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Consolidated Electrical Distributors

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Career Opporunity with CED - Division Manager Consolidated Electrical Distributors Employee Review

5.0
Sep 19, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When I initially interviewed with CED, it was under the guise of a “practice interview” from a career services department at my school. Since CED is still a privately owned company, there really wasn’t much information at the time on us. Over the past 16 years, I’ve moved up from a management trainee to a profit center manager and now a district manager. What CED really offered me was opportunity to have control over my own success. I have always been a competitive athlete, and subsequently believe that if you put in the work you should have a realistic opportunity to be successful. CED has provided that environment for me and it has been a very good career choice.

Cons

One of the biggest challenges with CED is finding out who we are. There is a great website, Cedcareers, that paints a good picture, but I would encourage potential candidates who are thinking about CED as a career to reach out to a local profit center and sit down with the manager. If you are someone who needs constant feedback on how they are doing, this may also not be a fit for you. The kind of person that excels in our culture is someone who is self-motivated and does not need constant reinforcement. Self-motivated entrepreneurs are the best fit for CED.

Explore other reviews about Consolidated Electrical Distributors

5.0
Jun 23, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great atmosphere and culture and pay

Cons

None that come to mind at the moment

2.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very nice coworkers and you get to travel a good amount in your first year. Guided training process wasn’t bad

Cons

Low pay and long hours. The contract they’ll have you sign in misleading on salary. You’re basically going to be a hourly employee your first 2/3 years and more likely than not are not going to be making the amount on the contract unless you do a lot of overtime. There is a lot of corporate pressure on being able to move wherever they tell you to also. My best advice is to look at what your local managers lives are like and consider if they’re happy or not. You have to have a certain amount of being a loner in you to be ok with their outlandish moving expectations.

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