A Zillion things wrong here! - Merchandising Specialist Wayfair Employee Review

1.0
Aug 5, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good for your first job after University, but do not stay here more than an year or two. - Almost all the associates and interns are just absolute wonderful, welcoming, and support each other all the time. More importantly share similar views about the work. - Decent work-life balance, lot of social events.

Cons

- Lot of changes in Merchandising, way too many to keep a count on. Things were pretty good a year ago, suddenly the management decided to change the scope and objective of the department. Many of us feel it was downright unreasonable, because the goal was just to reach a certain number of products on site. I highly doubt any analytical approach was made. Just because the Wayfair EU's head came up with a number, all the managers agreed and went along with it. The consequence is that a lot of associates hate their jobs, do a very repetitive and a boring job for which you do not need any specialized skill set. - The mid-level managers can make your work-life very hard. All of these managers are from MBA + consultancy background and do not know much about managing people, their expectation, developing them, etc. They are just good story tellers, this is what it is. They lack minimum empathy, and just keep pushing the management agenda towards their team of associates. The associates suffer the most taking all the work. - Get ready for minimal transparency. Any major changes/ decisions will not be discussed with the teams, employees. Instead, it will already be in place and then the employees are informed. Basically, the associates and specialist are not considered for anything, their opinions does not count. - Merchandising conducts a lot of social events, so if you are not a big fan of those or if you are a person who thinks "I don't owe anything to my company after the work hours", then just forget about visibility, promotions, etc. Only the extroverts, people who talk ill about others, people who ask the most obvious questions all the time gets promoted and seen as a “visible” or “vocal” contributor to the department. If you just come to work, do a great job and go back home, you are instantly assumed as “not-so-motivated” employee. - The HR process is another fallback. It doesn’t make sense why Merchandising is hiring overqualified graduates (bachelors + masters) to do such basic manual jobs. If you are not utilizing their skills or help them in growing their skills, they will leave the company soon. The department or the company is failing miserably in adding value to the associate’s skill set. The HRs always oversell everything about the role, the company, the benefits, the compensation package. - Every single day is toxic working here. You constantly keep hearing about rumors about people getting fired, denied promotion, people changing teams, managers making bad decisions. Managers micro-manage so much that they literally sit next to the associates and dictate emails, agendas. How will such an environment thrive when there is absolutely no trust placed on employees? - I cannot not stress how unacceptable the managers are at Merchandising department. Their MBAs do not mean a single thing when they cannot do the most trivial thing such as LISTENING to their own team. Managers look out for opportunities to just show their direct reports their place by constantly belittling them with their own “new & innovative ideas” or "work styles" they picked up during their tenure in Consulting. - I have seen many great employees not getting promoted since 3 years. The reason that comes from the managers is their performance is not exceeding but just meeting their expectation. The nepotism runs rampant in this department. Only when you keep nodding to every manager in every meeting, being a loudmouth during social events, you have some chance of getting promoted. The real good employees who challenge the status-quo, and the managers are immediately seen as a threat to the top management and their agendas. Such employees are branded as “employee who is merely driven by promotion” or “employee who is un-coachable” and are soon fired. - Another strange thing is that there is no gap in the scope of what senior associates, associates and the interns do every day. They all do the exact same job in varying quantity, that’s it. If you decide to quit, you are most likely replaced by an intern who does not give a damn about the department/ company because he/ she is here for some extra money and some free beers (good for them! Interns are absolutely lovely). - The topic of compensation is a big joke. The managers are not ready to listen to any employee’s compensation requests. They always say it is not in their hands and compensation decisions are made by HRs. An employee getting paid less than the industry standards with an annual hike of EUR 30 (net) monthly has very little incentive to do more. There is no attempt made to retain current employees, instead the organisation is heavily focused on getting new ones. If you decide to quit, no one bats an eye, you are just replaced by a new graduate in few months. I have also known many employees who received a salary hike more than what was prescribed by HR just because their manager likes this person the most. - The last bit of the charade is the Career Development of associates and senior associates. There is no effort made by your managers to improve you, challenge you and grow you. It is always the “you own your development” talk. In many cases, the associates do not know in which direction he/ she should improve, and managers could simply tell them, but the managers don’t do that. Only after each review cycle, the manager say “oh, you were almost there for the promotion, maybe next time. Bye.” I have known teams in Merchandising without a manager/ team lead for a good one year. What kind of career development can such a team demonstrate without anyone to look after them? Well, even crazier thing is, the senior manager who was supposed to act as an interim manager for this team got promoted pretty quickly. If you are wondering why, you should just ask his shiny MBA degree which (I am sure) is sticking to his/her living room wall.

