With two upcoming headquarters in New York City and Arlington, Va., Amazon will begin hiring for thousands of positions in 2019. The Seattle-based tech giant plans to house at least 25,000 employees in each location, so job seekers intrigued by Amazon’s culture of fierce competition and breakneck growth will have plenty of opportunities to try their luck in applying.
However, are Amazon jobs good and actually worth the hubbub over the new corporate sites? Working at any company has its pros and cons, and Amazon is no exception. Check out the reasons why you should — and shouldn’t — spring for that enticing job opening at the popular online retailer.
· GOBankingRatesThis article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Amazon Jobs Aren’t Always Worth the Hype — Here’s Why
With two upcoming headquarters in New York City and Arlington, Va., Amazon will begin hiring for thousands of positions in 2019. The Seattle-based tech giant plans to house at least 25,000 employees in each location, so job seekers intrigued by Amazon’s culture of fierce competition and breakneck growth will have plenty of opportunities to try their luck in applying.
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However, are Amazon jobs good and actually worth the hubbub over the new corporate sites? Working at any company has its pros and cons, and Amazon is no exception. Check out the reasons why you should — and shouldn’t — spring for that enticing job opening at the popular online retailer.
Perk: Collaborate With World-Class Employees
If you manage to land a position with the online retailer, you’ll be in the company of first-rate talent. Nearly 1,000 employees at Amazon have written Glassdoor reviews about their exceptionally smart, creative co-workers as of February 2018, according to Business Insider. A finance manager in Seattle called Amazon’s employees “the best of the best” that could be hired anywhere.
Drawback: The Environment Is Cutthroat
Working with highly competitive, world-class employees can have its disadvantages, especially when your co-workers might not have your best interests at heart. Amazon’s aggressive approach apparently isn’t limited to the market — it can be seen as part of the internal culture, too.
“Amazon is built, quite deliberately, to be Darwinian,” said a Seattle-based software development manager on Glassdoor.
Perk: Earn a Competitive Salary and Benefits
The average salary at Amazon is $100,000 a year, according to PayScale, which means employees can get compensated handsomely at the company. A former warehouse associate in Pennsylvania posted on Glassdoor and complimented the “great starting pay and the ability to get raises very quickly,” and a former area manager in Georgia noted that Amazon employee perks “are the best thing about working at Amazon.”
Worth It? You’ll Hate These Jobs But Love the Money
Drawback: Work-Life Balance Is Lacking
Despite the positive comments about compensation, more than 400 reviews complained about the lack of work-life balance in the typical Amazon work schedule, according to Business Insider. In a telling report, Amazon didn’t even break the top 100 in Glassdoor’s 2018 Best Places to Work — which was chosen by employees — although other tech companies such as Facebook and Google ranked among the top 10.