> Not saying that it's the same for every SDE...
I think my initial comment had enough disclaimer to make it clear that I don't think this is applicable to every team at Amazon.
> You realize that a pip is not normal? Even one person getting PIP'ed on a team is is an event and abnormal. The fact that a manager has to "push back" for not pip-ing somone raises a red flag for me.
Every company I worked at had some form of "performance improvement plan" that essentially meant "pick up the pace or we will have to discuss options". The idea that on a team of 20 people, during the span of a year, not a single employee (expected rate is ~5%) is underperforming is worthy of writing a justification.
EDIT: Re-reading your comment I think I understand why you think this is so weird.
> The fact that a manager has to "push back" for not pip-ing somone raises a red flag for me.
You don't have to push-back not pip-ing a specific employee, but you will have to justify why no-one on your 20+ people team got PIP'ed during the year. Is that clearer?