Wayfair reviews

3.1

39% would recommend to a friend

(6,849 total reviews)
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Niraj Shah

28% approve of CEO

27% positive business outlook

Wayfair has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 6,849 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Wayfair employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

7K reviews
2.0
Mar 31, 2021

A glorified furniture company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You’ll see pronouns of choice proclaimed proudly in email signatures and encouragement to donate to organizations supporting BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ folx, but not enough work done to uplift, coach, and support employees in any of these groups. You get a designated Slack group to find your tribe. There is no perfect formula, but they are trying. Steve and Niraj are visible in large company initiatives, and they come off as approachable and employee-focused. There are opportunities to visit other locations and meet people you’ve only ever seen on video calls and it helps you form a closer bond during your day to day.

Cons

Although it’s been around for 15+years, you would think you’re working for a start-up. Turnover is high because there is virtually zero work-life balance or support. It’s a rarity to meet anyone who has been with the company for longer than 3 years or older than 35. So much so, that it becomes a running joke. No one is following the same procedures throughout the org. Everyone has a word doc for whatever arises during the normal course of work, and it’s hastily shared when you’re putting out yet another fire. Company procedures are shared on spreadsheets that everyone has access to, and therefore a different version of over time. Policies are erratic and ambiguously applied. The team is unwilling or unable to offer any concrete information about policies or procedures, so you are largely left to fend for yourself and subject to the consequences of that if things go awry. There are some great people that work here, and you will be bonded to them by shared trauma. But they’re leaving the company in droves or transferring to different parts of the org, and who is left will have you wondering who you can actually trust. The dozens of arbitrary group projects to develop basic processes (again, for a company this age???) is where specific type-A personalities truly shine. The company’s insistence on elevating weak personalities on the team sets a poor precedent for what you actually need to do to get a promotion- and to a greater extent, send the message that this is what is truly valued. Lack empathy and people skills, but know how to delegate? Perfect! You will be gaslit into thinking that you shouldn’t have that much work because of the archaic ticketing system in place, when really, countless nights will be spend at your computer looking up nonexistent answers to questions you’ve received throughout the day on the company’s info portal or on one of dozens of Slack threads. You will be given added responsibility, such as taking on more sites, and you will not be compensated for it. Read that again because it is a camouflaged requirement of the role. Beware of “as needed”. And there are days where you will be trapped in meetings for nearly the entirety of your shift. You will see band-aids and promises, but very little execution or accountability to improve things. The quarterly and annual surveys are for show. They’ll change up on the easy stuff, like adding a new benefit, but will keep managers that consistently rank low. If any Leader truly cared about why their entire team is wiped out, you would think they would investigate. It comes off as if they prefer to see these issues in the verbiage of a lawsuit to legitimize it. If you haven’t been deterred yet, maybe you are one of the “better people” they are looking for in their quest to become the next Amazon.

1.0
Jun 12, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some smart people used to work here

Cons

anyone who has a clue of what's going on either leaves pretty quickly, or gets disheartened and quits trying. Those who rise up the ranks are either political savvy wannabe engineers who 'rest-and-vest', and/or are complete hacks who write unmaintainable garbage.

1.0
Jan 13, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Can't really think of any.

Cons

As a senior engineer, you are expected to work under very rigid (and dare I say extremely questionable) coding guidelines. If you wanted people to follow something like that, hire contractors. Senior folks are going to have opinions! The culture that this creates is that it is extremely hard to care. What else do you expect when you are forcing a senior engineer to do something against their gut on a daily basis? I care about the company that I work for and its products so this lead to a lot of internal conflicts for me. I was so depressed! Leaving Wayfair was the best thing that has happened to me! Who likes it here are people fresh out of colleague or those without any experience outside of Wayfair. Or if you like to keep your head down. Code review process is extremely frustrating to the point that once you are done with (multi-level!!!) approvals, you can hardly recognize your own code! Oh yeah, that process can take WEEKS. That's right - weeks. Bugs? You betcha! For a (storefront) codebase that is a hot mess, so much red-tape is comically surprising. But then again, with the horrible, logic-defying coding standards, what else do you expect? Here's a funny story: some random developer asks about adding a linter rule for comma dangle. Gets implemented immediately. Apparently the benefit is "cleaner diffs". Except that nobody bothered to get the whole codebase up to date with that rule update so hundreds of developers saw comma diffs for months for every file that they touch!! I mean, really? This isn't some high-school project. Despite of being extremely rigid on how development should be done, onboarding is useless. You will hear about random corporate crap. Oh, did I mention that part of WF's culture is to reinvent the wheel. Custom everything! Because why industry standards, right? They have something called "Labs" where they teach interns and fresh out of college folks about the codebase. Those poor souls are then scared for life because they probably think that spaghetti code is what development is all about... Remote employees? Don't even. It's a pilot program in which nobody actually thought about how it is going to work. They instead expect remote employees to actually take charge of driving that culture. If you ever worked in a distributed environment you will know that the pilot program set up this way is a huge waste of money and everyone's time. By far the worst position I've ever had. Extremely high turn-over shows it. Don't even think about it. Run away! Seriously. No matter how good the pay is. Money isn't everything if you are going to be hating your job and yourself every day.

Viewing 76 - 78 of 6,849 Reviews

Glassdoor has 7,870 Wayfair reviews submitted anonymously by Wayfair employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Wayfair is right for you.