Molly Jay, an early member of the Kindle team, said she received high 
ratings for years. But when she began traveling to care for her father, 
who was suffering from cancer, and cut back working on nights and 
weekends, her status changed. She was blocked from transferring to a 
less pressure-filled job, she said, and her boss told her she was “a 
problem.” As her father was dying, she took unpaid leave to care for him 
and never returned to Amazon.

“When you’re not able to give your absolute all, 80 hours a week, they 
see it as a major weakness,” she said.

A woman who had thyroid cancer was given a low performance rating after 
she returned from treatment. She says her manager explained that while 
she was out, her peers were accomplishing a great deal. Another employee 
who miscarried twins left for a business trip the day after she had 
surgery. “I’m sorry, the work is still going to need to get done,” she 
said her boss told her. “From where you are in life, trying to start a 
family, I don’t know if this is the right place for you.”

A woman who had breast cancer was told that she was put on a 
“performance improvement plan” — Amazon code for “you’re in danger of 
being fired” — because “difficulties” in her “personal life” had 
interfered with fulfilling her work goals. Their accounts echoed others 
from workers who had suffered health crises and felt they had also been 
judged harshly instead of being given time to recover.

A former human resources executive said she was required to put a woman 
who had recently returned after undergoing serious surgery, and another 
who had just had a stillborn child, on performance improvement plans, 
accounts that were corroborated by a co-worker still at Amazon. “What 
kind of company do we want to be?” the executive recalled asking her bosses.

The mother of the stillborn child soon left Amazon. “I had just 
experienced the most devastating event in my life,” the woman recalled 
via email, only to be told her performance would be monitored “to make 
sure my focus stayed on my job.”


full: 
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/16/technology/inside-amazon-wrestling-big-ideas-in-a-bruising-workplace.html
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to