Amazon To Experiment With Part-Time Tech Teams (usatoday.com)
Elizabeth Weise, reporting from USATODAY: In an effort to lure hard-to-hire tech workers and possibly recast its reputation as a harsh workplace, Amazon plans to pilot a program of part-time teams composed entirely of employees putting in 30-hour weeks. The Seattle company will test using entire teams of engineers and tech staff who will all work 30 hours a week, thus side-stepping many of the problems faced by part-time workers in a full-time environment. The pilot teams' core hours would be Monday through Thursday from 10 am to 2 pm, with flexible hours throughout the week. The 30-hour groups would receive the same benefits as 40-hour-a-week employees but less pay, Amazon said. The plan is smart from a recruiting standpoint and a unique strategy in the highly competitive tech world, said Kate Kennedy with the Society for Human Resource Management.
I would love the option to work for 20 or 30 hours/week even for half the money. I've always felt like I had to choose between 40-50 hour weeks or nothing.
I think it eliminates the chance of working for a lot of other jobs being 10am to 2pm only. If they moved this to different shifts outside of normal work hours I think it'd have a lot more applicants that already work another "day" job.
Do you just check out at 2PM, or are you obligated to stay behind and put in extra hours to get the project done? I am guessing they hope for the latter.
Isn't Amazon one of the tech firms that famously burns people out working them 90+ hours a week? If so, it just sounds like they're doing an experiment to see if hiring more people but working them less produces better results (Hint, it does in non-dysfunctional workplaces.)
If you don't fill the quota numbers, you still work 60 hours a week just for less pay.
Would you prefer to go back to Starbucks Mr. 40-something white male?
The 30-hour groups would receive the same benefits as 40-hour-a-week employees but less pay, Amazon said.
It's right there in the summary. These employees will be getting benefits.
I'm sure a large company would love to hire people for 30 hours or less a week, thus dodging any requirement to give them full-time benefits.
<reads rest of summary>
The 30-hour groups would receive the same benefits as 40-hour-a-week employees but less pay, Amazon said.
...hmm. Now I'm intrigued. Count me among the group that would happily accept a 25% pay cut for a guaranteed cap at 30 hours per week, if I didn't have to give up benefits.
Actually, given the cost of benefits, the pay cut would probably have to be more than that, because the cost of benefits is mostly constant. If your 40-hour week earns you $100K/yr take-home, and your benefits cost another $50K, Amazon would want to pay $150K * 0.75 for three-quarters of the work, or $112.5K, of which you'd see $62.5K -- a 37.5% cut in take-home pay. But I still might consider it.
sacré bleu! 30 heures? Zees is full-time, no?
How much of a shit do you have to be to spin part-timer exploitation as a move to help the workers? All this shows is that you think of even your management as peons unworthy of benefits.
I am sure this has nothing to do with it...... But, if your employee is not full time, there is no obligation to offer health insurance, vacation, or sick time as large companies currently need to do.
Seems like Amazon would save a ton of money by having everyone move to "part time".
It'll be like Uber for Amazon tech teams!
You are welcome on my lawn.
Unless they readjust pay to offset the reduced hours, it's still a wash.
Then again, this is Amazon, where backstabbing is encouraged.
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Everyone's work situation is different. Some people want fixed, regular hours with well-defined time off. Some people just seem to want to be exploited to the maximum extent possible. Others have requirements that fit neither extreme.
For example, one of the reasons I work where I do now is the flexibility. I have 2 little kids, one of which is going into kindergarten this fall. My wife has a job that absolutely demands "butt in seat time" and a horrible commute. I make less than I could be making, but I can disappear when I need to and just do the work later on in the day. One very popular option I could see for people that work and have kids is work structured so that at least one parent can be home when the kid gets home from school and when it's time to leave for school, yet both parents still work. My job's not flexible enough to swing that, but I would certainly give up some pay for that flexibility.
I think employers in the long run will see that being flexible lets them keep a higher-quality work force. I've been looking into working in the state university system, since I would then have a 3-minute commute instead of a 25-minute one. Jobs just aren't available because once people get in, they stay. You have to wait until someone literally retires, partially because it's really hard to hire people, but partially because of long service. Several staff members I know have confirmed this, and a huge reason is flexibility...they certainly don't get paid market rates. You're working for the state and have to deal with bureaucracy, but academic jobs give people the freedom that some like more than money.
