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Bridgestone Americas

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Customer Experience/Manager of Tire Sales - Catalyst Program - Catalyst - CEMTS Bridgestone Americas Employee Review

3.0
Jan 19, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The corporate side of the company takes great care of the Catalysts for the most part. They fly you to Chicago and Nashville multiple times for training and fun experiences. The benefits from the company are great as well as the potential opportunity to diversify and grow within the company.

Cons

As part of the catalyst program, after the initial internship, you are placed into a customer experience/manager of tire sales role with the promise of advancement after 6-10 months. However, whether or not you meet the requirements for advancement are completely up to your personal manager's interpretation and there is no standard at all. For example, from the corporate side catalysts just need a general understanding of a role to advance, and while some store managers understand this and will promote relatively easily, others hold catalysts to ridiculous expectations, and only see the catalyst as a benefit to themselves and thus will hold them back. Basically, your career success depends on your manager's personal outlook of success and the way they choose to manager their store, not what corporate thinks on the matter. Also at least a year store experience is needed to even apply for a position outside of the store, which many of us college grads want, and thus has sent over half out the door.

Explore other reviews about Bridgestone Americas

5.0
May 31, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It a pretty good job I love working at bridgestone it have taught me alot I appreciate it

Cons

I really don't have any cons it's a good job a good paying job as well

3.0
Jun 12, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Stable work - buses on the road every day, so tire service tends to be more predictable than some other retail work. Mechanical experience - You'll gain experience with heavy-duty vehicles, commercial tires, fleet operations, safety procedures, and potentially CDL-related skills. Physically demanding - Frequent lifting of tires, pushing heavy equipment, bending, kneeling, and working around large vehicles are regular parts of the job.

Cons

Repetitive labor - Much of the work involves mounting, balancing, and repairing large tires repeatedly throughout a shift. Safety risks - Working with heavy commercial tires and transit vehicles requires strict adherence to safety procedures and PPE requirements.

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