McMaster-Carr reviews

2.8

29% would recommend to a friend

(1,363 total reviews)

Jay Delaney

30% approve of CEO

45% positive business outlook

McMaster-Carr has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 1,363 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The McMaster-Carr employee rating is 24% below average for employers within the Construction, Repair & Maintenance Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
5.0
Feb 23, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This review is a little long, but i'm trying to be as thorough as possible...I was hired into the Business Operations Specialist role and it was one of the best things to ever happen to me. First off I want to say that this role is NOT, I repeat NOT, an entry level position. You need to be extremely competent to be able to handle the job. That’s why most of the people that are hired into this role were managers/supervisors at their previous company or at least they were doing complex work—more than just “office work” or data entry. If you’re able to get hired here, you’ll be working with other people of the highest caliber. Let me tell you a little about my time here and what the job entails. Benefits and company life—Super competitive salary, great medical and dental benefits, cash and deferred profit sharing, and work/life balance. I came from a retail management background, so I love not having to work odd hours/holidays. Want to work a 40 hour week and have weekends off? McMaster-Carr can give that to you. Like to surf? You have all weekend to catch waves. Want to be able to go to church on Sundays (or any other spiritual/religious equivalent)? Well, now you can. With all that time off, you can do things that you've previously been unable to do for lack of time. Many employees I know spend the extra time with their kids. What did I do with my free time? I jumped into health/fitness and was able to get into shape in about a year. I’m in my thirties now and I've never been in better shape! Going to the gym not your thing? Well you can pursue whatever else you’re interested in because you can go to school for whatever you want (as long as the school is accredited), which by the way would be paid for 100% by McMaster-Carr. I haven’t taken up their offer yet, but I’d be crazy not to. Oh and they’ll even help YOUR KIDS go to college if/when the time comes. How cool is that? I have never heard of a company that offers that. They also sponsor a company football, basketball, softball, golf, and even a DRAGON BOATING team if you’re into that (and more)! Simply put, there’s a reason that some people have chosen to spend their entire careers at this company. It’s because McMaster-Carr is all about helping its employees improve the quality of their lives in any way possible. Went through a two week training course (I think it may be a longer course now...not sure) and started working in the Phone Contact Center (the Text Contact Center is the same job, only their mode of communication is strictly email/text). Oh and side note…if you don’t know this…When you call McMaster-Carr as a customer, there’s only one phone number and an actual human being picks up the phone--24 HOURS A DAY. Need to place an order? Need to check on an order? Need help picking out a bolt? Need to know if those bolts meet a certain spec? Need those bolts in a certain material or manufacturer? Need to get 1000 of those bolts to San Francisco by 8:30am tomorrow? Need something you don’t see in the catalog? Need to make a payment? Need any documents? That’s right, you call one number and the McMaster-Carr Business Operations Specialist that answers the line can help you with whatever you need. No runaround, no wasting your time, and no messing around. Sounds so simple but you don’t experience that kind of customer service everywhere. THAT’s the Phone Contact Center and that is the department that provides the fantastic customer service they've become famous for. On the job, I would take calls from customers--10% of the time it’s just an order, another 10% of the time they might need documentation or they might need to check on an order. Those are the quick and easy requests. The challenging and more fun interactions are from customers that are working on a project of some sort and they need your help building things. I once had an engineer from Cal Tech who called in because he needed help building a specialized ducting system for an experiment he was performing. Another time I had a call from the set of the TV show Sons of Anarchy where they needed some security bars that would fit on a specific kind of door. One time I even helped Tim Commerford (the bassist from Rage Against the Machine) build a custom Polyethylene panel for his off road truck. As you can see, it takes a critical thinker/problem solver and awesome customer service skills to be able to handle the wide range of requests from McMaster-Carr customers. Anyhow, I’m going to admit that in the beginning I made a few mistakes (like sending someone a wrong quantity on an order or not listening to the customer/missing information or forgetting to include a phone number in some correspondence or accidentally saying the wrong thing on the phone or somehow making something difficult for a customer…stuff like that). But while I was struggling, I was always notified of my errors so I could improve my performance. Each time a trainer talked to me about an error I made, I took it as a learning opportunity and took notes on what I should improve. It took a little time, but I took all the feedback and made the proper adjustments. After a few months, I started to meet expectations and gained the trust of my supervisors. Over time I was given more responsibilities, had more privileges, worked on various projects and was even given a raise after my first year. In fact I've been getting a raise every year because I've been meeting expectations (I think they would have been bigger raises if I did more than just meet expectations…and there ARE people who do!). Eventually, I was able to move to another department and am currently learning about a whole other side of McMaster-Carr. In retrospect I wish I had been able to make that transition a little sooner than I did. Especially because I was starting to see a lot of co workers (some who were hired after me!) get moved or promoted to supervisor. Some of them only spent about a year or so as a Business Operations Specialist before they were whisked away to the Export department, Marketing, Recruiting, Product/Order Support or Accounting. Thought I was jealous, I have to admit that every person who got moved or promoted fully deserved it! They are some of the best and brightest people I know. They were all fully meeting expectations if not exceeding them when they transitioned to other departments. As for me—although it took a little longer—I kept a positive attitude from day one, did my best and when a need presented itself in the company, I was a moved as well. Now here is some more of the nitty gritty. Those that don’t meet the clearly outlined expectations are given every resource and opportunity to turn things around, but if they are not able to improve their performance within about a year or so, they are fired. It’s never a surprise though, because you always know where you stand in terms of your own performance. It’s understandable though if you can’t do the job. The most common reasons for under performing---not able to give good customer service, not good at active listening, no attention to detail, can’t think critically, not good at problem solving, not receptive to feedback, or having a bad attitude. I've had friends who were let go and I have friends who have quit (because they weren't doing too well and they knew their days were numbered). Some of them have admitted to me that the role was not for them and they have moved on to other careers. The really disgruntled ones are usually the ones that have a hard time taking feedback/criticism or else they think they are too good for this job…and once they are fired they go on websites like this one and write bad reviews (so take the bad reviews on Glassdoor with a grain of salt). To all those people I say this: don’t blame your incompetence on others…especially your supervisors. I can tell you that the supervisors/trainers/managers that work at McMaster-Carr didn't get to where they are by blaming their shortcomings on others. Do you think a company that is at the top of their industry and has lasted for over 114 years got there by hiring mediocre staff/supervisors? No way! Bottom line is that when it comes to growth and career advancement here—If you want it, you can have it. There are no games here. You just have to earn it.

