Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will they ENFORCE this? Lots of barking from these companies about RTO but zero bite. Actually enforcing these stupid rules would create a huge imposition on management to fairly track, open the company up to lawsuits, etc.
Anytime a company mandates RTO but includes “exceptions,” you know it’s BS. The only truly genuine on-site policies are those with zero exceptions (like my grandfather’s factory had). If you’re sick or need to stay home, TAKE LEAVE — that’s what it’s there for.
Because you have to badge in. In fact, people were coffee badging--badging in and getting a coffee and then leaving--but they tracked that too and said you had to be there for at least 2 hours. If you don't meet the requirements your manager gets notified and then it becomes their problem to have to do something about it or THEY will get in trouble. Even if they could care less.
Do what about it? Make mean faces? What if the employee alleges that others are allowed to work from home more than he is? Favoritism? Discrimination?
What a silly time suck. All so that employees can smell each other (the ONLY benefit to working in the office)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On call weeks just got harder...up 5 times last night? No matter, up and out of bed, get dressed and head in.
Exactly. My spouse gets calls all hours. And, a lot of his team works in Seattle or internationally and its expected they flex.
What is the pay for being on call for amazon like that?
Same pay. Only higher pay for clearances. My spouse takes calls all day usually up till 7-8, but on a on call rotation at night. Regular calls can start around 6. They have lost a lot of really good people with all this and will lose more. Supervisors often cannot actually do the work so it makes it hard when no one is there to train the new people. It’s a bad idea as with the rto my spouse works less on those days due to commute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More than one of my friends are in software engineering management roles over there. They have been complaining about productivity issues related to people not being in person for a while now. Real product development that is of any quality isn’t done completely siloed. Sole exceptions for things like Linux kernel development, where distributed teams of people who are highly interested get the work done, and they are all afraid of Linus calling them out anyways.
My husband complains that it’s because half the people are idiots. Doesn’t have much to do with RTO.
However, it is going to affect the good people who were hired remote, then told they had to come in 3 days a week and are doing crazy commutes from hours away and now will either have to move or lose their jobs.
We had to get an apartment and spend a lot of money so he can go in 3 days a week or drive 2 days each way 3 days a week. He’s been looking for something else for over a year and a half now but at his level it’s not easy. Now maybe we just sell our house except the COL is crazy higher in Arlington.
L
If your husband is senior level at Amazon, you can afford a house in Arlington
L6. We have a child who just graduated and aging parents who won’t move. House is worth 700,000-750,000. We bought it a long time ago for a lot less but have also made a lot of improvements so it’s not paid off. Comparable houses in the Arlington area at like 1.5-2 million. We considered and looked but were disappointed with the quality of life difference.
it’s normal in Amazon to have a commute. Not sure how an l6 can afford Arlington.
We live hours away. It's not a commute you would do on a daily basis. He makes quite a lot as an L6. Don't know if he will get to L7. The plan before was always jump ship and move up. But that's really hard now. And gets harder as you get older and make more money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More than one of my friends are in software engineering management roles over there. They have been complaining about productivity issues related to people not being in person for a while now. Real product development that is of any quality isn’t done completely siloed. Sole exceptions for things like Linux kernel development, where distributed teams of people who are highly interested get the work done, and they are all afraid of Linus calling them out anyways.
Salary?
My husband complains that it’s because half the people are idiots. Doesn’t have much to do with RTO.
However, it is going to affect the good people who were hired remote, then told they had to come in 3 days a week and are doing crazy commutes from hours away and now will either have to move or lose their jobs.
We had to get an apartment and spend a lot of money so he can go in 3 days a week or drive 2 days each way 3 days a week. He’s been looking for something else for over a year and a half now but at his level it’s not easy. Now maybe we just sell our house except the COL is crazy higher in Arlington.
L
If your husband is senior level at Amazon, you can afford a house in Arlington
L6. We have a child who just graduated and aging parents who won’t move. House is worth 700,000-750,000. We bought it a long time ago for a lot less but have also made a lot of improvements so it’s not paid off. Comparable houses in the Arlington area at like 1.5-2 million. We considered and looked but were disappointed with the quality of life difference.
it’s normal in Amazon to have a commute. Not sure how an l6 can afford Arlington.
We live hours away. It's not a commute you would do on a daily basis. He makes quite a lot as an L6. Don't know if he will get to L7. The plan before was always jump ship and move up. But that's really hard now. And gets harder as you get older and make more money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will they ENFORCE this? Lots of barking from these companies about RTO but zero bite. Actually enforcing these stupid rules would create a huge imposition on management to fairly track, open the company up to lawsuits, etc.
Anytime a company mandates RTO but includes “exceptions,” you know it’s BS. The only truly genuine on-site policies are those with zero exceptions (like my grandfather’s factory had). If you’re sick or need to stay home, TAKE LEAVE — that’s what it’s there for.
