Awful company where only the big players reap the rewards - Anonymous employee SSP Group Employee Review

1.0
Dec 26, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

not much to be honest.

Cons

Working at SSP for almost 4 months now. The pay is minimum wage while working at a SSP franchise branch of M&S, considering how much profit is made that is diabolical for a company to pay so little. The staff also get a 15% discount which at M&S while working minimum wage they should not have bothered with the discount. However we used to get free lunch, this was taken down to give us a discount card, shortly after I had found out the managers got a bonus on their pay check for the removal of a free staff lunch (funny how this was never mentioned to the other staff). This company is all about greed, greed and more greed. The people reaping the rewards of your hard work are the managers and higher up. SSP don't even internally train their own managers, they bring them over from other places to save costs on training, which means less chance on you moving up the company. Shops are constantly understaffed (to save costs again). I've worked at McDonald's and I would go back in a heartbeat.

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5.0
Jul 4, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great team members and make money depend on the season

Cons

management aren’t on site all the time due to managing multiple locations.

1.0
Feb 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The employee meal discount is genuinely helpful since bringing food into the airport or buying it from outside is difficult. Many hourly employees are friendly, supportive, and hardworking. Most frontline managers try their best and often go above and beyond despite the pressure they face.

Cons

Senior leadership in the Northeast region operates with intimidation, ego, and favoritism, creating a toxic and unprofessional environment. Schedules are changed constantly with little notice, and employees are expected to work long, exhausting hours without regard for work–life balance. When employees speak up about burnout or need to call out due to exhaustion, they are often targeted instead of supported. Union employees frequently earn more than the supervisors responsible for managing them, which creates tension and undermines morale. Promotions are based on personal relationships rather than merit, and nepotism is widespread across multiple levels of leadership. HR functions more as a disciplinary weapon than a neutral resource for resolving issues or supporting employees. The overall culture is retaliatory, inconsistent, and not aligned with ethical or sustainable business practices.

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SSP Group Response
4mo
We are sorry to hear about your negative experience. Your feedback is important to us,
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