Corporate Culture Not Reflected On-Site - Know What You're Getting In To - Leasing Professional Greystar Employee Review

2.0
Jan 3, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some of the industry's greatest work for Greystar so you will learn a lot and have potential for growth if your passion is property management. The benefits are okay. The company culture defined at corporate level is fantastic in that they look for growth in each employee and are committed to being the best in the industry. You'll meet amazing people at corporate when there for training - you'll want to be moved to corporate level.

Cons

The culture is not disseminated down to property level. Your experience on-site will be solely dependent upon your manager, regional and owners. If you have a good leader, you will have flexibility and opportunities. Unfortunately, Greystar corporate does little to involve itself with what's going on at the site level. Many mangers deny earned PTO, have expectations that cannot be met, and only manage assets while failing to lead a team. One of Greystar's values is work-life balance. Personally, my manager and regional did not care - if you were scheduled to work, you worked. I would go to work with the flu because the manager refused to cover any duties beneath him. The owners of the property's can be extremely cruel as well and talk to you as nothing more than a replaceable human asset. Also, for being the nation's LARGEST third-party management company, Greystar pays poorly. Many leasing professionals and assistant managers seek part-time work to supplement the poor incomes they are making.

Explore other reviews about Greystar

5.0
Jun 21, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great work environment to work in

Cons

Can have favoritism to some people depending on management

1.0
Jul 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay with housing discounts tend to be better than competition

Cons

Severe negatives if you plan on taking any type of leave of absence. While they are required to allow the leave, (my experience) has been that if retaliatory since it adds additional work load to those in your group (your boss). I’ve experienced this personally, and have seen it with other managers in my group. You will start to receive write ups that you never had before, micro managed, and/or fired after such things. I went from discussing promotions before my leave started to becoming ineligible for rehire after taking state protected LOA.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All