How do so many of you not even finish the summary? I get the difficulty of clicking to the article, but stay you missed was only 2 sentences away.
You didn't even read the summary. It stated they "would receive the same benefits as 40-hour-a-week employees."
The problem is that they're going to require the employees put in sixty hours minimum for less pay. For some people, that's better than the usual eighty hour a week demand from Amazon, but it still isn't honest of them. I know when my roommate got a part time job there, they told her she would only be required to work every other week in her UX position, and that is what she wanted since she works on a lot of side projects. She finally got fired for not putting in a minimum of forty hours on her weeks off.
Or not.
If you have a competent AI running the company, the "CEO" job would devolve into something more like a Wal-Mart greeter. A friendly public human face for the company. I guess that puts Larry Ellison out of a job, though, doesn't it?
And why have "a" CEO if that's all the job entails? Hire an even half-dozen or so of them, take a quantity discount and never lack for corporate PR at all the best public functions.
Hope this becomes a trend. I would love the option to work for 20 or 30 hours/week even for half the money. I've always felt like I had to choose between 40-50 hour weeks or nothing.
Sounds like typical part-time software development work, the sort I had during most of my undergraduate and my graduate school days. Working 25-30 hours a week at real companies, albeit usually small ones, although my hours were somewhat dependent upon class schedules in undergraduate days.
Its great Amazon is doing this but is it really something new and different in the "industry"?
It's not the health benefits. They've already said they'd give them those. But in every IT job I know of companies work you like a dog. Usually low level hourly work goes to contractors or outsources so companies can treat those employees like crap w/o having to admit the fact. Maybe this is just to get some good press? Or maybe this lets them pay people for 30 that they give the usual 60/hours of work to.
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Properly managed companies don't have crunch times. Good employees get their shit done on time.
Well, when a good employer does a proper job of estimating the work involved.
I fortunately once had such an experience. I led a five person team on a 14 month project and we only had about two weeks of crunch, and it was relatively minor crunch. It was a small company and I manically kept developers focused on priority features. I did not allow my boss or the company owner to insert their ideas into the current tasks. Its not that their ideas were bad, its that they weren't contractual obligations. We were developing the software for someone else and had a very hard immovable due date, it was software to be physically bundled with a chemistry textbook and a contractual feature list.
The conversation usually went "That's a great idea, and it will only take a day or two, but it has to go on the end of our features to implement list. Its not core functionality. We can't risk being late or missing one of our contractual features so the contractual features have to be at the top of the list." The boss and owner were usually disappointed but persuaded. While they did not have software development backgrounds they were otherwise intelligent and reasonable people. Yes at other companies I probably would have been fired. As I said, an admittedly fortunate experience.
FWIW I am in a "tech job" and I went from 40 to 30 hours a week just before our 2nd child was born, so that was over 18 years ago. Loved it so much I stayed at that level, even as she got older. And I always thought that my employers get the *best* 30 hours of my week, not the hours spent hanging in the coffee room on Friday afternoon!
I once worked at a company that's normal schedule was 9 hours a day Monday through Thursday and 4 hours Friday morning.
Absenteeism was lower and management happy with these and other metrics. People naturally scheduled offsite things like doctor's appointments for Friday afternoons. But more often they just started their weekend early. People were overwhelmingly happy with the schedule.
Alas California put an end to this. Employees apparently don't have the authority to move a non-overtime hour from Friday to another day of the week and exceed 8 hours in a given day.
Unless Amazon also changes their culture of overwork, those "30-hour" weeks are rapidly going to become 50 hour weeks, the same way "40-hour" weeks became 60-hour weeks. Rather than gimmicks, I'd rather just have an employer that was honest and upfront about what is expected, with competent enough project management to meet that expectation, from both sides.
Imagine all the people...
I haven't applied to Amazon though I have applied to a lot of other major employers in my area. What is the most common response? Nothing at all. Not even a form rejection letter, just nothing - drawn out over a long time.
It seems the majority of employers in our country are reliant on various shitty HR algorithms to evaluate resumes en masse, and most often the employers don't know shit about how those algorithms work. The employers then congratulate themselves about how many resumes they were able to avoid reading, and then they get stuck with a thoroughly illogical collection of resumes written by people who happened to match the correct combination of keywords (which were often not included in the job posting).
If they would actually have human beings read the resumes, they would find hiring gets a lot easier.
