Amazon Principal Software Development Engineer reviews

3.6

61% would recommend to a friend

(114 total reviews)
avatar

Andrew Jassy

52% approve of CEO

84% positive business outlook

Principal Software Development Engineer employees have rated Amazon with 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 114 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Principal Software Development Engineer professionals have a good working experience there. Amazon is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Principal Software Development Engineer professionals compared to other employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

114 reviews
4.0
Jan 14, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Work on stuff that your friends and family use and love - Company culture is a meritocracy - Company culture makes sense/is logical (which for engineers is important) - One of least political places to work - Engineering teams have lots of ownership...no software architects or 200 page requirement documents. Thin product management layer. - Managers are good individual contributors, not just people managers - Peer review culture (of your code/designs/deliverables) - The feedback produces lots of personal growth, and better engineers - No-one asks you to do overtime/work weekends/etc. - Pretty flexible working for people with kids (as long as prepared to commit to coming into office most of the time) - The Amazon reading and writing practice is awesome. - Crappy team mates get encouraged to leave the company quickly. - Company promotes women and minorities, educates staff on implicit bias, etc. - The NYT article was completely inaccurate/trash/rubbish/basura - I could see myself spending the rest of my career here.

Cons

- There is always too much to do...have to manage your time and avoid over-committing. Have to have discipline over your own time to innovate and stay up to date on things going on outside company. - It's easy to confuse the wisdom of teams (which is huge) with individual wisdom...yes, the people in the room are as stupid as you are...just collectively they appear smarter. - Not a good fit for talented people/geniuses who struggle to pay attention/too laid back/not detail oriented/can't be anything other than a big fish in a small sea/don't realize the company and customer comes first. - Lots of meetings (that pro about peer review culture has a counter balance) if you aren't prudent about declining. - Definitely better benefits in other companies. Amazon's opinion is they'd rather pay you well and you buy your own lunch rather than supply lunch every day, for example.

5.0
Aug 29, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I love working with such talented coworkers with such a diverse skill set. I learn a ton from others. Over my 12 years at Amazon I've worked on tons of teams from on the amazon.com website to AWS. Each team brings new challenges and keeps me interested. The culture is great, and I enjoy the cycle of busy-to-relaxed depending on the time of year and what part of development my projects are in. I love the culture of ownership, even being on call to make sure we build high quality systems. I've grown a lot at Amazon, starting as an entry-level software developer out of college.

Cons

Amazon asks a lot of managers, so they're often stretched somewhat thin. And with people switching teams, it's common to have a different manager every year or so. This just makes it important to occasionally write down what you've been working on to hand context to your next managers(s). But this is a useful exercise for reflecting on your recent work, so it's not that big of a deal.

3.0
Mar 13, 2018

A great decade

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I love the smart people I've gotten to work with regularly. The customer obsessed cultural is inspiring, and the leadership principles we strive towards are a deep guiding light for successful productivity in any job role. The stock's long-term trajectory (nearly 30% YoY since inception) has been very lucrative for those who have stuck it out. The performance culture is stressful if you're struggling, but generally means you will routinely only be working with highly effective and motivated people. As I've grown in my career, I've always had bigger and broader opportunities presented to me, and have enjoyed the same overall growth that the company has enjoyed.

Cons

The benefits are inferior to most major tech companies. The 401k, for example, has a lowly 2% match. It routinely fails non-discrimination challenges (due to no default enrollment across the company, and low participation of FC workers). Even if we try to contribute the maximum ($18,500 in 2018), then we get a mandatory withdrawal and refund check (of~$3,400 in 2017), and of course this negatively impacts our taxes. It also does not allow after-tax contributions as is possible at a Microsoft or a Google. These gaps can be seen across the entire benefit package. Given that the HCE refunds have happened for over ten years, it's clear the company has no interest in fixing root causes of enrollment gaps to pass the discrimination tests.

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