REI reviews

3.6

64% would recommend to a friend

(4,359 total reviews)
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Mary Beth Laughton

38% approve of CEO

34% positive business outlook

REI has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 4,359 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The REI employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
2.0
May 16, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent employee discount. Customers are generally very nice. Convenient location. Co-workers are fairly nice. Clean and pleasant work atmosphere.

Cons

It starts out just fine. Kind of like going to camp, and then you realize very quickly REI isn't what they seem (at least the store I work at). There are constant contradictions: customer is #1, but we won't have enough cashiers to assist the customers because we are so worried about our bottom line; "celebrate the member and the non-member", but not too much! Don't take too long in conversations because you have other work to do; "shameless enthusiasm" as long as you can do a return, ring up a customer, and answer the phone all at the same time. Probably the weirdest things the cheery management folks do (other that their enthusiastic "How's it going?" is that they like to give you little tests to see how you do. They play secret shopper on the phone when they can see that you are very busy. They plant little tests in your area's of responsibilities to see if you will pass. This can be as simple as going around and rearranging merchandise you just stocked, leaving mystery items on the content with misleading information, not giving you your check-off list to see if you can do the work without it; telling you to violate a policy and see if you do (or do they just forget what they trained you on or didn't train you on). Plant money in your drawer to see if you report it; talk to you like a naughty child in front of customers; have family and friends come in to test your skills and report back -- just plain old junior style management. Do they teach that stuff on one of REI's staff outings? Maybe with marshmallows around the evening camp fire? You might be asking "What's the point of all of this?" I had to ask myself the same question after ruling out that I am not paranoid or delusional. It's really simple. It's about profit. Push those memberships above all else. I'm still not sure what that money really goes for, but it is really important. In fact, your job depends on it. They bring in people are a lower rate of pay, or bring in lots of people and offer them little hours. By giving little tests and keeping daily totals on membership sales they keep a running record on just how effective they feel you are to REI. If you fail to keep up with membership sales you are either reduced to very little hours or simply let go. Even if by all accounts you do a good job and are a good employee. They can and will find something to use against you. It's just a matter of time. Everyone has a off day or makes a mistake. Most people are probably completely shamed by this and never say anything about it. "How could those nice and cheerful folks be capable of such cold blooded acts?" "Who would believe you?" I think most just wonder off into the forest and try to move on. Never letting on to what a fake place REI is to work.

2.0
May 14, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Customers can be awesome -Discounts (50% off REI products, 30% off all other brands) -Pro-dealing through companies -Work parties and management bringing on food which helped especially on days where there was a big sale -Breaks were fair and reasonable -Awesome pay for the job (start out at $9.90 an hour)

Cons

At my location, I had the unfortunate experience of working with management who were corrupt. They based their decisions based on politics and popularity of the individual. If you weren't in their inner circle, you weren't treated fairly. There was NO POSSIBLE WAY to make any of the managers happy. You think you're doing it right, and a manager tells you you're wrong. I was also shoved out of the way by a manager (literally) for dealing with a customer in the wrong way. The registers were made so that our backs were constantly to the customers and management would complain about us never looking back to see if customers were in line. ALSO, I worked there for a year and there was NO hope that I would ever move off of Frontline. I know that I did a great job, but management failed to base hours and promotions on job performance. There was absolutely no positive reinforcement. If something was my fault, I was battered and criticized until I cried. I had one specific manager that would constantly berate me, no matter what I did. It just seems like it would be a great place to work if the management wasn't as awful as it was at the Northville, MI location. Don't work here. STAY AWAY.

2.0
May 11, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's a relatively easy job, even in customer service with difficult customers that come there w/ problems.

Cons

The ideals/image of REI & the reality are not exactly the same. Very corporate The scheduling became increasingly difficult. Low compensation Having to push "memberships" Boredom factor... it is retail after all. Could be worse (as in sales associate) It's not as portable of a job as one would think... I know one person who moved cross country & was promised close to FT hours but kept getting less than 20h/wk. Evaluations are done thru some system that was clearly brought (bought) from some management consulting (software) company... not always reflective or considerate of all the factors.

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