Walmart reviews

3.4

55% would recommend to a friend

(142,047 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 142,047 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 Commerce de détail et de gros industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

142K reviews
2.0
Oct 19, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's exciting to work in the e-commerce industry, especially with a company that has a lot of potential and interesting things going on.

Cons

It depends on the team, but what I personally saw were multiple rounds of layoffs, and a very cut throat environment. There is no job stability. No work life balance. You are not welcome if you have are older and have a family or kids - the majority of employees and those that are most valued are in their early-mid 20's, young, and willing to work 24/7. New management has killed the company. Their goal is to get rid of everyone at Walmart and replace them with teams from Jet; anyone at Walmart will always be inferior. They don't care about people, whether it is in retention or development. You are easily replaced if you are not a super smart young Harvard educated analytics type person. Let's just say that I had high hopes for working at Walmart eCommerce and although it was once a great place to work it has turned into a night mare and I am left traumatized by the number of extremely experienced, admirable people that I have seen suddenly walked out by security and laid off for no reason.

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Walmart Response
8y
I appreciate you reaching out with feedback, although the feedback you left is harrowing to hear. We want to do everything we can to ensure our associates are treated with respect, fairness and trust. If you have any concerns regarding discrimination, you can contact Walmart Global Ethics at https://www.walmartethics.com/reportaconcern.aspx# or call 1-800-WM-ETHIC. Walmart prohibits discrimination in employment, employment-related decisions or in business dealings on the basis of an individual’s race, color, ancestry, age, sex, sexual orientation, religion, disability, ethnicity, national origin, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or any other status protected by law or local policy. If you feel comfortable doing so, I would welcome the chance to hear your feedback directly. I can assure you that we have a zero tolerance for retaliation. Please reach out to me directly. - Becky S., SVP Human Resources
5.0
Nov 10, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay is GREAT. They treat you like a friend. Very understanding about your situation as well. This will be my first job and it’s probably the best decision I could have made.

Cons

Attendance is huge to them. If you do mess up your chance with Walmart you will be asked why u quit or got fired from the number one retail store and that looks bad on you.

1.0
Jan 26, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only positive quality of working at this company is that you know its going to be around for the next several years, so basically job security.

Cons

I've been working at Walmart eCommerce for almost a year as a Category Specialist. When I was first hired, I was truly excited for the direction the company was going in to compete with Amazon. Aside from a smooth, yet misleading interview process, my entire experience thus far has been very unsatisfactory and has me looking to get out ASAP. Pay & Benefits-- For starters, if you apply to a Category Management role in the SF Bay Area, you will not be compensated for your market worth and will definitely be underpaid. The recruiters make it seem like the 10k bonus (or rather 6k bonus, after taxes) is a selling point-- don't let that fool you. In addition, you would think the benefits would help offset the lower salary, but that is definitely not the case. I know this may sound arrogant and a bit entitled, but when you're a company that makes millions in hours and you're also competing for top talent with Amazon, let alone in the Bay Area, you've got to step your game up. Culture-- Aside from mediocre pay and benefits, the office culture reeks of bureaucracy, politics, rigidness, and saps one of any energy and drive. It seems like most people are content and just going through the motions, while others are trying to turn Walmart into something its not-- an actually innovative and forward thinking company. Walmart's biggest selling point is that you get the experience of both a start up and big company-- but from my experience, any attempt at innovating, challenging the status quo, or simply lobbying to get projects worked on (because everything has to be approved by a director, director's director, VP, and so forth) makes it extremely difficult "to move with speed", "agility", or "change the way we work"-- nothing but fictional words and phrases used to create the allure of a company that wants to be considered in the same league as its competitors. Management- During my time with the company, I've reported to 3 different managers- some better than others, but for the most part, management seems to lack the emotional intelligence/people skills required to develop and retain employees. I've never been in such a hierarchical-based company. At other companies I've worked for, even directors and leaders that your manager reports to would make time to hear your perspective and develop you. At Walmart, your manager is the only person who really gets to communicate to leadership about your progress, thus if you don't agree with everything your manager says, you are seen as being defiant or "not performing well".

Viewing 37 - 39 of 142,047 Reviews

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