http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/bl … _loves_youGuardian wrote:
Amazon chief Jeff Bezos has been finding out first-hand what it's like to work in one of the online retailer's giant distribution centres, by spending a week on the shopfloor.
The lucky warehouse - or as Amazon calls it "fulfillment center" [sic] - is on Mercer Road in Lexington, Kentucky - about 2,470 miles from Amazon's headquarters in Seattle. (It's OK, it would only take a day and a half to drive, thinks Google.)
Google Nostalgia - sorry, Street View - suggests it's sunny. And large. And flat. And quite a distance from anywhere else.
Amazon declined requests from the local paper for an interview: "Unfortunately, I'm not going to be able to arrange any interviews or photos this week while he is in Lexington," said a spokeswoman. "He is there to work."
And you know what Amazon is like about work in its warehouses. Back in April 2001, the Guardian noted that the retailer had been accused of running "the worst of old economy working practices" by staff in the UK. They said "pickers" were forced to select three items per minute from shelves, and "packers" to parcel on average 5 orders every two minutes, on 11-hour shifts from 7.30pm to 6.30am which included an unpaid one-hour meal break at 1am - in a place with no canteen.
So what are your thoughts? PR stunt or the CEO trying to get better understanding of his workers?