Trader Joe's reviews

4.1

82% would recommend to a friend

(10,566 total reviews)
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Bryan Palbaum

73% approve of CEO

72% positive business outlook

Trader Joe's has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 10,566 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Trader Joe's 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

11K reviews
4.0
Jun 23, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Overall, a pretty great company. Awesome Medical/Dental/Vision/Retirement benefits, including chiropractic/physical therapy and mental health benefits, really terrific core values and culture (see note in Cons below). There are differences between working as a part-time Crew Member and working as a manager of course, but at all levels the compensation is pretty good for what you do. Excellent raise structure for part-time employees. A 10% discount on your shopping and lots of free coffee/snacks while you work is pretty nice, too.

Cons

As a crew member -- As with any hourly job, you are given hours based on your availability and the store's needs. If you have open availability, and a busy store, working close to 40 hours a week and making a living is no problem. If you have limited availability, or your store has off/on busy seasons, the income may not be as steady or reliable. Also, the work can be very physical, and the high service expectations of our customers can be exhausting. As a manager -- Pretty much totally exhausting all the time. 10+ hour days on a rotating schedule or not, each store is different. Working both closing shifts (until or after midnight) and opening shifts (starting at 4 or 5am) in the same week is normal practice. You are given a LOT of responsibilities, but the responsibilities themselves are not the problem. it's more so that you are expected to fulfill them regardless of the normal rhythm of the store and the 100 other tasks you need to accomplish in a given shift. The better managers will delegate most of those tasks out, but often, there is no opportunity due to tight staffing and increasingly tighter hourly production/payroll goals. A lot of this is dependent on your Captain (Store Manager). There are some opportunities for movement/transfer if you are really at odds with your Captain, but not many, and for any move you need your Captain's approval. Great Captains fight to develop other great Captains -- they encourage forward/out-of-the-box thinking and reward performance. Less stellar Captains will want you to do everything their ways, and might ignore or even reprimand ideas/practices that are different. It can be hard to keep your head up and stay positive in that kind of environment, and even harder to be convincingly excited and happy to be at work everyday, which of course is the expectation.

1.0
May 1, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

10% shopping discount. Everyone, including managers and the "Captain", know how to, and often do perform the same tasks as the lowly crew member.

Cons

NO ACCOUNTABILITY for the majority of employees who stand around, socialize, and generally let a small minority of the crew do most of the work. LOTS OF FAVORITISM based more upon social standing/friendships than work ethic and ability. VERY LITTLE communication, as there is no real means of in-store communication (email/intranet mail, etc) other than speaking to someone directly. Even then, the message is often lost or not passed on to anyone else in management who MIGHT do something to improve the situation. Even when an issue is widely known, little or nothing is done to correct it. Unsafe working conditions given there is SUCH LIMITED STORAGE SPACE. Management sometimes ignores work-related incidents/injuries which should at least be documented with an incident report. Low hourly rate for crew ...and only small increases with time: not based uopn level of competence, title, or responsibility. Blatantly engage in age discrimination regarding annual bonus ...if you're under a certain age, you receive a bonus check every January. If you are above that age, you have no choice but to see that bonus go straight to your "pension" ...which takes 5 years to become 100% vested. So you're losing money from the first year you're an employee. Can't see how this is legal!!

5.0
Jun 12, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Company cares about its employees.

Cons

Can't really think of any.

Viewing 34 - 36 of 10,566 Reviews

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