Amazon reprimands employees for not adhering to in-office work requirement

Amazon reprimands employees for not adhering to in-office work requirement

Amazon is‍ reprimanding its US workers for not spending enough time in⁢ the office, sending a ⁤stern email about its work policy to employees this week.

“We are reaching out​ as​ you are not currently meeting⁢ our expectation of joining your colleagues in the office at least three days⁤ a week, even though your assigned building is ready,” the email reads, according to a screenshot shared on the anonymous corporate message board Blind and confirmed by Amazon.

“We⁤ expect you to‌ start coming into⁣ the office three‍ or more days a week now,” the⁤ email continued, ⁣adding ⁣that if the‌ recipient‍ had ‍received the email in error or had a specific reason​ prohibiting them from attending the office, they should ‌have a⁢ conversation⁤ with their manager ‌as soon as possible.

When asked ⁤to clarify the circumstances under which an employee might receive such​ an email, ‍Amazon said it was ​intended for workers who⁣ “have badged in fewer than 3⁣ days a‍ week for 5 or more​ of the past 8 weeks,⁤ have not badged in 3⁢ days a ‌week ⁢for 3⁢ or more‍ of the past 4 weeks, and their building has been ‌ready 8 weeks or more.”

A ⁢spokesperson for Amazon also⁣ stressed that this ⁤policy only affected employees based in the US but ‍didn’t respond when asked under what circumstances workers will be⁣ able to apply for exemptions, and ​if attendance ⁣will be ‌tied to employee performance reviews.

In May, several ⁢hundred tech and administrative ‌workers at Amazon’s main headquarters in Seattle staged a walkout, in part due ‌to the company mandate on the number of days employees needed to ⁢be in the⁢ office.​ The Amazon Employees ⁣for Climate Justice group, ​which organized the walkout,⁢ accused the company of overseeing a “fumbled rollout” regarding its ‍return-to-office ‌policy and said it threatened the⁤ company’s ⁢long-term success.

Amazon​ also laid off more than 18,000​ employees in ‌January this year. The figure, which represented‍ the largest ‍round of job⁤ cuts in⁣ the⁢ company’s history, were the result of “the uncertain economy,” according to a note from ‌CEO Andy Jassy.

Big Tech continues to renege on flexible work policies

Even though technology organizations seemingly led the charge to work from home‍ during the COVID-19⁤ pandemic, over the last 12 months​ a large number of⁢ so-called Big​ Tech companies have backtracked​ on ⁢their flexible working ‌plans.

Earlier this week, ⁢videoconferencing⁤ company Zoom updated its hybrid work policy to require any employee within 50 miles of an ‌office to commute in‌ at⁤ least twice a⁤ week, while​ last‍ month, Google​ begun ⁤requiring most employees to‍ be in an office at least three days‌ a week ‌and​ controversially⁢ said it would be‌ factoring office attendance into employees’ performance reviews.

According to a report from The Information, Meta is also planning⁤ to enact ‍its strictest remote work policy⁤ change ⁤since the ​outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, requiring employees to be in the office three days a week from…

2023-08-12 ‌03:24:02
Article from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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