Walmart reviews

3.4

55% would recommend to a friend

(142,109 total reviews)
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John Furner

60% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Walmart has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 142,109 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Walmart employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

142K reviews
1.0
Sep 23, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Due to size, great growth opportunities (have to be in current role 18 months) - Great chances to move in 100's of depts without ever leaving Wal-Mart the company (IT, HR, Logistics, retail, trucking, pharmacy, distribution, sales, aviation, etc....endless roadmaps) - #1 retailer - pride in saying I was with a company with 2.1 million employees, $440 billion in annual revenue (no other company can say that) - Great chances to take IT training in almost anything, from Lean Six sigma, to Dale Carnegie, to Agile etc..

Cons

- EXTREMELY stressful and ridiculous demands (10+ hour days); plus Saturday morning management meetings (mandatory) - Parking is horrible, literally walk 10-15 min from car to front door daily one way, heat or cold; no canopy. No care of employees ease.. If you work in ISD bldg, but have to go to home office for a meeting - plan to waste a lot of time driving then walking. Miles a day. - Companies policy: EDLC (every day low cost) is acronym for CHEAP. Which means, you get reimbursed for NOTHING. drive your own personal vehicle to different buildings for meeting or training. Almost nothing gets reimbursed due to EDLC. - Wal-mart is focused on one thing only: COST. Therefore, they don't care about quality. Whether its the quality of the food served in the cafeteria (cheap) or quality of anything else. This also meant, you throw your OWN garbage out of your cubicle daily (no cleaning service = EDLC). NO cleaning service = nats all over, all the time. YES, this is constant and consistent - and seems to be acceptable. Solution: Throw your garbage out daily, yourself. - HORRIBLE health insurance. Plan to put $10,000 away from your base salary for medical annually. - No sense of importance or value. Because the company has 2.1+ million employees (over 4,000 in IT), you are just a peanut in a very large jar. If you are a contractor, you sit in a grey cubicle. If you are a VP, you sit in a grey cubicle. There is NO sense of pride, because of EDLC, everyone sits in a grey cubicle, no windows for anyone, at any level. - People are "brainwashed" to save the company money, yet there is no real reward back or sense of pride. I felt as if I were a slave, with sole purpose: Make the Walton family RICH. - At the end of the year, at the celebration ceremony, what did VPs give us Project Managers as reward: Kudo's granola bar and Toasties crackers. NO JOKE! Because of EDLC, VPs handed out Kudo's and Toasties as a "THANK YOU" for the hard work and recognition for the 10+ hour days for months and years to complete delivery of mufti-million dollar projects. I have been in companies where I got $2,500 visa gift card for leading mufti-million dollar projects. But EDLC (aka CHEAP) is Walmarts corporate policy.

1.0
Nov 29, 2018

Demoralizing

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's still Fortune 1. Also, the work can be highly visible. And if you have the patience to deal with condescending behavior and a top-down culture, you might be able to introduce new technology, or at least be able to use it yourself.

Cons

The company micro-manages and uses tools that only they have heard of, which makes remaining marketable challenging. Additionally, the micro-managing removes any desire to grow, which is what all the studies show, but Walmart is too big and too profitable to care. I've had a boss look over my shoulder since day one, micro-manage my work my first week to the point where he was correcting my grammar (which is what I have pretty much studied my entire life, and "corrected" it to something that was so wrong it made me cringe). He's also infantilized me through both actions and words, and when I dare think, he says the same thing, but a different way because after all, that is how we manage in 2018 like it's the 1960s. In stereotypical/clichéd fashion, there are too many 20-something males running around with stunted maturity and inflated egos. Misogyny and narcissism come to mind.

2.0
Mar 30, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice people, backing of Walmart

Cons

Highly political, In adequate middle and upper level management, No accountability,

Viewing 55 - 57 of 142,109 Reviews

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