Kniha Amazon Unfiltered Stephens

Amazon Unfiltered

Power, Performance, and the Human Cost of Scale

Autor: Stephens
Jazyk: Angličtina
Väzba: Pevná
Dostupnosť: Očakávané naskladnenie
Naskladnenie 12. 07. 2026
40.81
Amazon runs on speed, scale, and relentless performance - but what does that discipline actually cos...

Informácie o knihe

Autor
Jazyk
Angličtina
Väzba
Kniha - Pevná
Vydalo
2026
Stránok
460
EAN
9798996524501
Enbook ID
53241503
Hmotnosť
785
Rozmery
152 x 229 x 30

Kompletný popis

Amazon runs on speed, scale, and relentless performance - but what does that discipline actually cost the people inside it?

Amazon Unfiltered is a firsthand account of life inside one of the most closely watched companies in the world, written by someone who lived it. Rad Stephens draws on years of hands-on experience inside Amazon's operations to pull back the curtain on how pressure moves through a modern logistics organization - how metrics shape behavior on the floor, how performance culture rewards speed over judgment, and how accountability so often lands on the people with the least power to push back.

This is not just a book about one company. It's a close look at how today's largest institutions use data, automation, and operational intensity to hit their numbers - and what gets obscured along the way. Blending personal experience with sharp institutional analysis, Stephens traces the gap between the polished efficiency Amazon projects to the outside world and the human reality of the warehouse floor.

Readers interested in workplace culture, labor and employment issues, corporate power, and the role of technology in the modern economy will find Amazon Unfiltered a candid, unflinching read. It's a book for anyone who has ever wondered what really happens behind the "efficiency" of same-day delivery - and what it demands of the people who make it possible.

Part memoir, part institutional critique, Amazon Unfiltered asks a question that extends far beyond one warehouse: when performance becomes the only measure that matters, who pays the price?