Dillard's Corporate - Terrible Practices and Management - Aviod At All Costs - Anonymous employee Dillard's Employee Review

1.0
Jul 12, 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Easy Entry You don't need to have any skills to get a job here. They will take almost anyone they can get and try to teach you the skills. Good talent leaves since there isn't any growth here.

Cons

Awful Benefits - low 401 (k) match, little vacation, no WFH roles, not great Health Care, only 6 holidays off Management has power hungry dictators who under pay employees, yell and scrutinize employees in front of their teams, rarely give raises (only when absolutely necessary to meet the cost of living), and pretty much get away with whatever they want. My manager literally brought alcohol to other employees on my team in the office where alcohol isn't allowed on the premises. Favoritism is a huge problem, and gender bias towards women. I've never seen any of the Dillard's family who works in the same building. They never go to any yearly events or send any notice of any kind showing they care about the employees. All events that I have attended are really low budget with little to no effort put into them. There is no HR here. There isn't a place to go when your manager mistreats you here. I started with 10+ colleagues, and several of us have been mistreated by our managers in different areas of the company, and some fired for made up reasons by the hiring manager. Although you will be taught some of the skills you need for your job before you start, Dillard's doesn't really have any training available to grow your skills. All college hires are put in a training class and expected to do code related work, regardless of the job they want when they finish. The Hiring Manager then decides what department everyone goes to, regardless of your past experience, major, and skills. For this reason, several people are stuck working in areas and doing jobs unrelated to their interest or skills. The technology here is very antiquated. You will not be able to work with new technology or convince others to do so. This company is run by an older generation for an older generation fan base, and has the mentality if it isn't broke don't fix it. Dillard's doesn't keep up with technology, they patch it and fix it to keep it running as long as possible, like COBOL. COVID-19: When hard times hit you lose your job. Dillard's furloughed hundreds of store employees, and several Corporate employees. When the recession hit several people were also laid off. There is no security in working here, because of poor money management, and the money hungry CEO.

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.

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