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Amazon Lab126

Part of Amazon

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Amazon Lab126 Reviews

3.2

59% would recommend to a friend

(748 total reviews)

Jeff Bezos

63% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

Amazon Lab126 has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 748 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Amazon Lab126 employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

748 reviews
4.0
13 Apr 2024

Work in lab126

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good work life balance. Competitive compensation.

Cons

There is no clear path to get promotion.

1.0
17 Nov 2018

Unsaturated consumer

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lots of vendors without screening

Cons

Merchandise delivery failure, no guidance in rechecking shipping

1.0
25 Apr 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- It is possible to get away with pretty mediocre work. Look around, and you'll find huge teams of people doing nothing. If you want to do nothing too, this is a great place to be. - Quite a few people get hired away by better companies. Lots of employees ride the "they make hardware" reputation to other companies that want to get into the hardware game. Don't be fooled. Engineers from Lab126 are like an infestation. One will show up, and 20 others will follow to totally screw up your team. They move in pods, and the only thing they're good at is political games. - Cash bonus to start. When you start, stock vestiture is 5%, 15%, 40%, 40%. This is totally broken, so they make up the up front with cash. If the stock swings around, you've got cash for the first two years.

Cons

- A very political backstabbing company. Seriously, you have to learn to how to curry favor and build little pods of political power. If you don't, it doesn't matter how good your work is. Everything is about politics at Amazon. - Compensation model screws you over if the stock does well. This one is hard to explain, because nobody else does it this way. If the stock from a previous grant does well, it gets counted against you in later years. Let's say you got 400 shares at $100 a share (example numbers). You have an awesome year, get a great rating, etc, and the stock doubles to $200 a share! Great! Except the HR people have calculated your "target compensation" for the stock appreciating 15% year over year. You would have gotten share counts of 20, 60, 160, 160 after years 1, 2, 3, 4. Let's look at year 3. HR assumes 15% year over year, so a share price of ~$152.09 for 160 shares, or $24,334. Maybe they have you pegged for $30,000 of "target" stock compensation. If you're anything other than perfectly timed, your first year of review won't count. You get jack. But let's say you came in at review time, so you have a one year lead. At a "target" of $30,000 of stock at year 3, they would give you another 37 shares to get you to 197 shares vesting in year 3. But the stock went up to $200/share. So they figure a continued 15% appreciation year over year, and they assume that the new 3 year price is $264.5/share. Taken against the 160 shares you already have banked from your signing bonus, they figure you'll be getting $42,320 after year 3, which is more than your "target". So what do you get for your first annual bonus in RSU's vesting after year 3? Nothing. That's right. Nothing. You get nothing because you're "already hitting your target compensation with previous grants." The only thing you get is the potential that, if the stock doesn't do great or you don't get a stellar review, you'll be staring a huge pay cut in the face. It's hard to grasp, because it's so stupid. If the stock goes down, you obviously lose. If the stock goes up, Amazon takes credit for the price at vesting, not at grant time. What a bunch of jerks. - Senior management in Seattle is stupid. All of these broken incentives and backstabbing come from Seattle policies and mismanagement of Lab126. You will feel like a misunderstood subsidiary being managed into the ground by know-nothing jerks who think they walk on water. - The products are embarrassing. Fire phone? Echo Tap? $50 tablets that seem like a good idea until you use them? Try explaining to your friends and family why you work on products that you yourself don't use or recommend. - Virtually impossible to climb unless you are willing to play political games. Everything is about trading favors, and you have to be willing to throw good engineering away to get ahead. It will suck your soul out of you.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 748 Reviews

Glassdoor has 905 Amazon Lab126 reviews submitted anonymously by Amazon Lab126 employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Amazon Lab126 is right for you.