Decent Pay, Strong Core Team — But Leadership Politics Drag Everything Down
Pros
Pay is solid for the actual workload we handle. Benefits are above average, especially compared to similar contract roles. A couple of great managers (Maintenance Manager and Front Half Nights) who actually care, communicate, and lead by example. The job can be laid-back when the warehouse is running smoothly — plenty of downtime when things don’t break.
Cons
Leadership quality overall is poor. Most managers are uncoordinated, unmotivated, and bring unnecessary politics and attitude into the workplace. The culture has turned toxic — people constantly stepping on each other to look good while still doing the bare minimum. Unfortunately, this includes some in leadership. Growth opportunities are basically nonexistent. Promotions feel predetermined before interviews even begin, with the same few “favorites” always getting the nod. Heavy favoritism: a select few techs get all the chances to work on complex systems or handle meaningful projects, while the rest are left doing repetitive grunt work. Retaliation exists. If you speak up or challenge a decision, expect to be sidelined or assigned to unpleasant tasks soon after. Safety culture is extremely relaxed. A lot goes unreported, and risky shortcuts are often ignored as long as production keeps moving. It makes the job easier but it’s not the standard CBRE or Amazon claim to uphold. Operations team often lacks basic understanding of equipment and reliability, which makes coordination frustrating — like trying to explain to kids why their toy broke.