LM    Topics     Transportation    Warehouse

A look at how Amazon wins the war for talent


Here’s a fact for you: At present, Amazon employs more than 400,000 full and part-time associates worldwide across a network of 110 North American and another 75 around the globe. So, given that the shortage of logistics workers is a top topic at every industry event I attend, just what is Amazon doing to win the war on talent, given the scale of its operations.

That’s a question I posed to spokesperson Todd Walker at the end of our recent tour of Amazon’s highly-automated robotic fulfillment center in North Haven, Connecticut. The short answer is that Amazon is investing in pay, benefits and career opportunities for its fulfillment center workers much in the same way that it is investing in technology and automation. And for the same reason: “It all goes back to the customer experience,” Walker said. “It determines every move we make.”

During a tour of a robotics center, it’s easy to focus on the thousands of robots shuttling product to goods-to-person workstations, and forget that the facility also employs a small army of associates: In Connecticut, there are 2,500 full time associates at North Haven and another 1,500 at the Windsor facility just 50 miles away. That’s not counting the associates at the other 3 Connecticut logistics hubs. Add them all up, and you could populate your average New England town with just the Amazon warehouse associates working in Connecticut.

So, what are they doing? I think it can put it in two buckets: Recruitment and retention.

On the recruitment side, Amazon offers a $15 starting minimum wage and full medical, vision and dental insurance right out of the gate, according to Walker, and as much as a 50% match on 401(k) contributions. In the Northeast, where I live, that $15 minimum may be going up: Just the other night I saw a Walmart television ad offering a starting pay of $18 an hour for DC associates in New Hampshire, where we have one of the lower unemployment rates in the country.

On the retention side, the company offers up to 20 weeks of maternal and paternal paid leave, with other programs to “give new parents flexibility with their growing families.” That’s more generous than many white collar new parent leave benefits.

For those employees who are interested, Amazon offers a career path for floor associates. I noticed signs in the North Haven facility referencing mentors. Earlier, Walker mentioned that new employees work with mentors who train them for their positions. Aspiring employees apply for the mentorship program. Amazon will pre-pay up to 95% of tuition for courses in areas like game design, visual communications, nursing, IT programming and radiology, regardless of whether the skills are relevant to Amazon. The company has also pledged to invest over $700 million “to provide upskilling training for 100,000 U.S. employees for in demand jobs” to aid employees who want to advance into skilled positioned at Amazon, or outside. “There are literally 1,000’s of opportunities within the company,” Walker said.

Like the overall network, Amazon’s talent strategy is another of those factors that makes Amazon Amazon, and can’t easily be replicated by most organizations.


Article Topics

News
Transportation
Warehouse
Warehouse/DC
Technology
Amazon
Robotics
Technology
Transportation
Warehouse
Warehouse DC
   All topics

Warehouse News & Resources

ISM May Semiannual Report points to growth in 2024, at a reduced rate
April retail sales are mixed, reports Commerce and NRF
Automate and Accelerate: Replacing Pick-to-Light with the Next Generation of Automation
Get Your Warehouse Receiving Audit Checklist Now!
Optimizing Parcel Packing to Cut Costs
How site selection can help recruit top talent
SKU vs. Item-level Data Visibility: Why it Matters for End-to-End Traceability
More Warehouse

Latest in Logistics

FTR’s Trucking Conditions Index falls to lowest level since last September
U.S. rail carload and intermodal volumes are mixed, for week ending May 11, reports AAR
Cass Freight Index points to annual shipments and expenditures declines
ALAN opens up its nominations for 2024 Humanitarian Logistics Awards
U.S.-bound import growth remains intact in April, reports Descartes
Looking at a reshoring history lesson
NTSB: Ship lost power twice before slamming into Baltimore bridge, closing port
More Logistics

About the Author

Bob Trebilcock's avatar
Bob Trebilcock
Bob Trebilcock is the executive editor for Modern Materials Handling and an editorial advisor to Supply Chain Management Review. He has covered materials handling, technology, logistics, and supply chain topics for nearly 30 years. He is a graduate of Bowling Green State University. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at 603-852-8976.
Follow Modern Materials Handling on FaceBook

About the Author

Bob Trebilcock's avatar
Bob Trebilcock
Bob Trebilcock is the executive editor for Modern Materials Handling and an editorial advisor to Supply Chain Management Review. He has covered materials handling, technology, logistics, and supply chain topics for nearly 30 years. He is a graduate of Bowling Green State University. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at 603-852-8976.
Follow Modern Materials Handling on FaceBook

Subscribe to Logistics Management Magazine

Subscribe today!
Not a subscriber? Sign up today!
Subscribe today. It's FREE.
Find out what the world's most innovative companies are doing to improve productivity in their plants and distribution centers.
Start your FREE subscription today.

May 2024 Logistics Management

May 2, 2024 · As the days of slow, invisible supply chains that “worked behind the scenes” continue to fade in the rearview mirror, companies are improving their demand forecasting, gaining real-time visibility across their networks and streamlining their operations—and its software that makes that all possible.

Latest Resources

Get Your Warehouse Receiving Audit Checklist Now!
C3 Solutions created a detailed Warehouse Receiving Audit Checklist to enhance efficiency, ensure compliance, minimize errors, and reduce operational costs. Download it now to streamline your procedures and maintain operational excellence.
Last-Mile Evolution: Embracing 5 Trends for Success
Optimizing Parcel Packing to Cut Costs
More resources

Latest Resources

2024 Transportation Rate Outlook: More of the same?
2024 Transportation Rate Outlook: More of the same?
Get ahead of the game with our panel of analysts, discussing freight transportation rates and capacity fluctuations for the coming year. Join...
Bypassing the Bottleneck: Solutions for Avoiding Freight Congestion at the U.S.-Mexico Border
Bypassing the Bottleneck: Solutions for Avoiding Freight Congestion at the U.S.-Mexico Border
Find out how you can navigate this congestion more effectively with new strategies that can help your business avoid delays, optimize operations,...

Driving ROI with Better Routing, Scheduling and Fleet Management
Driving ROI with Better Routing, Scheduling and Fleet Management
Improve efficiency and drive ROI with better vehicle routing, scheduling and fleet management solutions. Download our report to find out how.
Your Road Guide to Worry-Free Shipping Between the U.S. and Canada
Your Road Guide to Worry-Free Shipping Between the U.S. and Canada
Get expert guidance and best practices to help you navigate the cross-border shipping process with ease. Download our free white paper today!
Warehouse/DC Automation & Technology: It’s “go time” for investment
Warehouse/DC Automation & Technology: It’s “go time” for investment
In our latest Special Digital Issue, Logistics Management has curated several feature stories that neatly encapsulate the rise of automated systems and...