Perfect job while attending school! - Barista Delta Hotels Employee Review

5.0
Jan 15, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible hours, great team, positive work environment, great perks (discounted hotel stays, food and beverage discount, access to the Vancouver Tourism Passport, and more). The company wants to hear feedback. Professional development is encouraged.

Cons

Our department felt isolated in comparison to other departments. There is also occasional gossiping, but that seems to be normal in smaller departments.

Explore other reviews about Delta Hotels

5.0
Apr 22, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

fun environment, good schedule,nice people

Cons

distance, not really anything else.

1.0
Jun 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It provides an immediate, firsthand lesson in how not to run an organization.

Cons

This is, without reservation, one of the most dysfunctional professional environments I have ever encountered. The organization suffers from a severe deficit in foundational infrastructure: Negligent Onboarding: Training is virtually nonexistent. Compounding this, a pervasive culture of condescension ensures that any pursuit of clarification is met with overt derision and eye-rolling from tenured staff. Arrogant & Insular Leadership: Management operates with an unearned superiority complex, routinely treating subordinates as intellectually inferior while simultaneously fostering a toxic, gossip-driven culture behind closed doors. Exploitative Labor Practices: Expect to have your work-life boundaries entirely obliterated. Leadership routinely demands 16-hour workdays; anything less is weaponized against you and absurdly mischaracterized as "taking a vacation." Severe Resource Starvation: The company is so poorly capitalized (or aggressively mismanaged) that basic, critical operational assets—such as physical keys for guest rooms—cannot be procured. Anemic Staffing Levels: Personnel have been cut to the absolute bone, forcing the remaining, overworked staff to bear the brunt of systemic operational failures.

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