Right for me, but not for everyone. - Information Services Expeditors Employee Review

4.0
Jan 10, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits (bus pass, medical insurance premiums are 100% paid for family) If you work for the right management chain, you can be happy. Company is stable, profitable and secure. Senior management is trustworthy. Growth is yours to seek and earn if you're motivated.

Cons

The biggest con is that everyone's experience greatly differs. -There is no consistency from group to group (Information Services) or manager to manager. -There are some managers and senior managers who have no business being in the role they're in. -Teams pick up other teams' slack even if it's not their discipline.

Explore other reviews about Expeditors

5.0
Jun 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good environment employee engagement good industry experince

Cons

higher pay would be good but good benefits and time off

2.0
Jul 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Stability and job security, formerly. Compressed work weeks and work-life balance, formerly. A 47-year no-layoff policy tested in two recessions and a pandemic. Formerly. Now? Well, all of those are gone, so it's hard to really cite anything other than that there's health care and the paychecks don't bounce.

Cons

The same stuff that's always been there, for one. Strict dress code. Dated systems they're trying to run away from as fast as humanly possible. Strict in-office culture with limited WFH. Little to no upward mobility; most senior management has been there for 20+ years and when someone does get promoted, the remaining jobs often seem to magically go to their buddies without getting bid. A complete inability to manage and coordinate anything effectively amongst multiple teams, which apparently is going to be somehow solved by laying off almost all the project/program managers. Oh, and on top of all that? Now, the new regime will lay you off, but first they'll gaslight you and claim the no-layoff policy never existed. Then they'll claim the team managers (who they conveniently also laid off) did the rankings that determined who got cut. Then they'll put a bunch of the survivors into a "bootcamp" and then make them interview to keep their jobs.

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