Cons

So there. That is what I have thought about working at McMaster-Carr and the Business Operations Specialist role. It’s a positive experience for sure. The only real negative thing about the role in my opinion…it’s in the largest department of the operation which may make it harder for you to distinguish yourself as a rock star employee. Being a larger department, you may not get "positive reinforcement" on a daily basis--but if you need a supervisor to tell you that you're doing a good job in order for you to do your job well, I think that is a reflection of your own personality and not the way the company treats you. I'm not saying there is no recognition for doing a great job, in fact there is--you get raises, privileges of working on company projects, trust from supervisors and yea even verbal praise when it is warranted. Ultimately the best recognition is that you're moved to other more difficult departments that need good people. Personally speaking, that kind of environment doesn't scare me at all. I've always believed that if you maintain a positive attitude and work hard, you can succeed anywhere. Especially at a company that provides all the resources you need to make it happen.

2.0
Feb 18, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, great pay, good amount of vacation/sick days, you're not expected to take your work home with you, they don't pressure employees to stay overtime.

Cons

Most employees don't enjoy the work. The company has extremely high expectations and uses fear to motivate their employees into hustling themselves. People often talked about having nervous breakdowns after work. Horrible culture to work in. Very dull workplace with no variety in the type of work done day-in and day-out. They're very strict about showing up and leaving exactly when you're scheduled to.

3.0
Feb 12, 2015

Hardcore place to work that pays well

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

McMaster-Carr pays very well and the benefits are absolutely outstanding...better than any company I've heard of by a long shot. Even the guy who separates a box of 1000 screws into 10 boxes of 100 screws is paid well....and he has a bachelor's degree. At other companies, a forklift driver probably barely has a high school education and may be considered to have a lowly position, but at McMaster, he might have an MBA (they offer tuition reimbursement); at McMaster, the forklift guy started out doing something simpler (like counting screws) and worked his way up to driving a forklift.

Cons

A little background: There are basically two employee tracts at McMaster-Carr; there's the employee track and the management track. Very, very few people make the jump from the employee track the management track. A large portion of those on the management track, or MDs (management development) are very smart people who came out of high quality colleges, but that does not mean that McMaster will not chew them up and spit them out. Most MDs are less than 5 years out of college. There is a high turnover rate among MDs It's a very intense work environment for people in management; the people at the very top have no problem completely humiliating management in front of large groups of people. They hold management to very high standards, and sometimes those standards are a moving target. You can never know what seemingly minor offense they'll let slide one day that they'll fire someone over the next day. Management works long hours (60 hours is standard) but a benefit of being a regular employee is that they do not work long hours. So for management, the work life balance is atrocious, but for regular employees, it's great. If you work in management at McMaster, you will most likely eventually go on to a different company where you'll be able to use a lot of what you learned at McMaster to be a better performer...and you'll also be glad to be free of McMaster. Note that the Elmhurst location (headquarters) is much more hardcore than the other branches. If you're a regular employee and you show up to work on time, work hard, and do your job well, you'll be there for decades. But if you're in management, doing your job well doesn't mean a whole lot, which fosters an environment of fear.

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