Our wheels have been rolling much faster than we’re used to.
In less than two weeks we went through Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas and didn’t see much other than a few small farm towns and more conservative Christian billboards than people.
Our rig is now parked at Hill Shade RV Park in Gonzales, Texas where we’ll be here workamping until mid-December. More about that later . . . but now:
The Road to Amazon is Now Paved with Gold?
This time of year always brings me back to my not-so-glorious days of working as a seasonal workamper at Amazon.com’s Fernley, Nevada warehhouse.
In fact, I keep receiving automated calls from the mis-named “Integrity” Personnel staffing agency that finds Amazon’s temporary workers in Nevada. The messages hype the lucrative pay and rewards that never materialized when I was there.
Funny thing is . . . maybe they’re telling the truth this time!
Note original post date: November, 2011.
UPDATE: Amazon CamperForce Discontinued
New Times at Amazon
Recently I bumped into Amazon’s main workamper hiring representative, the “Camper Force Coordinator” who attends RV shows and gatherings like the Workamper Rendezvous, touting the benefits of working at Amazon and hiring people on the spot.
This man isn’t a stranger to working the lowest rungs on the ladder at Amazon. He’s a retired firefighter who toiled at Amazon’s Kansas location before being hired as a seasonal recruiter when Amazon started managing the workamping program directly instead of relying on staffing agencies to do so. This recruiter is so nice that I hesitated to tell him about my crappy Fernley experience.
However I didn’t need to be shy: he knew all about the lousy way that the Nevada staffing agency managed seasonal workers like me, and he’s been working with Amazon to make every location a better place for workampers.
So it wasn’t just me! I wasn’t crazy for thinking that the agency treated everyone like dog-doo. I LOVE being vindicated!
The Camper Force Recruiter told me “I want to make sure that seasonal campers have a good experience and want to come back and tell their friends about it.”
Now that Amazon oversees temporary workampers, the benefits are greater than ever. Everyone gets a completion bonus, all campground fees are covered (they weren’t in Nevada), the pay is higher and every worker gets a 10 percent discount on Amazon purchases!
Amazon is also better managing the amount of workers they hire so that the promised overtime that never materialized for me is now occurring for workers at each warehouse. We talked to one Amazon elf this week who is already getting overtime in Nevada.
The Camper Force Coordinator made being a minion sound so appealing, he almost swayed me into applying. If I didn’t have other business ventures happening right now, I might’ve done it.
But then again, who am I kidding?
All Aboard the S.S. Independence!
The most valuable aspect of working as a minion was reacquainting myself with punching a clock.
I had forgotten what it was like to be told how to do my work and even when I could have lunch. Call it a bad attitude or whatever, but that’s just not my style.
As bad as it was working at Amazon’s Fernley location in 2009, I wouldn’t trade that experience for anything.
Why? Because it reminded me that . . .
I’d rather be the captain of my own dingy than a junior officer on the Titanic! (Dr. James Chan)
If you’re working at Amazon this season, what’s your experience like so far?
Yup. Phil is pretty awesome. I had the pleasure of working with him last year in Kentucky. I was in the IT department, so I cannot say what it was like on the floor of the warehouse, but I know that everyone was treated a lot better than Fernley… which I discussed with Phil at length.
Oh and they probably aren’t telling the truth during those automated calls. If you were to go through Integrity, you would probably be treated the same as you were last time. It was most likely them, not Amazon calling the shots.
Ohhh yeah, it was definitely Integrity treating people like crap.
Small world isn’t it? Glad you got to work somewhere other than the warehouse. Yeech! Hope to see you guys this winter. Where will you be?
We will be at the Rubber Tramp Rendezvous again this year and the slabs. Then on to Baja.
Alrightee! We’ll definitely meet up. I’d love to hear about your Baja plans.
I am glad to see you on the road, after Rene’s bump on the head. I’ve been doing some job hunting and now get all sorts of emails from recruitors…even got a text message from one, geesh. I look forward to more blog entries and pictures of your travels.
Hey Jeff, great to hear from you! yes, I get the stupid text messages AND voice mails too. Grrrr. Where are you these days?
Still dip my toe into Tribe, but this year has been such a year of change for me. Still working where I was, but looking for the next “thing” Not sure if it’s a new “job” or not.
I’ve been doing alot of research on silkworm farming and think that’s something I can do in a spare room. Also coming up on a full year of my Ashtanga practice.
Might open a store on Cafepress too…
Tried to keep it short, because it is your blog, not mine.
😉
I don’t think we met at Rendezvous, but we were there also.
We are just north of you at the Lake Falling Star RV Resort in McMahan. We are here for the winter. I’m workamping here a couple of days a week.
Maybe we can get together sometime.
Mac& Dianna
Thanks for the comment! We’ll be here in Gonzales until mid-December. Perhaps we’ll check in on y’all when passing through. We have to say y’all now that we’re back in Texas. 🙂
Would that be a picture of you fishing, my vegan friend???
Technically, yes, but I was only holding the pole so Jim could have 2 in the water and not get in trouble! I gave him the pole as soon as the fish bit. Ick!