In two Amazon units, 'builder' replaces traditional job titles


FILE PHOTO: Amazon logo outside an Amazon warehouse in Manchester, Britain, October 28, 2025. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo

SAN FRANCISCO, April 23 (Reuters) - During ⁠Amazon’s annual review season now under way, hundreds of employees will see their job titles ⁠stripped.

The company is not punishing underperformers. Rather, in a test, it is tossing out traditional titles ‌for white-collar workers in charge of product at its Ring and Blink home security units. Starting next month, they will be known simply as “builders” and their bosses as “builder leaders."

The man overseeing the switch, currently titled chief product officer, laid out the rationale in an ​internal memo this month, which Reuters viewed. “We’re committed to making this an ⁠organization of the future, and that means ⁠being transparent and open to change,” Jason Mitura wrote in the email, confirmed by Amazon.

“We’re moving to a ⁠single ‌job family: Builder,” he wrote. “As Builders, we define and reward success through one question: what is the scope and magnitude of the customer value you create?” Ring and Blink make internet-connected cameras and ⁠doorbells for home monitoring.

SILICON VALLEY ADOPTS BUILDER TITLE

Builder has become a catch-all ​term in Silicon Valley for ‌workers who can single-handedly solve challenges, typically using AI, on projects that once required teams of ⁠engineers and project managers.

Meta ​has been testing its own version, bestowing the title “AI builder” on certain job functions, Reuters reported this month. Payments firm Block has started calling some managers "player-coach."

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has embarked on a broader project to reduce corporate bureaucracy, including ⁠an internal hotline for calling out excessive red tape.

Mitura explained that ​the title change means “anyone can propose a change to our structure” and that processes that do not work will be rolled back.

But with the elimination of hard-won titles such as “senior” and “lead,” workers in the unit told Reuters they ⁠were concerned the path toward promotions and pay raises may become more difficult. Amazon has strict pay bands and equity grants based on performance and employee levels.

Others, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters, said they feared similar title changes could be rolled out companywide.

An Amazon ​spokesperson said workers’ fears were unfounded. “Compensation, growth, and promotion paths remain unchanged,” ⁠she said. The title change will “help foster a culture of experimentation and deliver for customers more efficiently.”

Online shoe retailer ​Zappos, which Amazon bought for nearly $1 billion in 2009, tried for ‌several years to eliminate its own hierarchical structure as part ​of a system it called “holacracy." The effort was abandoned several years ago.

Mitura himself will see his job title change too, perhaps to “builder lead,” said the spokesperson.

(Reporting by Greg BensingerEditing by Rod Nickel)

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