Meijer reviews

3.3

51% would recommend to a friend

(6,918 total reviews)
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Richard Keyes

63% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Meijer has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 6,918 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Meijer 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

7K reviews
2.0
Nov 20, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Opportunities for less-educated employees. A cleaner environment than most of it's competitors. Until 2003, there was much more opportunity for advancement and wage increases and bonuses were much better. Watch for a merger or buyout that will result more opportunities and a generally more positive work environment. I sincerely wish I could be more positive. It used to be a wonderful company, but when people feel insecure in their job, the tension can be overwhelming.

Cons

Meijer was the pioneer of "Big Box" retailing, and continued that tradition of innovation until about 2002. But due to constant "restructuring" since then and a non-innovative, simplistic focus on "price" at the expense of "service", an employee's ability and performance have not been the main factors in gaining promotions or even retaining employment at Meijer. There is a serious problem with the competency of store and district level management due to a concerted effort to "dumb-down" management positions, especially at the store level by taking advantage of IT systems to transfer control to the corporate level: Move the product to the store, get it on the shelf and price it. Because they no longer have the personnel, customer service is a shell of what it once was, store cleanliness has suffered and well-conditioned shelves and creative merchandising is no more. Also, Meijer is a private stock company and is not obligated to reveal it's financial status. There have been store closings and job cuts since strong competition from WalMart, Cosco and Target began in earnest about 2002. Because Meijer is not a publicly traded company, they have had to make creative partnership arrangements to finance growth, which has resulted in much slower than their competitors. The profit center for Meijer is it's supermarket and pharmacy, where it competes well, but the General Merchandise side is in serious trouble. The vast majority of management cuts have been in the GM area: At the beginning of the decade, there was a manager for each department, at least six line managers (Service, Two Night Store Managers, GM, Supermarket and Hardlines) but by 2007 that number has been reduced to four lines managers (Supermarket , one Night Store Manager, Service and GM) and one "department" manager each to cover Hardlines, Fashion, Video/Electronics and Night Stocking in GM, plus Produce, Prepared Foods and Grocery and HBC, in the Supermarket area. Meijer made what could be a fatal decision in 2002 to price-compete with WalMart rather than service the niche (between Kroger & Target on one end and WalMart on the other) that they had. That niche preferred the cleanliness and well-stocked and conditioned character of Meijer stores as well as access to managers and clerks in each department but now, the cost-cutting is beginning to show and they might as well rename the company "WalMeijer".

2.0
Nov 18, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

(Corporate) learning the innerworkings of retail strategy components. Multi faceted learning environments from a base retail perspective, ability to learn about many areas if you can find a group with a mentor. Although strategic leadership is fragmented, there are some areas that can provide a good foundation of learning. However, it's best to get first hand knowledge about the group you are interested in prior to working in it.

Cons

Lack of vision, incredible inner politics. There are some groups populated with people who really want to do well but more often than not are not able to due to politics. The result is massive turnover, or acceptance to the status quo regardless of what the right thing to do is.

2.0
Oct 21, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The best reason to work at Meijer would be to increase your people skills. Also, you recieve an overall idea of how business run and work. Another aspect would be you learn some skills on the job that you wouldn't in other places. These skills being definatly people skills and how to keep a customer happy.

Cons

Bad hours. Bad scheduling. Bad management. The overeall attitude in the stores is no one cares and everyone wants to go home early. Also, the rules and regulations Meijer is supposed to follow isn't always followed.

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