Tuff Shed reviews

4.3

79% would recommend to a friend

(518 total reviews)
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Tom Saurey

92% approve of CEO

82% positive business outlook

Tuff Shed has an employee rating of 4.3 out of 5 stars, based on 518 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Tuff Shed employee rating is 27% above average for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

518 reviews
1.0
May 7, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great product created by an obviously talented guy. The CEO. Good innovative concepts of updating the product line. Sub contractor installers need more money.

Cons

Absolutely NO training other than teaching you how to enter a sale. It's a car sales model, run by management from the car sales industry. The mid and senior management are in uneducable and unwilling to adopt a 21st century model of proactive engagement with its lower level employees. They've reduced the sales position to nothing more than order takers. Hi mr and mrs customer, oh you want a shed. Can I get you some fries and a drink with that? They have retained a few seasoned "consultants" HA. But that's only because they were at a higher commission level before that adopted the new 99% turn over strategy. Everyone hired during my time there has left the company. All one needs to do is read the ridiculous responses written by the Talent Acquisition & Management Director to see the arrogant, incredulous and insidious corporate mentally of this company.

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Tuff Shed Response
10y
While the HR Team manages Tuff Shed’s Glassdoor page, all reviews are shared with field and corporate management. The responses are feedback directly from General Managers, Regional Managers, and senior leaders. Tuff Shed has developed a comprehensive on-site training program – new SDCs spend a week at our National Support Center in Denver learning all aspects of the role. It’s an investment we make to build successful sales teams. We’ve also implementing a new CRM system, Salesforce, to manage leads and allow our SDCs to be more proactive when working with customers. Tuff Shed is proud of our sales teams – and our GMs and Regional Sales Managers provide training and development to give each employee the opportunity to reach their personal and professional goals.
1.0
Sep 11, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None none. None. None. None. None. None. None. None. They make you appreciate old jobs or next employer.

Cons

Can't keep builders. Cant keep employees. Place where old sales people go to die.

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Tuff Shed Response
10y
Thanks for your review. While we appreciate your feedback, we would like to note that Tuff Shed is a growing company – and we couldn’t be successful without a commitment to our customers and our employees. We offer a paid training period to all of our Sales Design Consultants to ensure that they understand our products and processes. And, our GMs and Regional Sales Managers provide ongoing support to allow our sales teams to meet personal and company goals. We are proud of our employees and are dedicated to their success.
1.0
Dec 16, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent and quality product when it’s installed well.

Cons

This could be an amazing sales job if you want to be independent with a full team supporting you. In reality it’s a nightmare. Leadership isn’t leading by example or in any other way for that matter. They don’t know how to work with, support or lead sales people. Every move you make, every breath you take is micromanaged and judged to death. This might be the place for you if you enjoy the following: Doing the same work 3-5 times via manual reports, CRM entry, repeating yourself and showing others how to do their job to find your work that they need in order to do their work. Receiving daily prodding emails, phone calls and messages about busy work or other asinine things that management is upset about. Zero tact from those who manage you including jokes about pay cuts, having enough in the bank to quit and how they’d know you had spread privileged information that they never needed to share with you in the first place. Daily manual reports and KPIs that local management doesn’t understand seem to be more important than sales performance or delivering a quality customer experience. And forget about this leadership team caring about your job satisfaction. Get ready for extremely vague instruction with little to no opportunity to clarify what they actually want. Be prepared for every request for assistance or any question you might ask leadership to yield only a question in response. There will never be a kind word, just do more and do better. If you get hurt at work don’t expect anyone to check on you or ask after your treatment or recovery, ever. No one on the team seems to understand what anyone else is able to do, so be ready to be asked to do things that you literally can’t or pulled into things you have no idea how to help with. There is horrible visibly and communication about action items and follow up, so be ready to go chasing answers and updates. The same is true of knowing when team members will be unavailable, you might go days not knowing that someone is out on vacation or has left the company all together. Every other Tuff Shed employee that your customers interact with could easily kill the sale. Scheduling, production and build teams lose business and enrage customers consistently and don’t seem to care; they certainly don’t seem to have any repercussions even though they are taking money out of the sales peoples’ pockets. Hot potato seems to be a favorite game at the regional factories. Customer issues are passed around and ultimately ignored until that customer is livid or completely ghosts us while sales has no idea that everything has gone sideways, yet again. One specific example: Customer was told by a scheduler that sales at Tuff Shed might say or do anything to make a buck but that doesn’t mean that Tuff Shed can actually deliver what was promised. The work force at my factory leaves something to be desired in the extreme. Drugs of all kinds are rampant at the factory and some sales locations. Coworkers are regularly caught in compromising, intimate situations with one another. Drinking on the job and even people trying to live at work on the down low aren’t uncommon. Installers might even engage in screaming matches with homeowners while out on the job. Instead of addressing those alarming issues, leadership will obsess over dress code, time clock and what they deem to be unacceptable communication: i.e. contacting them too much or heaven forbid contacting executives. The expectation will be that you make good business decisions for the company, but management will turn around and let a sale die because its the easiest thing to do. They will ask for your input concerning your store and then do whatever they want anyways. Of course you won’t know what direction they have decided on until it happens much to your surprise and confusion. Every store in every market is judged in the exact same way regardless of past performance, demographics, store age and other differentiating characteristics. You will get roll over phone calls from other stores which you are expected to answer with no regard for volume of calls and the fact that you will never benefit from those efforts. Extremely loose and subjective territories that can and will be exploited by your coworkers. Your only way to get a raise is in your hourly pay (if you get that) and the only way for that to happen is by increasing sales – that seems reasonable until you realize that your sales numbers basically have to be in the top 5-10% of the company to be eligible for a raise. If you are in a lower performing market you can forget about ever getting a pay increase – in fact, your hourly rate will probably drop to the $16/hr minimum and just stay there regardless of how your performance might improve year over year. But don’t bother commenting on the unfair ways stores are treated or judged because you’ll just be told that it must be unfortunate to live where you do. You will have no marketing materials or support to speak of, be expected to use your personal social media accounts to run ads and possibly work in a dangerous building with no regard to safety, human needs or even disability access. To wrap up, I’d advise you to read a number of the reviews here and take notice of Tuff Shed’s responses. The defensiveness and excuses are pretty telling and par for the course with this company. P.S. Tuff Shed’s number one competition is Tuff Shed products available for less at Home Depot.

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Tuff Shed Response
2y
Thank you for your review. We want to address the concerns you describe. However, it is helpful if we were aware of the factory store location, your role, and your manager's name. Finally, we invite our team members to communicate with their local management, regional leaders and Human Resources. We provide many resources to communicate including an anonymous Reporting Hotline, and confidential website. This is for employees to use for issues, matters, and incidents, including some of those mentioned herein.
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Glassdoor has 537 Tuff Shed reviews submitted anonymously by Tuff Shed employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tuff Shed is right for you.