Amazon Software Development Engineering I reviews

3.8

59% would recommend to a friend

(557 total reviews)
avatar

Andrew Jassy

40% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Software Development Engineering I employees have rated Amazon with 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 557 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Software Development Engineering I professionals have a good working experience there. Amazon is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Software Development Engineering I professionals compared to other employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

557 reviews
5.0
Sep 13, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- One will get fair amount of experience from the company. - They have good management team and the company takes good care of employees, to maintain work life balance. -Amazing work culture and colleagues who puts you at ease and a supportive team leadership. -True sense of belonging and amazing benefits including flexibility, reimbursements, leaves, etc.

Cons

-Competition with moving things -fast paced and various tech stacks

5.0
Sep 12, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Solid place to learn best practices of quality software engineering. Lots of established processes and documentation ensure only good quality code is shipped out. The environment is very structured. • Firsthand access to learning and mastering all aspects of AWS, as Amazon uses its own product to host its own infrastructure. Any training you can find here is extremely valuable, and carry from job to job.

Cons

• Company is "frugal", but in practice, extremely stingy. Snacks aren't free, they're placed behind a vending machine you need to pay for. The only napkins you get are paper towel rolls. Pro from this is that I can bet that with WFH becoming more popular, Amazon is probably going to use this to cut costs on their office buildings for software developers. • At least for my team, there was a high turnover. There were 14 people on the team when I joined, but 10 when I left. Those 10 were not the same 14, and someone was leaving every month. We had portraits of people organized in order of likeliness to leave and called that the "graveyard". I thought it was a joke... until it wasn't. But that's just my experience. • Upward mobility is easy at first, then it becomes exponentially harder without too much payoff. People usually just promote and leave for another big company that pays more and has better perks since it's not worth the overwork to get to that next level. You're going to see more people earlier in their career, and the "veteran" Amazonian is incredibly rare. • There are incentives and clear goals to make it to the next level, but chances are, the workload is so high that you're probably going to burn out before you get there, and transfer out before you vest all your RSUs. WLB is not really valued, just work.

Viewing 130 - 132 of 557 Reviews

Glassdoor has 251,023 Amazon reviews submitted anonymously by Amazon employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Amazon is right for you.