AmazonOfficial Platform UpdateWednesday, June 3, 20264 min read

What an Amazon GM actually does all day—and why he compares it to running a small town

About Amazon10h agoamazon
What an Amazon GM actually does all day—and why he compares it to running a small town
Executive Summary

On a recent episode of the Learn and Be Curious with Doug Herrington podcast, a fulfillment center leader explains what the job actually looks like.

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Key takeaways An Amazon general manager oversees everything from safety and financials to associate well-being—which is why Alessandro Carbone compares the role to being mayor of a small town. Daily routines include reviewing metrics, walking the floor with associates, and solving complex problems that affect people's lives.

Carbone traded a law career in Italy for Amazon operations nine years ago—and says stepping outside his comfort zone changed his life. Alessandro Carbone has a simple way of explaining his job at Amazon. When his 93-year-old grandmother in Italy asked what he does for a living, he told her he's like a mayor of a small town.

"I have 3,000 associates I need to take care of their well-being," Carbone said on the latest episode of the Learn and Be Curious with Doug Herrington podcast. "I need to take care of the roads around the building because I have a huge yard, trailer yard, a parking lot. I have a social responsibility for my township.

I have the financials, our cost to serve customers, it's our priority. I pay the bills. I literally pay the electricity." You can also listen to this episode on Amazon Music, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts. Carbone shared his story with Doug Herrington, Amazon's CEO of Worldwide Stores, on the podcast.

He's the general manager of an Amazon fulfillment center in southern New Jersey, outside of Philadelphia. At 665,000 square feet—more than 1. 4 million with the mezzanine levels—the building holds up to 20 million individual units and three million unique items. That's roughly the equivalent of 30 big-box retail stores under one roof.

Inside, robots bring shelves of products directly to associates at their stations, instead of workers walking to find items. Carbone’s job is to keep all of it running smoothly.

How an Amazon GM spends the day Every morning begins with Carbone and his team reviewing daily and weekly performance data to understand what happened the previous day—what went well, what didn't, and where to focus. AI tools have transformed this part of his job. "Before, you needed to go in 20 different portals, doing your analysis, Excel," Carbone said.

"Now there are tools that are telling you what went wrong, what are the root causes, what are potential actions in 10 seconds." The time savings matters because of what comes next: getting out on the floor.

Three times per week, Carbone and his senior leadership team conduct what's called a Gemba walk—a lean manufacturing practice where leaders go to where the work happens and talk directly with the people doing it. How to tour an Amazon fulfillment center in 2026 Anyone can schedule a free in-person tour at more than 50 sites across 12 countries.

"We walk the floor with an associate and then we listen from them what are the main barriers, the recurring barriers," Carbone said. "And then we put an action plan into place." Between those structured walks, Carbone moves through the building spontaneously, picking up observations along the way.

He also put up a banner with his face and email address, inviting associates to reach out directly. He gets 25 to 30 emails a week—mostly about problems that aren't complicated to understand, but are deeply personal and impactful for the people raising them—like a shift schedule that doesn't work with a family situation.

"Once you start solving one problem at a time, or sometimes I call them in my office and say, listen, here I can't help you, but I have this other option—once you start building this trust, that's where you are changing the culture," he said.

What it takes to keep millions of packages moving On the operations side, Carbone's building receives about 100 inbound trucks and sends out about 100 outbound trucks every day. The work has to flow continuously—from receiving inventory, to storing it, to picking, packing, and shipping once a customer places an order.

Herrington compared it to water running through a hose: "If you stop it anywhere, you've got big problems. You're going to get a huge bubble that blows up any place in that building, and then the rest of the building gets starved."

Amazon's CEO of Worldwide Stores explains why telling your team to 'move faster' doesn't work Doug Herrington shares his approach to helping teams move fast without sacrificing quality. Carbone said his approach comes down to empowering his team rather than micromanaging. "Empowering your team to take risks," he said.

"It's not paying off in the first six months, but then it's unlocking a lot of potential. When everyone is leading at their scale, you will see the building flying." The other half of his operations philosophy is more visible: keeping the building clean and organized. Carbone follows a lean manufacturing principle called 5S—the idea that everything in a

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This briefing is based on reporting from About Amazon. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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