Remote work, coffee badging, and hybrid work at Amazon are over, according to a memo sent to all Amazon employees by Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. Jassy announced that workers must return to the office five days a week starting January 2nd, 2025.
“We’ve decided that we’re going to return to being in the office the way we were before the onset of COVID,” Jassy says in a memo sent to staff on September 16, 2024. The announcement expands the hybrid-work mandate of working from an Amazon office 3 days a week since May 2023.
An excerpt of the memo Amazon CEO Andy Jassy sent to all Amazon employees announcing the change is shared below and is available on their public website:
Remote Work and Coffee Badging at Amazon are Over
Amazon’s announcement reverses a previous three-day-a-week hybrid work schedule that the company began enforcing in May 2023. The mandate was audited for employee compliance, even tying in-office presence to promotion eligibility.
According to an Amazon spokesperson statement to Business Insider, employees who didn’t meet the required three-day office policy could be denied promotions for “not being in compliance with company guidelines and policies.”
This led many to start the trend of “coffee badging,” or showing up to work to badge in, grab a coffee, and leave after spending minimal time in the office.
However, Amazon wised up to the act by auditing the time between Amazon employee badge swipes.
Amazon Workers Blast the 5-day RTO Policy
Amazon is not the only large corporation to mandate a return to the office, but it is one of the few in “Big Tech” to enforce a 5-day RTO policy. Not surprisingly, Amazon employees are not happy to be forced to commute five days a week – especially after flip-flopping on remote work policies.
“I don’t see myself as part of Andy Jassy’s Amazon,” current Software Development Manager Carl Shimer, AWS, shared on LinkedIn. “I don’t mind riding the train into Bostonm to see my team, but do I really want to do this five days a week for the rest of my career? Nope,” Shimer continued.
“Can I negotiate my manager to PIP me,” one employee wrote about Amazon’s famously ruthless performance improvement plan. “Take my money and leave?”
“So if I go in 5x week, that means I can leave my laptop at work right? There’s no reason to bring it home,” another Amazon employee wrote.
It’s unclear whether this is an effort to force employee resignations by non-compliance to trim headcount or something the company believes will benefit from enforcing RTO. However, one thing is clear: the top-performing AWS and Amazon employees who aren’t interested in staying know their value and will swiftly gain employment elsewhere.
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