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Amazon Enforces New Office Hours Rule (businessinsider.com) 76

Amazon is now monitoring the hours corporate employees spend in the office. From a report: This move is intended to crack down on people who are trying to skirt the company's return-to-office policy, Business Insider has learned. Several teams across Amazon, including the retail and cloud-computing units, were told in recent months that a minimum of two hours per visit is required to count as office attendance, according to multiple screenshots of internal Slack messages obtained by BI and people familiar with the matter. Some teams have been told to stay at least six hours per visit.

Amazon's goal is to ramp up scrutiny of "coffee badging," some of the Slack messages said. Coffee badging refers to employees who badge in, get coffee, and leave the office shortly to satisfy their return-to-office mandate. Amazon started requiring office attendance for most corporate staffers three times a week last year, but it didn't have a minimum-hour obligation for each visit.

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Amazon Enforces New Office Hours Rule

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  • Sociopaths (Score:5, Funny)

    by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @01:26PM (#64630315)
    Until morale improves, the beatings will continue.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Hey... at least they haven't banned bathroom breaks yet, like they did with their delivery drivers. Those cubicles are going to start smelling pretty bad if people start throwing pee bottles in the trashcans.

      • ya gotta remember to put the bottle's caps back on tight, then there is almost no smell. if you don't put the cap back on, then, well, when you throw the pee bottle at the rubbish receptacle, there will be pee in other places than in the bottle.
      • Bottles? We were supposed to use bottles?

        Next you tell me the memos the boss hands out aren't for wiping...

      • by chrish ( 4714 )

        We'd be lucky to have cubicles at this point, many (most? all?) offices are switching to an open-office plan, but worse. They're calling it "agile seating" which is the same as hotelling or whatever; no assigned seats, desks are cleared every night by the cleaners, you're supposed to store your "personal" stuff (like keyboards, mice, flair) in a locker (that you have to request, and there aren't as many lockers as there are desks, of course).

        If you're lucky, your org might have an area designated as theirs,

  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @01:54PM (#64630403)

    Every week someone else takes one for the team and badges everyone in.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @01:58PM (#64630419)

    Maybe they'll put in a steam whistle at headquarters, to mark the shift changes - and, at the main door, they'll have one of those punch-in/punch-out time clocks [alamy.com]!

    Bezos will be standing there, wearing a fedora and chomping on a cigar, keeping a sharp eye on the employees...

  • ...is one of Amazon's "values". It's batshit crazy. Worst part is their people leave and try to spread this trash to other companies.

  • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @02:40PM (#64630537)

    If you can't tell if someone is remote or not by productivity measures - which is why you're trying to re-invent the time lock - then why worry about where they are instead of worrying about improving your productivity measures?

    Yes, there's the whole stealth layoff thing (which ought to be illegal because the reason someone loses employment affects their future prospects), but outside of that this is simply arbitrary exercise of authority.

    • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @03:05PM (#64630615)

      If you can't tell if someone is remote or not by productivity measures - which is why you're trying to re-invent the time lock - then why worry about where they are instead of worrying about improving your productivity measures?

      I don't think you want to be held accountable to your manager's productivity ideals alone. Ever have a boss with unrealistic expectations? Picture it from upper management's perspective. Lower level boss wants to fire employee because he thought a 6 week task should have been completed in 2 weeks. Upper management doesn't know the nuances well enough to know who is lying.

      Was the employee slacking or is the manager clueless? Or the employee says they're having mental or physical health issues and needs a bit more patience. Do you know for sure?...or are they just overemployed or fucking around during the day?

      If you're a great trustworthy employee, you can be awesome from everywhere, but a good portion of my team is not like you.

      If you're showing up for work daily, we know you're not fucking around too much. It is easier to give the benefit of the doubt that you're being extra thorough and putting more care into the task and the manager had unrealistic expectations. Other staffers can more easily help you when you're in the office rather than waiting for when everyone can get on a call. When you're remote?...we have no clue what is going on.

