Snap-on reviews

3.5

61% would recommend to a friend

(686 total reviews)
avatar

Nick Pinchuk

80% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Snap-on has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 686 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Snap-on 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

686 reviews
3.0
Jun 17, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

it was pretty stable and you got paid on time

Cons

a lot of scheming among the lower management instead of spending their time supporting their team

2.0
May 30, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

American pride A mostly solid product line A lot of good people at many levels in the company Very hard-working co-workers Opportunities to travel and see things you otherwise might not

Cons

Unbelievable chaos, 24/7. "Good-ol' boys" syndrome - "How could any idea but ours be the right one?" Ridiculous sales goals, the most consistent reward for doing well is more to do! 5 to 15 percent increase in go-gets and bonus tiers every year, but no COLA for you. Ever. Inconsistent programs, amnesia to promises made, total denial of anything that would even slightly require a change to the pre-established plan handed down at the last minute. The most vague concept of IT support for the product, and the sales systems, and the billing systems, etc... Unbelieveable communication breakdown between departments, data sets, and so on, at every level. When you find a problem in the Diagnostic Tool software, and take the time to document it with the customer, and report it, you never hear back. It takes months to years to get it fixed, and there are no release notes on their service upgrades, so you don't know where you stand. Commission scam - "Unlimited Income" claimed due to the Shopkey Sales portion of the job, nevermind that they sell it over the phone under the primary Mitchell1 sales channel by telling lies, and leave you with the fallout. Angry customers find out they are under contract, when they were told it was a 30 day trial. Then you walk into a hornet's nest. Any work you do to try to rectify the situation may help your franchisee's relationship with their customer, but won't pay you a cent. In addition to this, the Mitchell Sales Channel gets the inside track on new programs, marketing, training, etc. Your role as a ShopKey Rep is an after thought. Ridiculous work/life balance. Actual work hours expectation exceeds normal waking hours of average human being. You are considered "Management" but have no actual authority of any real kind. Constant Tug-of-War between local management, Regional management, the "DI" (Diagnostics & Information) division, and the Tools division, over what is priority #1. This leaves you with a "Drop what you're doing, and focus on, well, everything all at once" directive about 2-8 times per week. You effectively have about 9 bosses, 30 Franchisees to care for, and something like 3,500 individual customers and businesses to try to work with. Good luck!

4.0
May 9, 2017

Sales Manager

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Quality Product, Brand Recognition, Macro Managed, Manufacturer of your own product that you are selling, 95 plus years of great company success.

Cons

Lots of hours needed to make a competitive salary, no company car or even much of an expense allowance, Fortune 500 mentality and treatment of employees, little support in the field or with training (in certain jobs)

Viewing 538 - 540 of 686 Reviews

Glassdoor has 797 Snap-on reviews submitted anonymously by Snap-on employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Snap-on is right for you.