Gap reviews

3.8

70% would recommend to a friend

(10,067 total reviews)
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Mark Breitbard

72% approve of CEO

58% positive business outlook

Gap has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 10,067 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Gap employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

10K reviews
4.0
Jan 27, 2015

Good first job

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

As long as you work hard you never have to worry about job security. Any hard worker is valued. The company does make efforts to figure out if employees are satisfied- there is an anonymous survey that everyone has to take twice a year. There is also a hotline to call if you feel unsafe telling management about a problem you have.

Cons

It is very, very dependent on what store you work in and who your management is. I worked at three different stores and had wildly different experiences. My first store was horribly run, I was treated terribly and got only 4 hours a week. (This store has since had a management overhaul- every manager I knew has been fired.) The second store I worked at was amazing because my head manager was such a great guy. Loved working there. It tends to be high turnover- typical for retail- so you start loving managers and they leave. It is difficult to raise higher than a sales associate. They do NOT want to hire people full time and pay benefits, so they avoid it at all costs. They won't generally promote anyone from associate to manager. They prefer to hire outside the company rather than take a great associate and make them a manager. This is a huge failing of theirs, and they lose great employees doing this. Anyone worthwhile who finds they cannot advance leaves for better things.

3.0
Jan 9, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company was great for me in the sense of the community service. There were many opportunities to help others outside of work and still get paid. There are tons of benefits that are offered to full and part time employees, but you have to look into them.

Cons

Badgering customers to sign up for credit cards. I transferred from a specialty store in NY to an outlet store in Brooklyn. Worst decision I could've made. The dynamic was horrific and management had me under the impression that they'd never managed a day in their life. Every week, rather, every day, hours were cut which meant if you were working that closing shift you were pressured to recover in a very short time frame. This resulted in poor closings, terrible openings, and neglect of customer service. There was no visuals team except for the occasional regional managers who came every 3 months, so product placement was out of control. The stock team was so overwhelmed with shipment that 70 percent of merchandise never came out of boxes until their promotional period ended. No new merchandise meant the customers came in and saw the same thing from 2-3 weeks ago which also meant there was a decline in sales which we know resulted in no hours to give employees to work. Management was lackadaisical so the store looked like a natural disaster every day. The only time employees got hours was when there was a corporate visit (which never ended well) then it was all hands on deck and that was your nice paycheck for the month. Gap prides themselves on hiring from within and offering great flexibility. At certain stores, yes it will be easy to rank up in management but not in Brooklyn. As far as flexibility, yeah right. This is a good job if you're in college or as a second job for extra income, but not as a full time employee, parent, or as a main stream of income. This was a learning experience I could've avoided by not transferring. Outlet stores are not for everyone. Clearly.

4.0
Dec 28, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture is dynamic and radiant. Lots of opportunity to grow and move internally to support career growth and development. Innovation and creativity is supported and rewarded.

Cons

Struggling business creates internal churn in order to manage quarterly financials. Main, anchoring brand is being eaten by competitors who offer fashion forward clothes for much less. Company needs to either reduce prices or offer unique, quality style consumers are willing to pay extra $ for. Otherwise, internal churn will continue to lose bright, let talent.

Viewing 46 - 48 of 10,067 Reviews

Glassdoor has 10,677 Gap reviews submitted anonymously by Gap employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Gap is right for you.