great job to have while you're in college - Sales Associate Dillard's Employee Review

4.0
Mar 16, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay is pretty decent compared to other retail stores. The managers at my store are awesome. they are all aware that flagstaff is a college town and they work with school schedules and and try their best to give you the time off you ask for to go back home. the coworkers are for the most part friendly compared to other dillards'. it is really fun to help merchandise products and it gives you a lot fo experience if that is a career you want to work towards. another good part is the discount which is pretty nice compared to other stores.

Cons

you have to sell a certain amount per hour to get a raise and if you dont you may qualify for a pay cut. if you do make your goal and get a raise, your goal goes up and you have to sell more just because you are getting paid more, which makes no sense. because of this it gets really competitive in certain departments. the employees end up not liking each other because everyone fights for sales. this sometimes creates less attention to keeping the area clean and well merchandised because no one wants to be putting stock away when they could be helping customers and getting sales.

Explore other reviews about Dillard's

5.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great payment benefits and flexible schedules

Cons

long-standing hours and sometimes overnight work or very early mornings for inventory

1.0
Jun 8, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Only pro is that you can expect there won't be any. So, transparency.

Cons

Annual raises for salaried employees are minimal, often only 100–500 dollars per year, regardless of performance or inflation. Salaried roles are consistently compensated below industry standards for comparable positions. Management routinely solicits employee input and feedback, then consistently ignores it, making requests for opinions feel performative rather than genuine. Excessive favoritism is openly displayed, accompanied by constant gossip, drama, and office politics that undermine professionalism and team cohesion. Leadership culture normalizes poor treatment by implying that if everyone is miserable together, the situation is acceptable. The company shows little concern for employee health and safety, pressuring staff to work in unsafe conditions because “it was done before.” Employees who raise workplace health concerns or request alternate work arrangements for health reasons are consistently penalized rather than supported, effectively forcing them to choose between their health and their job. The building was shot at, and management waited several hours to inform employees and refused to let anyone go home, demonstrating a disregard for basic safety and crisis response expectations. Any non-vacation time off, including sick time, medical appointments, and other approved leave, can be held against employees and negatively affect promotions, raises, and recognition. Promotions and raises are often denied based on incomplete or misleading assessments of performance, while significant individual contributions and permanent fixes to long-standing issues go unrecognized. External or third-party training and professional development are not supported and, in some cases, are actively discouraged. Execs are only concerned about profits and never employee well being, morale, or happiness.

2
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All