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Cornerstone Building Brands

Engaged Employer

Cornerstone Building Brands reviews

2.9

44% would recommend to a friend

(409 total reviews)
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Gunner Smith

78% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Cornerstone Building Brands has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 409 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Cornerstone Building Brands employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

409 reviews
3.0
Mar 1, 2020

Great people but semi-ok Pay

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits Great people Can do overtime if wanted

Cons

Pay is okay Room to move up is possible but very hard

1.0
Feb 29, 2020

One Of The Worst Employers in the US

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Unfortunately, you dont deserve one.

Cons

Cornerstone continues to be one of the worst companies to work for in the US due to these reasons: 1) It continues to be owned by an equity firm, in this case CD&R. This equity firm bought struggling companies PlyGem and NCI, then orchestrated the merger of them. Equity firms have only one objective, buy struggling companies, gut them of workers until they can sell it for a profit, followed by that company almost always going bankrupt afterwards. There is no positive end game with working with companies owned by equity firms. And the current Trump administration has allowed them even more abuse over struggling companies with zero regulation now. Stay out or get out now! 2) Because of item #1, workloads across the board are and continue to be, more ridiculous to the point some vulnerable roles suffer from depression, anxiety, even suicidal thoughts. I personally know people that are on antidepressants to cope with this. This creates growing infighting and tension among different teams, departments, etc. Those with lower work loads refuse to help those struggling to the brim with work after their support gets cut. The equity firm wants this infighting, so they ignore whose really causing this issue behind the scenes, which is the firm. If you have a high workload/backlog, the question is not, do we need more people? Its, how can we blame this on YOU? 3) Executives come first, their perks/toys 2nd, employees dead last. If you do any cost savings or improve profit, whatever is left that does not go into the equity firms pocket, or for stock buybacks or executive bonuses simply goes into hiring more managers and executives to escalate on you instead help with the actual WORK! 4) Favoritism is REAL and SEVERE here. And its unfortunately based on whether you are a contractor vs full-time, whether you are the dominant race in your department, and also based on gender. Women in particular are often conditioned to be put on pedestals by executives and allowed to talk to male co-workers however they want without consequence. If you complain to your manager or theirs they will not care. 5) Its a company in the business of domestic manufacturing exterior construction products. This is a dying industry. You simply cannot compete against foreign factories that can do the labor cheaper. 6) They refuse to pay the plant workers good/fair wages. Which is the REAL reason they have a plant worker shortage. The executives do not want to admit this as it would upset their equity firm overlords, so instead they keep imbalance workloads and try to automate if they can. Problem is, automation is also a severely expensive. If they just fix the wages, problem fixed. Because of these worker shortages, almost EVERY Cornerstone plant has SEVERELY low Google reviews due to excessive wait times to pickup loads. 7) They continue to be obsessed with using contractors. And with no corporate wide conversion process that allows a consistent and fair opportunity to turn fulltime like most other companies do. Contractors are by far more expensive to be left in that state long term, as opposed to simply hiring full time workers. In addition, full time workers generally produce better work because the employer cares about their development, preventing work burn out from basic vacation/holidays, etc. 8) ZERO training. You better be a mind reader to know what the heck you are supposed to do because you will not just get thrown into the pool, you will get thrown into the middle of an ocean with zero life preserver to figure things out while avoiding sharks all around you, in this case your own co-workers.

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Cornerstone Building Brands Response
6y
Thank you for your feedback. Our employees are essential to our success and we believe in providing an environment in which everyone can contribute to our mutual success and grow in their careers. At Cornerstone Building Brands, our management teams continually strive to provide leadership that fosters individual and team growth. We believe that training and ongoing support from management are necessary to help our employees succeed. We also recognize the value of the hard work and dedication of our team members. We’re proud to offer a competitive total rewards package which includes pay and a comprehensive benefits package available to all employees from day one. We do take great pride in the diversity of our team, and in building an inclusive culture where every team member is empowered to be their best. This includes development opportunities focused on gaining new experience and career growth. We would like to hear about your concerns in more detail and would request that you contact your HR representative for additional discussion.
1.0
Feb 17, 2020

Inferior Managment Team

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

large company with benefit package

Cons

no good reason to work for this company

Viewing 391 - 393 of 409 Reviews

Glassdoor has 433 Cornerstone Building Brands reviews submitted anonymously by Cornerstone Building Brands employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Cornerstone Building Brands is right for you.