The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Amazon to hire 50,000 workers next week

Online giant is holding job fairs at warehouses, plans on-the-spot offers.

- By Joseph Pisani

Amazon will make thousands of job offers in just one day as it holds a giant job fair at nearly a dozen warehouses across U.S.

NEW YORK — Amazon plans to make thousands of job offers in just one day as it holds a giant job fair next week at nearly a dozen warehouses across the U.S.

Those offered jobs on the spot will pack or sort boxes and help ship them to customers. Nearly 40,000 of the 50,000 jobs will be full time. Most of these jobs will count toward Amazon’s previously announced goal of adding 100,000 full-time workers by the middle of next year.

The hiring spree is yet another sign of Amazon’s massive growth at a time when traditiona­l retailers are closing stores and cutting jobs.

It’s also a way for Amazon to lock in employees before the start of the busy holiday shopping season, when other retailers look to hire seasonal workers. Retailers are facing a tighter job market; the nation’s unemployme­nt rate is 4.4 percent, near a 16-year low.

Same-day job offers, like Amazon

is promising, are “extremely unusual,” said Andrew Chamberlai­n, the chief economist at job site Glassdoor.

He said a shortage of workers, plus Amazon’s rapid growth, is likely why the company is trying to scoop up workers quickly.

“There are just not as many available bodies,” Chamberlai­n said. “It can be a real challenge to hire.”

Amazon has long been known

for investing the money it makes back into its businesses. Part of that involves opening new warehouses, or fulfillmen­t centers, and filling them with employees. Consequent­ly, Amazon has often reported quarterly losses, even as revenue grows.

The number of full-time and part-time workers at Amazon has swelled from 56,000 at the

end of 2011 to more than 340,000 last year. In roughly the same period, the number of people employed by the parent company of Sears and Kmart has been slashed in half to about 140,000 workers.

Amazon plans to expand further: It recently announced a $13.7 billion deal to buy organic grocer Whole Foods, it added Sears’ Kenmore appliances to its website and it’s rolling out its own ready-to-cook meal kits, competing with com- panies such as Blue Apron.

Amazon’s stock increased $12.93, or1 percent, to close at $1,052.80 Wednesday, after Amazon announced its plans. jobs disability­insurance,Amazon.comoffer health Inc. insurance,said retire- its ment savings plans and com- pany stock. Pay differs based on location, according to job postings on Amazon’s site. It is offering a starting rate of $13 an hour for a full-time job in Baltimore and $12.25 an hour for a similar posi- tion in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The job fair will take place Wednesday from 8 a.m. to noon local time and will include tours and sessions with company representa­tives. Job prospects will also be introduced to robots and other automation technology Amazon uses at its warehouses.

The event will take place at 10 Amazon shipping sites. Besides Baltimore and Kenosha, they are Chattanoog­a, Tennessee; Etna, Ohio; Fall River, Massachuse­tts; Hebron, Kentucky; Kent, Washington; Robbinsvil­le, New Jersey; Romeoville, Illinois, and Whitestown, Indiana. Amazon will also hold events for part-time positions in Oklahoma City and Buffalo, New York.

 ?? TED S. WARREN / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 ?? Amazon.com workers process orders at its fulfillmen­t center in DuPont, Washington, in 2015. Amazon said Wednesday that it will hold job fairs at facilities around the country next Wednesday. Company officials said nearly 40,000 of the 50,000 jobs would...
TED S. WARREN / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 Amazon.com workers process orders at its fulfillmen­t center in DuPont, Washington, in 2015. Amazon said Wednesday that it will hold job fairs at facilities around the country next Wednesday. Company officials said nearly 40,000 of the 50,000 jobs would...
 ?? ELLEN M. BANNER / SEATTLE TIMES ?? While other retailers are shedding jobs, Amazon is hiring workers to keep up with massive growth. Next week’s job fairs will help Amazon snag workers before the holidays.
ELLEN M. BANNER / SEATTLE TIMES While other retailers are shedding jobs, Amazon is hiring workers to keep up with massive growth. Next week’s job fairs will help Amazon snag workers before the holidays.

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