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As much as I agree that Amazon is looking to cheap out on benefits for these groups eventually, calling someone shills because they point out your error makes your comment entirely laughable.
That's why currently we are paid to work 40 hours but are expected to do 60 or 80. This is just a ruse they are trying to pay people less for the same amount of work.
Legally, they can't do that. For ACA purposes, for example, if someone works 30 hours or more, they're considered full-time employees legally, and you have to pay for their health insurance. And you cannot legally limit 401(k) matching unless the employee works fewer than 1,000 hours per year (19.23 hours per week).
At 30 hours per week, about the only thing they have any flexibility on is the number of vacation days. And nobody is going to join a company that makes them work 3/4 time with no vacations, so if they attempted that, it would quickly become a self-correcting problem.
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I can tell how this one is going to go down.
Amazon: Erm, you don't quite qualify for one of our full-time positions, but we have a new part-time program. Unlike most part-time work, it is 30 hours and not twenty, aaaaand we expect you to go the extra mile and stay late sometimes.
Job-Seeker: So basically, work 40 hours and get paid for 20, without benefits or any expectation of future employment?
Amazon: (Sadistic Chuckle) Not officially, but that's what you'll end up doing. Now, do you want to advance your career, or not?
Alternative Right.
Look at the core hours: 10-2 when the kids are in school. This is obviously an attempt to improve their gender equality numbers.
Good idea if it works for them though.
As a senior multi-language full stack dev, I have talked to Amazon before. The reason I laugh and hang up on their recruiters that cold call me is because they are dicks, not because the money is bad, or even the hours being uneven. They have a lot of people, like MS did 15 years back, who are convinced that because they work for a company that is currently doing well, that they are 'the shit' and anyone else is garbage. They earned the nickname 'Am-holes' for a reason.
Rather than trying to fire off the bottom 20% of the company's performers each year, perhaps they should be trying to fire off the 20% that are anti-social, abusive, or poor team players.
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Echoing some of the other comments .. once I read this story
1) As everyone else knows.. oh yes we have 40 hour a week IT jobs... when is the last time you had a consistent 40 hours? so they're saying hmm we'll pay them for 30 and get the same hours out of them
2) Again - cutting other key benefits such as health insurance - employer provided ones that is ... I am sure they won't be equal to other works -- be it options or perks etc. What companies say and what happens in reality I'm sure are different things... Maybe it's benefits .. but scaled down ... I'd like to get a chat with a 30 hour worker after the honeymoon is over and see what happens
3) Once a place is deemed a sweatshop, unless the place gets turned over inside and out, ownership and management-wise... it's always a sweatshop
Just like full timers are not checking out after 40hrs, why would these part timers be checking out after 30? Unless of course there is a new policy requiring overtime pay so a part timer working 40 hrs get 30+1.5*10 = 45hrs worth of pay. All full timers will want to become part timers! :-)
...let me amend that to "I'd happily accept a 25% pay cut for a 30-hour work week, but not at Amazon."
I could possibly be earning more money working somewhere else if I were willing to put up with 24/7 on-call. Not interested. Not interested in the quality-of-life sacrifice, and not interested in helping perpetuate the myth that you can do that to people without impairing the work they do during "normal hours".
I could definitely be earning more money working 60-80 hour weeks for a nominally "full-time" position. But what would I do with the extra money? I'd have no spare time to spend it. I couldn't use it to buy back my kids' childhood, or my marriage. And by the time I'd "saved up enough to retire early", I would've forgotten how to enjoy it.
Amazon is interested in the results of the Swedish experiments with the 30 hour work week from last year. Apparently humans are more productive when they feel rested and secure, or at least when they don't feel like they're trading their lives with their families and friends for depreciating income.
This has been my experience as well. When I've been able to identify and directly contact the actual hiring manager, they seem delighted to talk to me and always lament the complete lack of qualified applicants (none of them ever got my resume passed to them from HR). So far I've ended up turning down most of these offers, but you have to wonder how many other qualified resumes the hiring manager never even sees.
Any communications with HR, even if addressed to a specific person, are just blackholed. I have no idea why companies even have these useless departments or if there are actually any real people in them at all.
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The 30-hour groups would receive the same benefits as 40-hour-a-week employees but less pay, Amazon said.
It's right there in the summary. These employees will be getting benefits.
For now.