      Many employees are not as motivated, talented and trustworthy as you view yourself.

      • by r1348 ( 2567295 )

        So the reason everyone has to return to office is because of... mediocre middle management? Either screwing over their team with unrealistic expectations, or too clueless to be able to track performance remotely?
        Because these are the only two options you presented.

        • So the reason everyone has to return to office is because of... mediocre middle management? Either screwing over their team with unrealistic expectations, or too clueless to be able to track performance remotely? Because these are the only two options you presented.

          I get why you feel that way and I am explaining to you why my management wanted people in the office initially. For most teams, it's done on a case-by-case basis. I get my work done. I do my work better that most of my peers and am very transparent in regards to what is going on in my life and schedule. Other employees are not so transparent and the boss probably doesn't have the heartless nature to just automatically fire them, so having the problematic employees come into the office is an intermediate

          • by r1348 ( 2567295 )

            I do work at AWS, but I'm not based in the US. I'm actually the only member of my team in my country, so sending me back to office didn't exactly improve team collaboration in my case, it just added inconvenience. Apparently this doesn't prevent my US-based manager to promote me, since we're working on that right now.
            I also happen to be in a peculiar work arrangement that isn't actually tracked for attendance, more because of happenstance and incompetence of whoever enforced this, than by design, however th

      • Oh, please, this is the lamest excuse for RTO I've heard.
        There is only one reason for them pushing return to the office - MONEY!
        Have you ever stopped to think about how much does it cost you to commute every day to the office ?! Rent/mortgage (for the people who live somewhere just because of the work), car, fuel, car maintenance, food (restaurants vs home cooked), clothes, the time wasted in commuting.
        All of those expenses are profits in other businesses. Businesses in which the management echelon has
  • by dirk ( 87083 ) <dirk@one.net> on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @02:44PM (#64630561) Homepage

    I like work from home. I think everyone should have the option to work from home. I think what should matter is the amount and quality of your work, not where it is done from or when. But the idea that a company is wrong for punishing people when they completely ignore the rules is also wrong. If you are told you need to work from the office and you badge in, get some coffee, and go home you have to expect to be fired. The employees are free to go and get WFH jobs somewhere else (and I would fully support them doing that) but I can't support the idea you can just completely ignore what the company is telling you to do and not expect to be punished. Sorry, the company still gets a say in the working conditions, no matter how much you want to just do your own thing.

    • Be careful poster. The /. mob will come after you and Mod you down into oblivion with a Troll tag for your "anti-social" remarks.
      • wait a second, the /. mob is really about 15 or twenty mobs. I get modded troll for pointing out actual science (I am a physicist and have taught physics at the university level, so I think that I have a right to correct other people's statements about physics when it is important). I get modded trol for not licking Elon Musk's asshole. I get modded troll for not caring to vote for convicted felon's. You do not have to do much to be modded troll around here.
        • I know ... but /. stopped making sense sometime after it's founders left ... and /. still is generally more intelligent than certain other forums that shall remain un-named here.
    • If you impose a bullshit rule, watch me pit my smarts against it.

      I'm a pentester. I treat crap like that as a challenge. It's a bit like back when the game studios started putting in copy protection. After a while, thwarting that copy protection became a much more entertaining game than most of the crap they produced.

      If my employer wants to "gamify" my work experience, more power to him!

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @03:14PM (#64630649)

    Look, if I have to shower, dress and drive to the office, I'm (usually) going to stay longer than two hours, probably the whole day -- even if I don't have to. For a few jobs I've had, like when I worked at NASA Langley, it was a (minimum) 45 minute highway drive, through a bridge tunnel, often with less than ideal traffic, so leaving early, if it had been an option, would have been dumb. I've had other jobs that were literally 5 minutes from home and going into the office wasn't that big a deal. I've also worked 100% from home, excepting the occasional at-office meeting, and found it nice, especially being able to work whenever, like at 3am, but also a bit lonely and isolating. Personally, I like working at the office as it helps keep me focused, helps compartmentalize my work/life balance, and affords face-to-face interactions with co-workers. As both a software engineer and systems administrator (larger Unix/Linux systems) some of my work can be done remotely but some has to be done locally. I deal with it, usually at the office.

