Trending down for years - Sales Associate Best Buy Employee Review

1.0
Dec 1, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The employee discount is pretty good

Cons

It used to be that Best Buy employees specialized in one department, and were trained accordingly. I don’t know if I would say most were “experts,” but they definitely knew enough to be helpful. Best Buy seems to have transitioned to a “jack of all trades, master of none” model. I was hired for my previous expertise in one department, but due to the constant lack of proper coverage, I was expected to run around the entire store answering questions I didn’t know the answers to. I always just told customers “sorry, they didn’t schedule anyone who actually knows that, but I can google it if you want.” But I also saw employees (especially management) confidently answer customers with clearly wrong answers rather than admit they didn’t know. You’re also constantly pressured to sign people up for the credit card, and it seems like the products are just an excuse to try to get people to apply. I regularly saw employees incorrectly tell customers that the application was a soft credit check, and that they didn’t have to worry about it. I worked for a few years at Best Buy a long time ago, and then briefly again recently for some extra cash, and while it always had problems, it was sad to see the direction it seems to be going.

Explore other reviews about Best Buy

5.0
May 21, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to work if you love tech.

Cons

They have turned into corporate America. No longer care about their employees like they used to.

1.0
Jul 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

No pros. Just don’t work here.

Cons

This job adds little to no value, either for customers or for career growth. The primary focus is pushing credit cards and memberships that many customers don’t actually need, making the work feel repetitive and unfulfilling. The workplace culture and management are poor, and employees are often assigned busywork instead of meaningful responsibilities. There is almost no opportunity to develop product knowledge or apply any technical or electronics skills. Even the sales experience is limited since the role revolves around following scripted pitches rather than building genuine sales or customer relationship skills. Overall, it’s not a strong entry-level position for someone looking to develop transferable skills. There are many other jobs that provide better learning opportunities, stronger career growth, and more valuable real-world experience.

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