Amazon gives managers power to fire non-compliant employees

Share post:

Amazon is giving managers the power to fire employees who refuse to comply with the company’s three-times-a-week return-to-office policy.

This is the strongest measure Amazon has taken yet to enforce its return-to-office mandate, which has been met with resistance from many employees.

According to updated global manager guidance obtained by Insider, managers are instructed to first hold a private conversation with employees who don’t comply with the three-times-a-week requirement.

If the employee continues to refuse to come in, the manager should hold another meeting and, if needed, take disciplinary action that includes termination of employment.

Amazon employees have expressed frustration with the return-to-office policy, arguing that they were hired as remote workers and that the mandate is a shift from a policy allowing individual leaders to determine how their teams worked. Despite employee backlash, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has said that the company is “not going to work out” for those pushing back against the office-attendance mandate.

In an email to Insider, Amazon spokesperson Rob Munoz said the company was seeing “more energy, connection, and collaboration” with the vast majority of employees in the office more frequently.

He added that Amazon’s relocation policy was affecting a “relatively small percentage of our team” and exceptions to the return-to-office mandate would be made on a “case-by-case basis.”

Managers are also asked to “assume positive intent” and “make high-judgment decisions” regarding individual situations, such as ascertaining whether employees have missed attendance requirements because they’re on paid time off or at home because of an illness.

The sources for this piece include an article in BusinessInsider.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Costs from Global CrowdStrike Outage Could Exceed $1 Billion

The global tech outage caused by a faulty CrowdStrike update on Friday could result in damages exceeding $1...

Kaspersky to shut down its US business due to sanctions

Russian cybersecurity firm Kaspersky Lab announced it will cease its U.S. operations starting July 20, following sanctions from...

Intuit lays off 1,800 people amid a shift to AI

Intuit, the company behind QuickBooks, Credit Karma, and TurboTax, is laying off 1,800 employees, which is about 10%...

VMWare revenue drops by $600 million but Broadcom assures investors growth plan is on track

In its first full quarter under Broadcom's ownership, VMware's revenue fell by $600 million, dropping to $2.7 billion....

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways