Raising Cane's reviews

3.9

76% would recommend to a friend

(5,767 total reviews)
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Todd Graves

86% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Raising Cane's has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 5,767 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Raising Cane's employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Restaurants & Food Service industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
1.0
Aug 2, 2021

Talented Individuals Beware

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paid National Holidays with Restaurants closed Great local Managers that you get to work with If you build local community relationships, there are great connections there and you can make an impact in your local community

Cons

A lot of promises were made during hiring that was not kept. It has become common practice to make the job seem grander than it really is because to be frank, all you are doing is checking a box. If you have a mind of your own and want to do something creative, you must go through 7 layers of approvals (yourself, your Area Leader of Restaurants, Regional Leader of Marketing, Regional Leader of Restaurants, Divisional Leader of Marketing, Divisional Leader of Restaurants, and Restaurant Excellence). This insane level of micromanagement has become rampant across the marketing organization ever since the former CMO left unexpectedly in the summer of 2020. Regional Leadership is absolutely worthless, they cannot get along as a Regional Business Unit Team, and most of the Area Leaders are fed up with the lack of cohesion and obvious inability to work together. When feedback is provided to them, they don't know how to respond or take action, so they simply "brush it under the rug" in hopes that people will forget. They also cannot handle conflict or tough conversations when necessary. They would rather cower behind someone else, or act like it doesn't exist. Everything, and I mean everything, is an absolute priority, regardless of however many other "priorities" that you're working on. So the obvious must be true, that if everything is a priority then nothing really is, but don't tell them that, because they have no idea how to prioritize their projects themselves. Divisional Leadership is even worse. Absolutely disconnected from reality and not open to hearing what is really going on in the markets. When feedback is provided, they brush it off, or act like it's not true. I've never been in a situation where feedback has been provided about morale being low and that people are frustrated, and then have a divisional leader state that it's not true. This wasn't a question about what's going on, this was a statement, and a factual one based on first-hand experience, so why brush it off as if it were inaccurate or a rumor? Some leaders like to "peacock" and try to show their superiority by belittling people. Their obvious need to make up for something is truly apparent and I would caution anyone that stands up for themselves against the leadership. Some leaders like to think that they control everything when in reality, you can control the situation by simply not putting up with their BS and just leave, or just don't work from them in this role. The culture that I signed on for has gone and left. The once great company that everyone in the industry wanted to be a part of has been left in shambles as the company is trying to grow too quickly. Upper levels of leadership are completely disconnected and don't know how to take feedback, and when you do leave the company, they don't even offer you the courtesy of an exit interview with someone from within the organization. They outsource the exit interview to some 3rd party vendor that won't leave you alone. If they really cared about your feedback, they would have listened when you were an employee, or taken the time to reach out themselves when you said you were leaving. More than 9 Marketing individuals have left the company in less than 6 months. That should be an obvious sign to leadership that there is something wrong, but apparently, it's not because more are leaving, or are soon to be leaving as they find that their worth and knowledge can better be served with another company that cares about their employees.

3.0
Nov 30, 2017

Operations Manager

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Have fun and Work hard ethic PTO was great for being a long term employee. College benefits

Cons

The culture changed in the last five years. OMs are expected to work 10-12 hour days - My salary did not reflect this. They pay internal applicants way lower than external and that has left morale extremely low. Work/Family life is non-existent due to being on-call 24/7. In this role you will actually act as the GM because you end up doing the GMs workload and your own. The GM will use this and say it is part of your "IDP".

1.0
Jun 26, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are honestly very few pros to working at Raising Canes. When you first start it will seem like it is the ideal place to work, but as you continue you'll realize it's not.

Cons

The main con I would say is the managers and pay. In my interview they said "We pay you a little bit more than other places to show that we really value you as an employee." Well, that's completely false. All other fast food establishments pay at least .50$ to 1.00$ more than us an hour. They definitely don't pay the employees enough and buy the cheapest possible equipment which makes your job much harder. When it comes to management, they don't really do anything. At my store, there were managers that had never even work at Canes before this so they were learning how to do things as we learned from them. Another thing is the fact that they do not respect employees. Every day I worked somebody, including myself, would get ridiculed, screamed at, and harassed. Another thing I noticed is that when you put in your two weeks they make sure to schedule you the normal about of time, but they put you in the worst position possible and make you do ridiculous tasks. (Example: making me get down on all fours and scrub the floor.) Finally, they do not offer breaks at Canes. I once worked a 15 hour day and was only offered a 15 minute break after I said I needed one or else I couldn't do it. Often times you will work an 8 hour day and not get a break. If I were you and I was thinking about applying to Canes, please don't. You can find a better job that pays more and where people show respect for employees.

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