This 'peculiar' Amazon program has paid 7,000 workers to get training for a new career - even if it's not at Amazon
Sean Gallup/Getty Images
The company currently needs lots of people to stock, pack, and ship the billions of items people order each year. But Amazon is moving to replace increasing numbers of them with the Kiva robots it bought when it acquired Kiva for $775 million in 2012.
These robots automate the picking and packing process at large warehouses. Kiva has saved the company $22 million for each warehouse where they are used, it says, but Amazon has, so far, only installed them in 13 of its fulfillment centers. There are 110 fulfillment centers that don't have them yet.
Instead of a blind eye to the day when Amazon won't need all those folks, it's come up with an interesting solution: pay the tuition to help workers train for better paying jobs.
It's Career Choice Program was launched in 2012 and Amazon just announced that, so far, more than 7,000 hourly employees in 10 countries have taken part in the program, with more than 1,300 employees taking a college-level or vocational course at classrooms that Amazon has located in its warehouses.
Many companies offer tuition reimbursement programs that will help them advance in their chosen field or within the company. This program is "peculiar" (Amazon's own word) for pre-paying up to 95% or $12,000 worth of the tuition to train for another type of career.
Employees have studied for fields like game design, programming, nursing, radiology and accounting. However, the most popular choice by far: commercial trucking.
Disclosure: Jeff Bezos is an investor in Business Insider through hispersonal investment company Bezos Expeditions.
NOW WATCH: How to find Pokémon in 'Pokémon Go'
- Thailand is now welcoming Indians with open arms, but are its drought-hit islands really prepared for a tourism influx?
- Thoughtful gift ideas to make Mother's Day extra special
- Muslims up, Hindus down: What’s the larger picture behind India’s religious population trends?
- Scooch over magic mushrooms, toad venom could be the next big psychedelic for depression and anxiety!
- TBO Tek IPO allotment – How to check allotment, GMP, listing date and more