Amazon fired the employee, later tried to hire him again 4 times but…

A former Amazon employee who was fired by the company in January has rejected four reappointment offers, shedding light on the circumstances of her departure and Amazon's persistence in trying to bring her back. He was a business analyst at Amazon and was not happy with what happened during his tenure at the company.

by Vikash Kumawat
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A former Amazon employee who was fired by the company in January has rejected four reappointment offers, shedding light on the circumstances of her departure and Amazon’s persistence in trying to bring her back. He was a business analyst at Amazon and was not happy with what happened during his tenure at the company.

In January this year, a former Amazon employee received an email informing him of his layoff and two months of severance pay. Given his manager’s constant assurances about his job security because of his unique skills, this was a shock.

The former Amazon employee expressed his frustration, saying, “My manager said, ‘There’s no one else on the team who does what you do. So you don’t need to be worried.’ It turned out that this was not true; direct managers had no role in layoff decisions.”

He revealed that two months before the layoffs, Amazon had asked employees to document their work and projects. However, the process became disorganized as individuals edited others’ entries and took credit for work they did not contribute. Sadly, the former employee’s coworkers added her name to her projects, falsely suggesting that she played no significant role. Despite these red flags, management dismissed the situation, claiming it was “not a cause for concern.”

After his layoff, the former employee struggled in a job market marked by widespread IT layoffs, feeling unappreciated and reluctant to return to Amazon, even when the company offered opportunities to laid-off employees. He explained, “My manager and then their manager were always telling me that I was someone they wanted to protect and that I was someone they valued a lot. And in the end, it really didn’t feel that way at all. It felt depersonalized and almost like a slap in the face because you give so much to them.”

Despite not having a job, he remained firm in his decision to reject Amazon’s re-hiring efforts. According to an Insider report, Amazon contacted him four times, but he had lost faith in the organization and could not imagine returning to the company that had fired him without any reason.

In his essay, he expressed his concerns, stating, “The thing that rubbed me the wrong way was that they clearly had roles for these people. You’re hiring for the same job that I had. But yet you’re telling me my role is redundant. I felt like it could easily happen again because I was in a position where I felt like I was doing a good job, and I was working hard. None of that seemed to matter to them.” The former employee’s story underscores the challenges faced by gig economy workers, where job security can be fragile, and corporate actions can leave employees feeling undervalued and betrayed.

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