Shady Characters and Abusive Management - Director PartsSource Employee Review

1.0
Jan 25, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are some great people and solid professionals working here. There are a couple of good leaders who mean well.

Cons

There is only one goal: do everything and anything to APPEAR strong to the next buyer. Lots of problems with no desire to actually resolve. Most people are beaten down by the leadership so it's hard to get out. Very few people are happy unless they are one of the "lifers" who will never leave and who are asked to write the positive reviews you see here. No real strategy or organizational purpose. Culture is terrible. Be sure to ask for the turnover rate in the department, role, with that manager. Ask what the long-term plans are for the company. Had I asked these questions, I would not have accepted the position.

Explore other reviews about PartsSource

5.0
Jul 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The marketing department has tremendous opportunity for growth and professionalization. There's a genuine long runway ahead to establish more formalized processes, build structured systems, and elevate marketing practices across the organization. The foundation is there—it just needs intentional development and strategic implementation to reach its full potential.

Cons

Executive leadership lacks internal alignment and communication. There's a disconnect between departments where decision-making isn't coordinated, resulting in siloed efforts and duplicated work.

1.0
Jun 3, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are a number of genuinely talented, smart people across functions, and I learned a lot from the colleagues around me.

Cons

Prospective applicants and those interested in acquiring the company may want to read the reviews here with a heavy dose of discernment and skepticism. A number of the recent positive reviews appear to have been at the encouragement of management and HR, and the timing seems connected to the company preparing for a sale, so they may not reflect the typical employee experience. Based on my own time here, I would not recommend the role to anyone who prioritizes their wellbeing, meaningful work, and work-life balance. The environment took a real toll on mine. The organization is top-heavy, and leadership's attention often seems directed at the wrong priorities. Leadership also protects the wrong people and has little insight into how stretched most teams are, often with few resources. Many talented people stay mainly because of the promise of a future equity or stock payout rather than the work itself, which points to a retention problem rooted in incentives rather than genuine engagement.

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