Jobs in Amazon: Online shopping giant to hire 55,000 people
While other companies laid-off workers during the pandemic, Amazon's workforce ballooned as more people stayed home and ordered toilet paper and groceries from the shopping site. Last year alone, it hired 500,000 people.
- Online shopping giant Amazon will hire 55,000 people
- The Seattle-based company plans to hire 20,000 people at its Walmart and Sam's Club warehouse
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New York: Amazon is going on another hiring spree. The company said Wednesday that it plans to hire 55,000 people around the world, with about 40,000 of those roles in the US.
Its Chief Executive Andy Jassy said Amazon.com Inc is planning to hire 55,000 people for corporate and technology roles globally in the coming months. That’s equal to more than a third of Google’s headcount as of June 30 and close to all of Facebook’s.
Jassy, in his first press interview since he ascended to Amazon’s top post in July, said the company needed more firepower to keep up with demand in retail, the cloud and advertising, among other businesses.
He said the company`s new bet to launch satellites into orbit to widen broadband access, called Project Kuiper, would require a lot of new hires, too. The positions range from tech jobs to corporate roles to warehouse work packing and shipping orders for the online shopping giant.
While other companies laid-off workers during the pandemic, Amazon's workforce ballooned as more people stayed home and ordered toilet paper and groceries from the shopping site. Last year alone, it hired 500,000 people.
Amazon currently employs more than 1.3 million worldwide, making it the second-largest private US Employer after retail rival Walmart, which is also ramping up hiring.
The company said Wednesday it planned to hire 20,000 people at its Walmart and Sam's Club warehouses to fill online orders to drive lifts.
Like Walmart before it, Amazon continues to face pressure on how it treats its workers. A union push at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama failed earlier this year, but other unions and advocates still have the company in its sights.
The Teamsters, one of the country's largest unions, said in June that it would step up its efforts to unionize Amazon workers, saying that the company exploits employees by paying them low wages, pushes them to work at fast speeds and offers no job security.
Amazon said Wednesday a large number of job openings are due to its growing businesses, including its cloud computing unit and its project to send satellites into space to beam internet service to the earth.
The Seattle-based company said the open US Jobs are spread across 220 Amazon locations around the country.
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