Beyond, Inc. reviews

2.6

24% would recommend to a friend

(1,180 total reviews)
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Marcus Lemonis

2% approve of CEO

17% positive business outlook

Beyond, Inc. has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 1,180 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Beyond, Inc. employee rating is 26% below average for employers within the Ventas al mayoreo y al menudeo industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Jan 8, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are good but you can get similar benefits elsewhere. Building is good but what's the use if you are not happy inside.

Cons

Management has no strategy to grow business and this company is poorly run. They have been loosing money for last 4 quarters. Latest is that they are trying to be bought out by another company, which is better managed. Product Manager are reporting to engineering management, who have no idea about the product. They are there because management is just like a group of junkies, who get together over alcohol to discuss what should be the venue of their next drinking party. Specially IT executive goel brothers are there because they brown nose the CEO and president. They disrespect the employees in the meetings and use four letter words since they know they are safe as they are part of unofficial union. Little brother grew because big brother was an executive and favorite to CEO. Executives treat you just like resources. They will not help you switch careers/ grow, rather put hindrances if you want to do something you want to do to grow your career. They are not interested in helping you develop. If you somehow convince other team's manager for a different type of work, and manage to get what you want to do, then the executive, who initially opposed your move will take it on his ego, and will make life tough for you since most of the executives are drink buddies. They are least concerned about employees growth and coaching., specially the brothers. There were very good employees earlier in IT but many of then left because of brothers incompetence. Executives, specially on the IT side are busy playing ping pong because they have nothing better to do. In the first place they were promoted because they either have a blood brother in upper management/ or played ping pong/ drank with other executives. If you just keep your eyes and ears shut and pretend to not see all the nepotism around you, then you will have a job. Also, those in management who were promoted based on nepotism, prefers new employees over longer working employees, since the long working employees are aware of how those people were promoted. Those who raise their voices against the nepotism face hostile conditions, and either resign/ forced to resign/ quit. Management prefers new employees since they would not be aware of existing managements incompetence/ nepotism and would work happily for few years before they realize how incompetent management is, and find out how those who got in management actually got there. IT management prefers to hire employees on visa since they are indentured servant and join since they don't have many option now because of immigration policy. Mostly people end up joining because they have no other option.. If you have option to choose between different job then choose elsewhere. As a product manager and engineer, you will more likely to work on maintenance.

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Beyond, Inc. Response
8y
Well, I am sorry you feel that way. I know there is some griping about the brothers. Let me explain why I like them. Back when we were much smaller, and had only about 20 teams, Saum was leader over two of the teams. He and his two teams accomplished about 60% of all the projects completed that year. The following year he had 6 out of 20 teams, and he completed about 80% of all the projects accomplished that year. And Saum vouches for Amit, who has also accomplished the impossible on many an occasion. And I now have the benefit of our new 360 degree review process, so I can see how what the wisdom of crowds actually is about people. It seems to be really good tool for letting the crowd express itself to me, does it not?
5.0
Jan 4, 2018

Great place to innovate

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The management at Overstock allows people to own their projects and drive them towards success.

Cons

No cons as of yet.

1.0
Jan 1, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits were nice enough, but even that aspect was subpar. New campus is reasonably pleasant. Stable job, ish, on the tech side.

Cons

Where to begin. All management at all levels are completely unfit for their roles. This manifests as total lack of ownership of teams over what they are working on (for “team players”), black box business direction means there is nothing to align with so every project doesn’t make real business sense and is more set against dictatorial opinion than well-reasoned healthy goals (“fast paced”). Most dev staff have adopted a coping mechanism of “that’s just crazy overstock, I’m just here to do what I’m told at this point” which is beyond unhealthy and leads to useless engineers who produce unsustainably bad work. Management don’t know how to do their own jobs, which go completely unfilled in terms of responsibility, so they just try to do other people’s jobs instead - even the micromanagement issue aside, this is a problem because they are utterly bad at those usurped jobs too. No feedback loops anywhere. Most teams are lucky if they have a manager who even bothers to talk to them about how their job is going on occasion. This has created a completely out of touch executive team - explicitly by their own choosing - who have completely misguided conclusions about what has proved to be a good decision and what is causing major harm to teams. Even if they were clued in, though, it wouldn’t change their behavior, because they feel their responsibility is to each other and in no way to their teams. They simply don’t care and go out of their way to avoid doing things that resemble caring.

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Glassdoor has 1,219 Beyond, Inc. reviews submitted anonymously by Beyond, Inc. employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Beyond, Inc. is right for you.