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Amazon Axes Program That Had Employees Tweet Positive Things About the Company

Warehouse employees were paid to tweet positive messages about the company's fulfillment centers.

By Stephanie Mlot
January 27, 2022
(Photo: Rolf Vennenbernd/picture alliance)

Amazon has reportedly ended its "FC Ambassador" program, which paid warehouse employees to tweet positive messages about working conditions at the company's fulfillment centers.

"Amazon quietly shut down and removed all traces of the influence campaign at the end of last year," people with direct knowledge of the decision told the Financial Times, as reported by Ars Technica. The program, the FT said, suffered from "poor reach and embarrassing backfires."

More than a dozen Twitter accounts, run by real on-the-floor staff, were first spotted in 2018. They featured the Amazon smile logo and the same "FC Ambassador" title in their bio. The in-house diplomats, as Business Insider reported at the time, were regular members of staff whose job it was to share favorable experiences working at a fulfillment center.

Now scrubbed from the social network, the promotional accounts routinely promoted standardized messages of positivity, praising the working environment and denying negative statements about folks peeing in bottles.

"The 'ambassador' program was always a laughable attempt to minimize the abuses unfolding inside Amazon warehouses," Warehouse Worker Resource Center Executive Director Sheheryar Kaoosji told the Financial Times.

Amazon did not immediately respond to PCMag's request for comment.

After briefly going viral, Amazon's FC Ambassadors worked mostly under the radar, until a unionization effort at an Alabama warehouse reignited the flame—in the form of parodies. According to a 2021 article by Vice, Twitter suspended a number of Ambassador accounts thought to be created by trolls to confuse people.

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About Stephanie Mlot

Contributor

Stephanie Mlot

B.A. in Journalism & Public Relations with minor in Communications Media from Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP)

Reporter at The Frederick News-Post (2008-2012)

Reporter for PCMag and Geek.com (RIP) (2012-present)

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