employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Marriott Vacations Worldwide

Is this your company?

timeshare is not too fun - Sales Executive Marriott Vacations Worldwide Employee Review

3.0
Sep 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

the pay if you can sell can be pretty good at times, but it depends on if the group hits its budget goals or not. be careful when hired of the managers making false promises of potential income and setting the expectation bar too high, as some sales agents who are senior get treated differently and given different clients then the new sales people. besides that the vacation time is great, you really dont work very much in a given day, and the location is beautiful. also you dont need any education to be qualified for this job just the desire and ability to learn how to sell.

Cons

you hear no a lot, and very numbers driven. also it does not matter how long you have worked there and how productive you have been at sales consistently over the years, it always comes down to what have you done for me lately. I feel like the ocmpany does not pay the employees as well a it could based on what they contribute to the company, but that has changed recently is my understanding.

Explore other reviews about Marriott Vacations Worldwide

5.0
Mar 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Great money -Nice environment -Opportunity to shadow other departments

Cons

- Stressful day-to-day - Not a ton of "internship specific duties"

2.0
May 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Bebefits like medical were good.

Cons

During my employment as a Quality Assurance employee, I experienced clear unequal treatment compared to colleagues in the same position. Westbound QA employees were not required to clock in and out for lunch, while Eastbound QA employees like myself were required to do so — despite holding identical job classifications. As an hourly employee, this meant I was regularly working unpaid time during mandatory "break" periods. This was not a minor oversight — it was a policy applied unequally between teams. When I raised this concern directly to my manager, instead of acknowledging the legitimate issue, my manager responded by threatening to file an internal HR complaint against me — claiming I had raised my voice in a customer area. I did not raise my voice. Rather than addressing the problem, my manager used this as an opportunity to discourage me from speaking up further. This entire conversation was recorded with my manager's full knowledge and consent. Additionally, a senior manager in my department consistently declined notarization requests from the sales team, redirecting all notary work to me despite being equally qualified. When I was finally given authorization by the Director to take my 30-minute break, I returned to find 7 notarization documents piled on my desk — the senior manager had declined to handle them during my authorized absence.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All