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Pros

Smart colleagues tackling interesting, business relevant problems.

Cons

Long-term projects sometimes significantly modified in response to short-term business needs.

5.0
May 12, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Wayfair is a fantastic company if you're a software engineer who's looking to keep quiet, and not speak up when management treats you like garbage. And it excels at finding leaders who are willing to go the extra mile to be untrustworthy and make you feel like your job isn't safe (and for real, it's not).

Cons

Let's talk. The company has been growing like crazy, and one thing that was never thought about was "can we actually hire at a sustainable rate, and scale accordingly?" The answer was no on both counts. Software engineers at Wayfair have a history of disappearing. People who enter labs have an especially low success rate (70% make it through, and less than 50% last a whole year). It's basically their way to run people through a burnout gauntlet, and see who survives. And then you have the stories of the people who come in to work and are just asked to resign. You'll see hints of it here on Glassdoor if you dig, and it's even worse than what you read. They actually gathered all the engineers for a big meeting at the beginning of this year. And they said that they were sorry that people felt scared and were sad that people felt like management didn't care. Which is exactly how we felt. They promised that their door was open, and they were going to work hard to set things right. One person out of 500 stood up and asked a really cutting question. AND THEN THEY FIRED HIM! And there were 3 completely different official reasons given about it. It's crazy. The leaders also started up an engineering meeting to keep everyone on the same page and answer anonymous questions. One time someone asked why we couldn't get snow days off, because it was tough to shovel for 3 to 4 hours and still work an 8 hour day. So the leaders proceeded to talk down to us and reprimand us for even thinking about asking a question like this. Turnover has been high over the past year, and the best people are leaving. This worries management, but they still have no idea that the problem is actually them creating a terrible environment. So if you're a good person who cares about the person next to you and leaving things better than you found them, don't bother applying here. But if you're not, and you just want to keep your head down and not question anything, then this is the perfect place for you. And if that's what you want, Wayfair gets 5 stars. Amazing career opportunities if you want to have the same job forever. Incredible senior management that value untrustworthiness. A fantastic culture of watching people next to you disappear. It's truly a perfect company.

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Wayfair Response
8y
First, I wanted to thank you for providing feedback. Second, I am very sorry to hear that your experience was far from ideal. I know it can be hard to give feedback if you feel management is the problem, but leadership would love to learn about these issues to refine the Wayfair employee experience. We do try to create an open and transparent environment; one thing we’ve started doing is department-wide anonymous surveys. This has been helpful in identifying issues where people don’t feel comfortable speaking up for whatever reason and pinpoint where any issues may exist. As you noted, the company is growing very quickly - our Engineering team alone has grown tenfold over the past five years. I won’t pretend we get it right all the time, but we do aim to scale our teams and our systems reasonably to meet the rapid growth of our business, and we rely on employee feedback to refine these processes. To that end, we’ve put a lot of time and energy into our interview process. And, we closely track our voluntary and involuntary attrition rates to make sure we are keeping high employee retention and so that we can immediately nip any potential issues in the bud. For Wayfair Labs, we’ve made huge strides since the beginning of this program, and our average success rate is now over 90%, with several classes at 100%. We also run management trainings on giving, receiving and soliciting feedback. In these trainings - and in general - we encourage respect for all teammates and partners, communication and collaboration, and we try create opportunities for people to take on new challenges. I am very excited about the work we’re doing to solve tough challenges and there’s an exciting opportunity for our employees to do big things – our goal is to build a team that feels encouraged and empowered to do so. I’m very sorry you didn’t have the experience we try to cultivate. Once again, thank you for this feedback.
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