    The bottom line here is that your employment means you also agree to abide by the rules of that employer -- even ones you think are the dumb.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by smoot123 ( 1027084 )

      Look, if I have to shower, dress and drive to the office, I'm (usually) going to stay longer than two hours, probably the whole day -- even if I don't have to.

      Hopefully you shower, shave, and dress anyway so that's a sunk cost. Sunk costs shouldn't affect your subsequent actions. Although, my office had a shower room, I wonder if personal grooming that counts as in-office time.

      Around here, my drive to work took 60 minutes in traffic, 30 off-peak. What would make the most sense would be to hang out on Zoom for a few hours, head to the office at 10, badge in, and leave no later than 2. That's about 60 minutes driving for 3.5 hours in the office (minus a lunch break

      • Hopefully you shower, shave, and dress anyway so that's a sunk cost.

        When you're working from home, that's not always required. :-)

        Although, my office had a shower room, I wonder if personal grooming that counts as in-office time.

        I didn't have that, but if I was in the office, whatever I was doing I counted as in-office time. Staring at the ceiling, drinking coffee -- pondering a code/admin problem... If I'm there, they're paying me.

      • We currently have about 35 degrees Celsius where I live. You expect me to dress for working in my home office?

        I volunteer to keep the cam offline when we're in a teams meeting. If you insist in me turning it on... well, you wanted it that way.

    • I wish I worked at NASA Langley. I'd have to move, but... My father worked there back in the day.
    • I can see the need to dress, depending on the weather, but why the shower? Is it Christmas already again?

  • we want our 60-80 hour weeks back and WFH is not putting that in

    • Sure it is, just as much as it was back in the office.

      You really think anyone actually worked 60-80 hours? Unless "work" equates to "keeping a chair from floating off into space", you're delusional.

  • I worked for these guys for a while, during the start of COVID. Despite our team's supposed primary function being providing in-person PC support for AWS employees in the various data centers? They quickly pivoted to demanding we work only from home and do "chat and phone support". We looked forward to the one day a week they allowed a few of us to come in to the office to work. The place was nearly empty, mind you... with the whole staff ordered to work from home. But we could, at least, take a break from

  • so (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Growlley ( 6732614 ) on Tuesday July 16, 2024 @04:23PM (#64630885)
    coffee , water , cooler chat , tidy up email account., have a shit go home - that's about 2 hours then
  • But wait! Badge "out" can't be triggered because safety issues. How are they measuring badge-in and "out" without badge-out which shouldn't be a legal requirement for the mentioned safety issues. For example - there is a fire. People ran out without badging. How to account for the victims of the fire?
  • Typical scene in the Amazon office building entrance [youtube.com] I think Jeff Bezons has in his office the human skin armchair and the aquarium with employees.
  • I date with the dinosaurs it seems. Back in those days meeting attendance was increased dramatically for the meetings that had donuts available for the attendees. That worked better than the threats we were more used to. Google purportedly has wonderful employee amenities including food, free food. Amazon could provide employees who attend work (you checked in before 0800 the last couple work days and checked out past 1700) get free food on their badge's attendance credit. They also get access to the gym an

    • Mod parent up. My wife's teams have successfully delivered multiple sets of hardware for space missions due to being fuelled by meeting donuts and the promise of a team-member's favourite home-made cake if they hit deadlines. We're mammals: of course 'free' calories are going to be attractive :)

    • Meeting attendance went through the ROOF when we started teams meetings from home. The bi-weekly speeches by our C-suite were pretty much dead, with only a handful of die hard bootlicks going while they were in person, recently they had to upgrade the streaming server to accommodate the amount of people that participate. Pretty much every single person in the company that isn't on vacation or sick is there!

      If you really want attendance, get people to join from home!

      Ok, now for the real reason behind it: It'

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