Once a great company, not anymore - Sr. Logistics Manager Dow Employee Review

3.0
Oct 11, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay and benefits for a local company. There are some real amazing leaders.

Cons

Dow is currently looking to terminate everyone they can "for cause". Uninvestigated & unsubstantiated complaint, too bad, you're fired. Toxic environment that promotes sabotage and backstabbing. No direction from management on where the company is headed. Dow protects bad employees by putting systems in place to limit high performers. Promotions are for people managers no longer want. Too much DEI being shoved down employee throats. "High fliers" are the ones who accept and promote liberal and progressive agenda. The average manager knows nothing about business and just go with the flow. The real change agents get targeted and removed. You have the normal Heather's who go around filing complaints on people for personal vendettas. HR protects this practice.

Explore other reviews about Dow

5.0
Apr 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good career growth opportunities, great work/life balance, great benefits

Cons

Pay is ok but not great.

2.0
Mar 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Safety culture, flexibility (although less and less over time). Good health insurance and 401k match

Cons

Dow’s recent years illustrate the challenges of trying to simultaneously satisfy Wall Street’s demands for strong financial performance and aggressive DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) priorities. The company has heavily emphasized inclusion initiatives, including its openly gay CEO publicly sharing that coming out was one of the best days of his life in an internal communication, along with a notable increase in women appointed to senior leadership roles. Hiring practices reportedly require diverse candidate slates—including female candidates—and diverse interview panels before filling positions. These efforts, while well-intentioned, appear to have contributed to a series of questionable strategic decisions. Employees have borne the brunt through repeated rounds of layoffs (including significant cuts announced in recent years), minimal merit increases often in the 2-3% range, stalled promotions, and little turnover at the top levels of leadership. Senior executives seem insulated from the consequences, potentially overlooking how these factors—including their own leadership—may be central to the company’s ongoing struggles.

2
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