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National Restaurant Association

Engaged Employer

National Restaurant Association reviews

2.3

21% would recommend to a friend

(141 total reviews)
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Michelle Korsmo

11% approve of CEO

14% positive business outlook

National Restaurant Association has an employee rating of 2.3 out of 5 stars, based on 141 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The National Restaurant Association employee rating is 38% below average for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

141 reviews
1.0
Dec 14, 2025

Maga Destruction

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Office Spaces are well kept

Cons

The CEO. She assumed leadership during the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, inheriting an organization that was financially stable and well-positioned for success after a challenging time. Since taking office, however, her tenure has been marked by a lack of innovation and strategic vision. Rather than introducing new initiatives or building upon the organization’s strengths, she has leaned into her own narrative that in house talent wasn’t able to take the organization to the next level. Relying heavily on expensive consultants and loyal associates, which alienated staff with institutional knowledge. This approach has created an environment where experienced professionals, those who have dedicated their careers to the organization’s success, are marginalized and have led to massive loss of continuity and expertise. Multiple team meetings have taken place where she has labeled the staff as being “too soft”, while she has stacked on new Executives, as her loyalists - who are mainly women that look like her. The restaurant industry is a diverse marketplace, and the organization used to represent that diversity, by reflecting its commitment to inclusion and representation. Unfortunately, under the current leadership, these values have eroded. Compounding this shift, the CEO has openly signaled her political alignment by hosting an inauguration event in January 2025 at the Washington, D.C. office, reinforcing her partisan stance. Employees and stakeholders expect neutrality and inclusivity from organizational leadership. Significantly increasing healthcare premiums further demonstrate a disregard for the well-being of individuals who drive the organization’s day-to-day success. Stripping departments to a Help Desk model also strips morale. These actions not only also threaten the organization’s reputation and long-term stability.

2.0
Oct 28, 2025

CEO Ruining the Company

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits with many great coworkers.

Cons

CEO has no clue and Senior Management not allowed to give opinions on recent changes.

1.0
Oct 24, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

For many years, this was a genuinely great place to work — collaborative culture, strong mission, and dedicated, capable teams. Colleagues were passionate about their work and deeply invested in the success of the organization. The former CEO fostered a culture of unity that the new CEO has decimated. There are still a few talented and caring people trying to hold things together.

Cons

Everything changed under the current CEO. Despite limited leadership experience, she quickly created a narrative that the business was failing — one the Board unfortunately accepted without fully validating. What followed has been a steady erosion of trust, talent, and financial stability. Significant spending on outside consultants has produced little to no measurable value, while the organization has fallen deeper into debt. Expanding the "C" suite with people with no knowledge of the business who now owe their new career to the CEO, building on the underlying morass in the organization. Entire departments, including HR and most of Finance, have been eliminated and replaced with outside companies with no knowledge of the organization or its businesses, leaving basic operations under-resourced and chaotic. Many long-tenured and highly competent leaders have either been laid off, have chosen to leave or are preparing to leave due to the toxic environment and lack of strategic direction. The CEO routinely blames staff for poor performance while taking no ownership of decisions that have harmed the organization. What was once a respected, stable organization has become demoralized and vulnerable to competitors because of executive inexperience and poor judgment.

Viewing 4 - 6 of 141 Reviews

Glassdoor has 158 National Restaurant Association reviews submitted anonymously by National Restaurant Association employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if National Restaurant Association is right for you.