Russell Stover reviews

3.4

56% would recommend to a friend

(284 total reviews)
avatar

Niccolo Starace

78% approve of CEO

52% positive business outlook

Russell Stover has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 284 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Russell Stover employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

284 reviews
1.0
Nov 30, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Steady 40 hours + some overtime

Cons

Lied about shutting the plant down. Had to read about it in the local newspaper. No layoff package OR benefits. Nothing. Several people had to retire early without insurance. Lot of back-stabbers and favoritism. This happened in 2006.....and people are still bitter today in 2009.

4.0
Nov 18, 2025

Working On Culture

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The chocolate industry is fun and we're doing new things like s'mores and dubai style chocolate to stay relevant in the market. It's been hard work over the last several years, but also rewarding. There's a big focus on creating consistency across all locations - which is a good thing. They are working to improve culture by offering more training, lunch & learns, and diversity speakers. There are social opportunities to get together outside of work too - things like golf scrambles, ping pong tournaments, volunteer events, happy hours, etc.

Cons

The hybrid policy is a bit extreme. For salaried people, it mandates how many hours a day you have to be in the office, even for salaried people who typically manage their own time and balance their hours throughout the week. If one day you work 12 hours, the next you should have flexibility to work fewer if your work allows. Most companies measure the output of work vs. the time served.

1.0
Sep 17, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free chocolate is nice I guess

Cons

If you’re looking for a company stuck in the 1990s both culturally and operationally, Russell Stover is it. Senior leadership thrives on reactive decision-making, constant fire drills, and a complete lack of long-term vision. Projects are routinely under-resourced, rushed, and riddled with conflicting priorities — essentially set up to fail from the start. Brand managers aren’t actually empowered to build brands. You’ll spend your time as a glorified project coordinator patching together broken processes, chasing artwork approvals, and cleaning up packaging errors instead of driving strategy or growth. On top of that, far more time is wasted formatting internal presentations than delivering meaningful work that impacts the business. Culture is siloed, hierarchical, and paralyzed by politics. “Cross-functional collaboration” means endless meetings where nothing gets decided. Recognition is rare, burnout is constant, and the best talent leaves quickly. Office politics are rampant, and optics matter more than outcomes — learning to suck up to the biggest title in the room will take you farther than being the smartest person in the room. Most concerning: I was routinely asked to inflate numbers and misrepresent profitability to “sell in” projects internally. It crossed every ethical boundary I’ve ever seen in business and directly conflicts with standard practices in CPG. In addition: pay is below market rate, and the environment is WILDLY toxic. Bottom line: Working here taught me exactly how not to run a business. If you value your career, integrity, or sanity, steer clear.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 284 Reviews

Glassdoor has 292 Russell Stover reviews submitted anonymously by Russell Stover employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Russell Stover is right for you.