Beyond, Inc. reviews

2.6

23% would recommend to a friend

(1,182 total reviews)
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Marcus Lemonis

2% approve of CEO

17% positive business outlook

Beyond, Inc. has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 1,182 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Beyond, Inc. employee rating is 26% below average for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
2.0
Jan 6, 2016

Overstock.com

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A place where motivated self starters who need little direction can succeed. If you work hard, complete what you are assigned and gain a reputation for being an intelligent hard worker you will be successful. A recognizable brand for your resume. You can wear jeans every day. Competitive pay.

Cons

The culture of the company is extremely focused on individuals (rather than teams and even more importantly cross team collaboration) and favoritism runs rampant. Very competitive culture, if you are talented most people will perceive you as a threat rather than an asset. This being the case you must ensure you protect your reputation or people will actively seek to undermine it. Everyone seems to almost desperately fear to make a mistake hence nobody really seems to wants to put themselves out there to do something new, this is especially the case as it pertains to leadership. A complete lack of direction and vision from leadership, leadership does not set a course for pushing into new areas, instead leadership is focused on maintaining the status quo. People are let go and replaced with a staggering frequency. Zero emphasis on coaching and skill development. This is a company where everyone fears getting fired which in turn stifles innovation, trust and collaboration.

1.0
Dec 21, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Liberal minded people, Close to the freeway

Cons

The CEO needs to take the wheel of this company before it runs into the ditch. You have a call center with brand new people on the phone, (in training), taking your Christmas rush calls, giving away the farm, creating more tasks, and losing your most valued customers. You need to pay a living wage to your call center employees, don't try to be a Teleperformance or a Convergys, but try to be an online retailer with qualified employees. The entry level wage that the company is paying doesn't buy a good trainee, the trainee quits right out of their training class. The typical cost of turnover for positions earning less than $30,000 annually is 16 percent of an employee’s annual salary. Overstock had an opportunity to keep valued employees but let people walk. Now we have brand new employees creating issues on the phone, losing our valued customers (the big spenders you didn’t want to lose). I’m not sure when the big announcement of the loss is coming (first quarter of 2016), but the big O walked over dollars to save a few nickels. Our compensation would be fine if we would compensate the workers who work, and not the top 7 executives who are tubing the company. Overstock had over 150 employees apply to Jet.com because the wage at Overstock.com was not competitive. Jet.com was not the only company that pilfered our employees because our executives failed to address wages. Our company treats our employees like Overstock items and we put dedicated employees on the street right before Christmas. We had good people who had job offers at other companies leave because Overstock was not willing to pay a living wage. We have security cameras on the fridge instead of paying a living wage. We have executives writing phony 5 star reviews instead of addressing the problems inside the company. The company hires a person to oversee the call center floor who wants to turn the place into an authoritarian concentration camp. The lady hired sends out mean emails threatening termination of employees for not taking enough calls. The big solution to our call center woes was sending in a person who has an online degree from a “diploma mill” to use antiquated management styles. What O.co doesn’t understand is all of these people you hired for your training classes have four other offers on the table, you treat them like crap they walk…just like that.

1.0
Dec 14, 2015

Amateur hour

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

401(K) match and company events

Cons

Ask yourself why this e-retailer has never mounted to anything in the same amount of time that Amazon, Alibaba and Wayfair have dominated? Overstock is filled with amateurs at every levels of the company. Truly untested and unqualified people driving this capsized ship. The bright people leave rather quickly as demonstrated by the many refugees fleeing “the O” in 2015 and the ones who stay are either inept or realize they can’t do any better because they themselves are unqualified. CEO is a philosophical visionary that talks out both ends of his mouth and has no proven ability to lead or execute. President is nothing more than a lap dog who throws temper tantrums to get her way, mostly because she is not self-aware. Most of the negative things you read in the press are usually true. This company will always be small time (relatively speaking) as long as these bozos are driving. Keep you dignity and self-respect and just skip over any Overstock.com Career or Job Posting, unless you are desperate or sick.

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Glassdoor has 1,221 Beyond, Inc. reviews submitted anonymously by Beyond, Inc. employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Beyond, Inc. is right for you.