovation,” he said....MORE