employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Neiman Marcus Group

Is this your company?

Manager - Manager Neiman Marcus Group Employee Review

5.0
May 6, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture - leading with love! I love the culture at NM! Work from home 5 days a week Way of Working Unlimited vacation as long as your work is done Benefits: 401K, Medical, Dental, Vision, life insurance, Paid short term disability, hospitalization benefits, bereavement, etc…There are so many more amazing perks to this job that it’s difficult to name them all!

Cons

Of course the most common is that the pay could be higher. My biggest issue is that we contract with CVS for our prescription benefits and their service is horrible! See how picky I have to be to come up with a con. Haha! This really is a great job!!

Explore other reviews about Neiman Marcus Group

5.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Tons of cross-functional visibility and collaboration, friendly teams, great employee discount offerings

Cons

Not that many promotion opportunities for a corporate company

4.0
Sep 1, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Before it was SAKS GLOBAL, NMG was very good at identifying when things needed to change in delivering to the clients faster, more efficiently, and with the same grace and style that the brand had held for more than a century. They also understood the concept of work-life balance; they understood how to help when someone was feeling overwhelmed.

Cons

The Saks buy-out changed that, and quickly. The fact that you had to essentially interview for your position, that you had already been doing well at, was the first indication that this was not a simple acquisition to increase the portfolio. It was hostile and not well thought out on the support side. Many positions were liquidated, and the responsibilities were given to staff that were already overwhelmed. Many time these positions were removed and then they paid outside contractors three times or more to realign the positions to the 'vision of the luxury market'. This usually meant that if you had some knowledge that the position existed, that you may be given that position and your own with no support to help you learn or get up to speed.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All