As part of a book about the impact of technology on employment, the author writes about the bizarre miseries of working in an Amazon "fulfillment center."
http://ift.tt/1drm8aQ
Paradoxically (or not), you can buy the book on Amazon.
http://ift.tt/1ed1qQ8
Quote:
Amazons system of employee monitoring is the most oppressive I have ever come across and combines state-of-the-art surveillance technology with the system of functional foreman, introduced by Taylor in the workshops of the Pennsylvania machine-tool industry in the 1890s. In a fine piece of investigative reporting for the London Financial Times, economics correspondent Sarah OConnor describes how, at Amazons center at Rugeley, England, Amazon tags its employees with personal sat-nav (satellite navigation) computers that tell them the route they must travel to shelve consignments of goods, but also set target times for their warehouse journeys and then measure whether targets are met. All this information is available to management in real time, and if an employee is behind schedule she will receive a text message pointing this out and telling her to reach her targets or suffer the consequences. At Amazons depot in Allentown, Pennsylvania (of which more later), Kate Salasky worked shifts of up to eleven hours a day, mostly spent walking the length and breadth of the warehouse. In March 2011 she received a warning message from her manager, saying that she had been found unproductive during several minutes of her shift, and she was eventually fired. This employee tagging is now in operation at Amazon centers worldwide. |
http://ift.tt/1drm8aQ
Paradoxically (or not), you can buy the book on Amazon.
http://ift.tt/1ed1qQ8
via JREF Forum http://ift.tt/1ed1tew
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire