"Are All Big Companies Jerks?"
Most of my working life was spent in a company called Hays. The company was founded in 1651 as an operator of wharves and warehouses on the south bank of the River Thames in London. The name can be traced to Alexander Hay, who acquired a brewhouse there in the same year. It was redeveloped as a 'wharf', in fact an enclosed dock in 1656, and renamed Hay's Wharf.
Today it's an international recruitment company, but when I worked there recruitment was just one of many divisions. Back in my day the head honcho was one: Sir Ronnie Frost.
My role was to run distribution centres. Among my clients were the leading UK supermarket company, Tesco. I ran their distribution centre in Kent, near the town of Maidstone. After a stint there I transferred to there premier client Waitrose, the supermarket chain of the John Lewis company at the new town of Milton Keynes. I also did spells of running the Newcastle & Scottish breweries, a parcel delivery company name of: Data Express and a private mailing company known as: The Document Exchange.
In my early days, Hays sent me on a couple of courses, namely fork lift driver training, and also truck driver training. At the time the latter was known as HGV, or Heavy Goods Vehicle training. I passed both and hold certificates and licences for both. Hays policy back then was for their managers to know, be aware of and be able to converse with the staff whose job it was to do the said work. Hays used a clever analogy. They said that the conductor of a band can't be expected to play every instrument, but he/she could tell you when one is out of tune.
So, it's taken me four paragraphs to answer the question, "Are All Big Companies Jerks?" My response would be an emphatic no. But then again I haven't had the misfortune to work under the likes of Facebook founder: "Mark Zuckerberg," or Amazon's: Jeff Bezos," so I have been shielded by the visionary outlook of the likes of the late: Sir Ronnie Frost.