(no title)
programmertote | 5 months ago
Things I didn't like about Amazon: - you get paid once a month (basically, you'll letting the company use your money for free) - if I remember correctly, you get your RSUs vested at the end of the year for the second year (I think it's like 20% of your total comp) - your comp is heavily reliant on RSUs for the third and fourth year AND the base salary was below 200K - some of the things they do are cult-y - too much writing instead of building prototypes - some folks there practice resume-driven development regardless of whether it's actually good for the org/group in terms of maintainability, simplicity, etc.
Having said that, I met good coworkers and worked in a good team (luckily) although our on-calls were sometimes brutal (like hundreds of tickets a week during the on-call).
illusive4080|5 months ago
jedberg|5 months ago
When the stock was on a tear, some people would make 2x or 3x their expected total comp. But on down stock years, you could end up at 80% of the promised comp.
IshKebab|5 months ago
I've never worked anywhere that didn't do this (in the UK). Are you suggesting they should pay more often? Is that normal in the US?
> AND the base salary was below 200K
Oh no! You guys are in for a shock if developer wages ever become more "normal" there (i.e. closer to the rest of the world).
bravetraveler|5 months ago
This sounds like the types that enjoy a big tax refund, ignoring they had it to begin with. Unless adjusting tax withholdings, one also gives a free short term loan to Uncle Sam regardless of the cycle.
Contrived. At a point this is admitting a failure or unwillingness to budget.