Columbus McKinnon reviews

3.2

54% would recommend to a friend

(208 total reviews)
avatar

David J. Wilson

46% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

Columbus McKinnon has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 208 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Columbus McKinnon employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

208 reviews
1.0
Feb 5, 2025

Dysfunctional inexperienced leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The location of the building

Cons

Prejudiced, no career growth, no direction, low morale, selfish leaders and scared employees

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Columbus McKinnon Response
1y
Thank you for your feedback and for sharing your experience. We strive to create an open and inclusive environment where all employees feel heard and valued, and we are sorry to hear your feedback surrounding the leadership team.
2.0
Mar 21, 2023

Significant Room for Improvement

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- (Almost) Everyone I work with has been friendly enough so far.

Cons

First let me say that I genuinely hope things turn around for this company. The potential is certainly there. I think they are 2-3 good hires/fires away. - Inflexibility. Successful companies realize when something isn't working. If they fail, they fail quickly and pivot. CMCO plows straight ahead with failed systems and processes, continuously throwing, time, money and manpower at issues to no avail. Change occurs much slower than it should/needs to in order to remain competitive. - Meetings. Related to the ineptitude are the endless meetings. The company seems to correlate meetings with progress, when in fact the opposite is occurring. One problem typically equals seven meetings and zero solutions. - Poor Delegation. Delegation is critical for successful management... That said, everyone I've worked with in an upper management position is ignorant to what is going on under them. I'm not being hyperbolic - I can't think of one exception. It's a systemic issue. They pass off responsibility and hope the person they've delegated to knows what they're doing (and they usually don't). - Benefits. In America, top talent usually choose positions with top benefits. CMCO does not offer competitive PTO.

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Columbus McKinnon Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to provide your feedback. We appreciate your thoughts around the friendliness of the CMCO team and your comments to help us improve in certain areas. Each year we conduct an engagement survey and will continue to do so in order to learn additional feedback around our culture and leadership. With this information, we are confident we will influence change in a positive way.
3.0
Aug 9, 2021

Continuing downward trend

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are a lot of really engaged people, at least in the worker ranks, who want to make great products. My entire staff was dedicated to making safe products that were of high quality (I was in the development realm). Pay was certainly competitive with similar roles /industries. Until the last iteration of upper management, my personal development was something my bosses focused on and actively took an interest in.

Cons

I started with a smaller company that was eventually bought by CMCO. As time moved on after the purchase and CMCO became more involved in our operations, things started trending in the wrong direction. My penultimate boss was wonderful, deeply engaged in my department's work and my development. Then CMCO rolled all of development under one person (my final boss there). While I get the sense he was probably a bit overwhelmed and possibly even a bit out of his league in terms of what he'd taken on, it also became obvious very quickly that me and my team weren't very important. Weekly one-on-ones were something he was either late to or would skip entirely, sometimes without any explanation. This was true for almost every meeting I was in with him, even for meetings he scheduled. There probably is no more effective way to kill a direct report's drive and productivity than to basically ignore him. By the time they closed our office (which has happened to many branches), I couldn't wait to be gone. I've also never worked for a company that was so paralyzed by the idea of a lawsuit. I was even taken to task for raising a potential safety issue due to their fear of a lawsuit. That was one of the final straws for me. This was an assault on my integrity as both a person and an employee. Senior management doesn't really listen, contrary to what they say. By the time I was done, decision making was so short term as to be laughable. Retention seemed to be a growing problem, and sometimes people would suddenly be gone and there would be no explanation as to why. I must've had 8 different HR reps assigned to my department in the last 3 years I was there. One was suddenly gone and the only way I found out was a bounceback from an email I had sent to her. I truly felt if I didn't tell upper management what they wanted to hear I'd have trouble. Honesty was a dangerous trait to have. From a product perspective, the need for sustaining efforts overwhelmed my team. I needed more people or less products, facts I backed up constantly with hard data on hours worked. I'd venture to say I had more data than any other development team there on what we worked on and how long it took to accomplish things. It was mostly ignored. By the time I left, the development efforts were focusing on "new and different" while a massive backlog of safety related activities that needed to be completed were mostly ignored. It felt like everyone was being distracted by shiny objects but not looking at what needed to be done.

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Columbus McKinnon Response
4y
Thank you for taking the time to provide your feedback. We are sorry you had this experience. HR has elevated your concerns to the appropriate leadership team to look for opportunities of improvement.
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Glassdoor has 243 Columbus McKinnon reviews submitted anonymously by Columbus McKinnon employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Columbus McKinnon is right for you.