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
1.0
Sep 14, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

REI has great values, so if you either get a supervisor who supports them or are familiar enough with the values to insist that your crappy supervisor support them, you get good treatment. You get great benefits, you can talk them into paying for your schooling, you can convince them that you need some control over your schedule (at least if you don't work at the retail store level), and the discount is great. 30% on non-REI stuff in the store, 50% on REI stuff for you. Much bigger discounts if you order from other vendors directly!

Cons

The supervisors are some of the worst in the retail industry. They know that due to REI's reputation, there's always a huge stack of applicants who are willing to work. Rather than treat you fairly and with respect, as REI's values dictate, it's easier for them to hire new people. Plus, the huge percentage of retired folks and college kids who are both willing to work under intolerable conditions just to get the discount, make the job particularly awful for full-timers who actually need a job. REI is one of only a few outdoors employers who do not allow dogs in the stores. Big deal, right? Well, it is. This represents the environment that they set up. Instead of being a relaxed, cool place to chill while planning your next outdoor adventure, REI is literally a big-box corporation. Not allowing dogs reflects this. Worse by far is REI's salary. REI includes its "benefits package" whenever discussions of salaries come up. They neglect to acknowledge that no amount of discounting product matters to those people who can't afford to pay rent or buy food or gas. They actually include the amount you "save" on your discounted purchases in your total benefits package. Never mind the fact that you qualify for food stamps if you work full-time in their sales floor. When asked (as I have repeatedly), the CFO says REI has no intention of paying a living wage to its retail employees. This would be somewhat understandable if they were failing or something, but REI is opening 7-10 stores every year. Instead of opening new stores, REI could actually make an effort to pay its employees a reasonable wage, but they make a conscious choice not to. If you're female, or a male who cares about women, the sales floor is an awful place to be. Women make far less than men, though the company does not acknowledge this either. There are so few females that often at opening or opening huddles, I was the only one. This is bad enough, but then who do you turn to when the sexual harassment, which is rife, happens? REI's policy is that someone has to do something offensive, you have to tell them to stop, and then they have to do it again for it to constitute harassment. Any long-term REI employee knows this and simply doesn't do the same thing twice. I've never filed a complaint at any other job, and have fired 3 in 4 years of working at REI. I've worked at 3 REI locations across the country, and I've found that the only differences are in the supervisors (some are incredibly incompetent and make your life miserable; others are wonderful and make it tolerable) and in the dichotomy between retail and HQ levels. HQ employees are treated VERY well, paid VERY well, and have great amenities like free massage, cafes, and time off when they want it. Sales floor employees, even store managers, have none of that.

3.0
Nov 19, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- great coworkers - fun if you are not actively looking to advance in the company - access to discounts and pro-deals

Cons

The motto used to be "People over Profit" and since upper leadership has been bleeding money, they have sacrificed so many positive initiatives in the quest to return to profitability. Many retail employees got hours cut drastically without explanation, union busting, store managers who lack basic communication skills, shutting down opportunities to increase access to the outdoors (like rental departments). If you want to advance or develop into leadership roles you must have completely open availability and abandon all critical thinking- making it nearly impossible to have a second job- but they do not pay enough to afford cost of living on a single income. All stemming from lack of profitability but then you turn and see what money does get poured into- huge campaigns for poorly fitting shoes, overproduction of underselling e-bikes, brand trips for influencers (even though staff no longer get to partake in training trips) and ineffective ad campaigns. But fear not-if you exceed all your quarter goals and blow the credit-card application quota out of the water you WILL get a pizza party!

2.0
Mar 23, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great insider deals, Wonderful customers and coworkers.

Cons

The company has abandoned the principals that made it great in the first place: it's commitment to customer service and expert advice. REI is no longer a true co-op, but a greedy corporation that exists to extract maximum value from it's employees without providing training or resources that allow them to do the work that creates truly great experiences for their customers.

Viewing 73 - 75 of 4,359 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,497 REI reviews submitted anonymously by REI employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if REI is right for you.