Starbucks reviews

3.5

56% would recommend to a friend

(85,228 total reviews)
avatar

Brian Niccol

31% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

Starbucks has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 85,228 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Starbucks employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Restauration industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

85K reviews
4.0
Jul 13, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company is attempting to change to resume high growth in a business environment of rapidly growing competition and deteriorating economy. If you like to participate in change, solve problems, focus on priorities and what's important, there is a lot going on at the Service Center (corporate headquarters). Senior leadership is extremely aware of the danger that this environment poses to the truly unique Starbucks culture, and takes great efforts to maintain the best elements of our culture. Those include passion about the customer and the business, true celebration of diversity and uniqueness of person and perspective, joy in the workplace, and work-life balance as a real commitment rather than a buzzword.

Cons

Data and effective utilization of technology is nearly non-existent relative to truly competitive large companies. Decisions have been made almost entirely on intuition of the most powerful personalities, rather than business savvy and analysis. In certain highly critical areas, there is an attempt to change this, but it doesn't happen overnight. There is very little planning or project management expertise, process, or discipline or appreciation for these skills. The business is significantly more complex than it might appear, and so these specific issues have great impact on financial and operational performance. On the flip side, there is extreme potential for improvement, so if the ongoing change efforts are successful, Starbucks is going to be reborn like a phoenix in the medium term.

2.0
Jan 12, 2024

Not anymore

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nearly unlimited drinks and some really solid benefits, I get paid very well for my area as a shift (Been there for 5 years, I’m getting paid almost $22 an hour now). IF you can get enough hours it’s good pay. But everybody now is getting their hours cut like crazy in the middle of sales You get the chance to work with some really cool people and make great relationships with other partners and with customers. A guy transferred into our store a few years ago and now he’s my best friend and I’m in his wedding.

Cons

The company is not what it used to be. They are running relentless BOGO’s and happy hours without giving baristas proper time to prepare OR proper coverage. It’s not just my store. It’s almost all of them. People are burnt out. Upper management truly does not care. The store manager is treated just as terribly as everybody else in the store. They’re expected to cut everybody’s hours and still get good drive through times, customer connection scores, and a flawlessly clean store. My SM is amazing and I’m watching him get so burnt out because he has NO SUPPORT from anybody above him, just being told he’s not doing good enough.

2.0
Jul 13, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, including bean stock. Partner discount is very useful if you enjoy starbucks products. Schedule is pretty flexible for the most part if you are a barista. Job security (pre COVID atleast). It is a great feeling being a part of the starbucks community and going to different stores and having a similar connection with partners from all over.

Cons

To keep it simple, a Starbucks store manager is overworked, underpaid, and constantly stressed. As a salaried manager, you are expected to work on the floor as a barista for 30+ hours, and still complete administrative tasks like scheduling, payroll, training, and numerous district calls that last for over an hour, multiple days a week. Work life balance as a store manager is non existent. You are constantly on call, every week you will feel like you are trying to get shifts covered because somebody is always calling out. You will have to wake up at 3 or 4am if you’re opening barista doesn’t show up, or one of the partners has a question that nobody else can answer but you. Sometimes this happens on your days off. Other times you may need to answer a 4am phone call when you have to be up for your own shift in just a few hours. The company does not give its managers the time they need in order to properly operate and grow their business. It is a constant struggle between trying to be on the floor for your team, and keeping up with the ever changing needs of the business, or the constant stream of communication and process changes the district manager wants you to implement. At best, you are playing catch up everyday and always having to make last minute adjustments because a barista gave you a no notice resignation, didn’t show up for a shift, or changed their availability last minute. Starbucks has also implemented a “customer connection score” system that allows customers to take a survey and answer if the barista made an attempt to get to know them during their visit. This is a major metric used in order to gauge your success as a leader, but it’s implementation is flawed and only adds to the stress when you’re scores are lowered. For one, you have no control over who receives the survey, as it is random. Also, if the customer doesn’t “strongly agree”, the positive feedback doesn’t count. You are looked down upon for a metric that is for the most part, largely out of your control, and can fluctuate drastically week to week. Starbucks does everything in their power to seem like mental health advocates for their partners, yet their lack of clear communication, overloading their leaders and baristas, and constant pressure to put profits over people, they are directly responsible for a majority of mental health issues their partners face. I have had partners break down and cry, have anxiety and panic attacks, and even have to be out of work for weeks at a time because their mental health was taking such a huge hit. I think the company has completely lost sight of what makes customer interaction genuine, and are too concerned with preparing for the after effects of mentally drained and damaged employees, rather than do their parts to make sure the work environment doesn’t create those issues in the first place. You are only a manager in title at Starbucks. For a majority of your time, you will be a high paid barista who is still responsible for all the administrative tasks that keep the store running.

Viewing 91 - 93 of 85,228 Reviews

Glassdoor has 90,932 Starbucks reviews submitted anonymously by Starbucks employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Starbucks is right for you.