Because you have to badge in. In fact, people were coffee badging--badging in and getting a coffee and then leaving--but they tracked that too and said you had to be there for at least 2 hours. If you don't meet the requirements your manager gets notified and then it becomes their problem to have to do something about it or THEY will get in trouble. Even if they could care less.
Anonymous wrote:How will they ENFORCE this? Lots of barking from these companies about RTO but zero bite. Actually enforcing these stupid rules would create a huge imposition on management to fairly track, open the company up to lawsuits, etc.
Anytime a company mandates RTO but includes “exceptions,” you know it’s BS. The only truly genuine on-site policies are those with zero exceptions (like my grandfather’s factory had). If you’re sick or need to stay home, TAKE LEAVE — that’s what it’s there for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon had always been the place for people who can't get jobs somewhere else. Lowest paying, lowest benefit, most abusive management in Big Tech.
They thrive on desperate people (mostly immigrant new grads) who are willing to overwork themselves until they find something better or get laid off.
Not necessarily true. Husband made the jump from another FAANG I think during pandemic when hiring was going crazy and got a big bump in salary after getting passed over for the usual politics. Not because he was a bad performer. He was not.
He’s still making quite a lot more than he was making at his previous FAANG company, which is supposed to treat their employees amazingly but actually was a dysfunctional sshow.
Honestly, they are all kind of evil, but those golden handcuffs! It makes it hard to go to other places. He’s worked at a few. I’d say Microsoft was the nicest and chillest but paid the least. Amazon seems to be the roughest in terms of office politics.
I remind him, and he knows, that he makes way more than most people, and that is a combination of talent and ambition and luck. Amazon is evil but he still is getting paid a lot of money and his work life balance is not bad, as some people here are saying.
op would YOU want to go into the office 5 days a week?
if it were me and this happened to dh i'd encourage him to find a new job. He has one life to live, be supportive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More than one of my friends are in software engineering management roles over there. They have been complaining about productivity issues related to people not being in person for a while now. Real product development that is of any quality isn’t done completely siloed. Sole exceptions for things like Linux kernel development, where distributed teams of people who are highly interested get the work done, and they are all afraid of Linus calling them out anyways.
My husband complains that it’s because half the people are idiots. Doesn’t have much to do with RTO.
However, it is going to affect the good people who were hired remote, then told they had to come in 3 days a week and are doing crazy commutes from hours away and now will either have to move or lose their jobs.
We had to get an apartment and spend a lot of money so he can go in 3 days a week or drive 2 days each way 3 days a week. He’s been looking for something else for over a year and a half now but at his level it’s not easy. Now maybe we just sell our house except the COL is crazy higher in Arlington.
L
If your husband is senior level at Amazon, you can afford a house in Arlington
L6. We have a child who just graduated and aging parents who won’t move. House is worth 700,000-750,000. We bought it a long time ago for a lot less but have also made a lot of improvements so it’s not paid off. Comparable houses in the Arlington area at like 1.5-2 million. We considered and looked but were disappointed with the quality of life difference.
it’s normal in Amazon to have a commute. Not sure how an l6 can afford Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon had always been the place for people who can't get jobs somewhere else. Lowest paying, lowest benefit, most abusive management in Big Tech.
They thrive on desperate people (mostly immigrant new grads) who are willing to overwork themselves until they find something better or get laid off.
Not necessarily true. Husband made the jump from another FAANG I think during pandemic when hiring was going crazy and got a big bump in salary after getting passed over for the usual politics. Not because he was a bad performer. He was not.
He’s still making quite a lot more than he was making at his previous FAANG company, which is supposed to treat their employees amazingly but actually was a dysfunctional sshow.
Honestly, they are all kind of evil, but those golden handcuffs! It makes it hard to go to other places. He’s worked at a few. I’d say Microsoft was the nicest and chillest but paid the least. Amazon seems to be the roughest in terms of office politics.
I remind him, and he knows, that he makes way more than most people, and that is a combination of talent and ambition and luck. Amazon is evil but he still is getting paid a lot of money and his work life balance is not bad, as some people here are saying.
I assume you don’t work. That’s the key to Amazon. It works you like big law but pays way way less.
Anonymous wrote:I saw this coming from the moment businesses went remote during Covid. I never imagined it would’ve been a permanent solution frankly, I’m surprised it’s taking them this long to go back to the office. so many people aren’t putting in their hours.
I thought it was foolish for people to move away from their Jobs back in 2020 because they thought remote work would be permanent.
It’s also foolish of Amazon office workers to comment on Facebook, etc. with complaints about childcare because they are precisely why there is a push to return office, how can you effectively work when you’re also taking care of your babies and toddlers?
Anonymous wrote:Amazon had always been the place for people who can't get jobs somewhere else. Lowest paying, lowest benefit, most abusive management in Big Tech.
They thrive on desperate people (mostly immigrant new grads) who are willing to overwork themselves until they find something better or get laid off.
Anonymous wrote:I read about the Amazon RTO order and think it’s great. It’s high time the federal government got this done too.
Anonymous wrote:It’s their way of having people quit