When a Door Is More Than a Door
Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos has amassed a fortune that affords him superyachts and sprawling mansions. Yet at work, he's still stationed behind a desk fashioned from a cheap wooden door. It's not nostalgia. It's a calculated symbol that speaks to Amazon's core philosophy.
The door-desk tradition stretches back to 1995, when Amazon was nothing more than an online bookseller scrambling to keep costs down. The story resurfaced in early 2024 when Lauren Sanchez, Bezos's then-girlfriend and now wife, posted a photo showing him at the same type of makeshift workstation.
How a Home Depot Run Became Company Lore
The original design wasn't some clever branding exercise. It was pure necessity. "We happened to be across the street from a Home Depot... [Bezos] looked at desks for sale and looked at doors for sale, and the doors were a lot cheaper, so he decided to buy a door and put some legs on it," recalled early employee Nico Lovejoy in a company blog post.
That pragmatic choice evolved into something bigger. By 1999, Amazon had gone public and Bezos was worth roughly $10 billion in Amazon stock, according to The New York Times. But the company still furnished offices with door-desks. In a "60 Minutes" profile that year, Bezos explained the thinking to CBS's Bob Simon: "It's a symbol of spending money on things that matter to customers and not spending money on things that don't."
From Scrappy Startup to Corporate Doctrine
Today, upgraded versions of door-desks occupy Amazon corporate offices and fulfillment centers, according to a 2018 CNBC report and Amazon's own historical accounts. Frugality isn't just encouraged at Amazon—it's codified in the company's leadership principles, which state: "Constraints breed resourcefulness, self-sufficiency and invention."
The door-desk has also morphed into an internal honor. At all-hands meetings, Bezos has awarded miniature signed replicas—dubbed the "Door Desk Award"—to teams that uncover meaningful cost savings.
The symbolism aligns with Bezos's broader philosophy, from Amazon's garage-to-global-giant origin story to his famous "Day 1" mantra urging perpetual startup thinking. Even as his net worth has soared into the hundreds of billions, the door-desk stays put, a visible reminder that frugality should always serve the customer first.




