Don’t work at Amcor if you can help it - Machine Operator Amcor Employee Review

1.0
Jan 29, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can make some ok money if you sacrifice your social and family life.

Cons

Used to work at Amcor in Oshkosh, Wisconsin and gave nearly 10 years to the company. After several years you begin to realize that their corporate model is to continually trim your benefits and compensation, while telling you how they’re supposedly watching out for you. The management, while they had some good people here and there, are powerless to effect meaningful change on behalf of the shop floor people. They act like they listen to your suggestions, then ignore any sort of meaningful change or reform and do what they want to do corporately anyway. Even the bonuses had random criteria attached to them so the company could say they offered things like “gain-share” or “incentive bonuses”, but made it very difficult for people to actually qualify for the payouts. Pay. Your. People. They preach a lot about a great culture, but it’s incredibly toxic in reality because they don’t listen to their people. It was not worth the money to have my soul slowly drained out after year upon year of working overtime, a horrible rotating schedule, and having my compensation and benefits reduced annually.

Explore other reviews about Amcor

5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Diverse work, gains exposure to many systems and processes

Cons

Payroll is always strict and deadlines need to be met no matter what

1.0
Jun 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Easthampton, MA facility. Default overtime built into the first week of your rotation. Big on safety. Descent training. Mostly a low skill job, but they do a good job training. If you can walk and sign your name, no education, they'll hire you. Pay is mediocre $21 / hour compared to other manufacturing jobs in Western Massachusetts. Friendly coworkers.

Cons

Panama Schedule 12 hours overnights 7pm-7am gives a lot of time off, but hard to adjust to and your first day off is a waste as your body tries to reset to daylight hours. Impacts your health physiologically and mentally and hurts social relationships. One week you work 60 hours and the next 24. The worst is doing 36 hours over three nights. Management does not care about burnout and when it happens, they blame staff for not knowing how to deal with it. Management has no concerns about staff work / life balance. Stand for 12 hours. First 90 days you get penalized for taking time off. No sick or personal time until after 90 days. Plant shut downs during holidays is nice, but you don't get paid so your paycheck suffers. There's no employee wellness program. If you like to think and feel like you're making a difference in society, this is not the job for you. You'll feel frustrated and mentally bored. Feel like you're a cog in the corporate wheel. Can't listen to music via ear buds, which would help time go by. To be expected babysitting a machine due to safety, but it's the principle. 12 hours is ROUGH with limited mental stimulation. If you have a college degree they usually won't hire you. They mostly hire people with nothing more than a high school diploma and sometimes not even that, so the people you work with aren't cream of the crop. Latest thing is hiring immigrants because nobody wants to work at Easthampton. Amcor claims they hire top notch people. I beg to differ. They could legit automate 90% of operations using robots. Bulk of what people do is babysit the machine they're assigned to. Low skill, but management drums it up it's higher skilled because they give you a ruler and protractor to do periodic product quality control checks. Easthampton MA facility is struggling financially and that comes from someone connected to corporate management. Staff morale is low. Nobody loves their job. Lifers I think this is all they have to work based on a limited skill set. Working overnight you will gain weight.

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