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Lithia & Driveway

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Lithia & Driveway reviews

3.8

69% would recommend to a friend

(1,008 total reviews)
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Bryan DeBoer

80% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

Lithia & Driveway has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 1,008 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Lithia & Driveway employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Ventas al mayoreo y al menudeo industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Nov 24, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The creative team responsible for rolling out Driveway has some of the most talented designers I've ever worked with. In pre-Covid times, there was a lot of treating employees to dinner and coffee to just say "thanks" for a job well done and connect on a human level with upper leadership.

Cons

The following is only for the PDX Innovation Lab, and not a Lithia-wide issue: 1. Promotions occur once per year, in December/January during your yearly review. However, you'll be asked to step into your promoted role early with all the responsibilities attached to that work. You will not be compensated for this additional work, nor will you have the new title to reflect your new position. 2. Your accomplishments and achievements go unrecognized and you'll be asked to sacrifice your spare time for company needs. Here's an example to illustrate this: To celebrate one of our major launches, upper leadership had a guest speaker discuss his own achievement of walking across Antarctica alone, nearly dying several times. The takeaway that I, and several others on my team got from that experience was, "It doesn't matter how hard you worked, please keep pushing yourself further until your body almost literally gives out" and we were encouraged to text upper leadership at all hours of the day and night if we needed to. 3. Senior management can promise falsehoods and not be held accountable. I was personally promised a bonus that I was later told was impossible to get as the manager in question was not authorized to offer it. This manager was let go, but leadership's attempts at making good on his offer of a bonus went dark after a few weeks. I never got the bonus. 4. The CEO's opinion outweighs everyone's—no matter if you are an expert engineer, designer, marketer—data is not useful to dissuade their uninformed opinions. I have seen this multiple times when launching the new brand, Driveway. I was asked to rewrite the same two paragraphs over 10 times until the CEO was satisfied. Unfortunately, that satisfaction was short lived as the copy was replaced with something the CEO wrote themselves. 5. Infighting among the c-suite causes friction at the team-level. Turf battles are abundant and drag many teammates into the fray. There is a constant struggle for ownership and control over brand and creative—this plays out as multiple revisions to the same design element, brand tagline, brand colors, etc. Nothing stays the same for long resulting in hours of work to edit previously "approved" work with little to no explanation. 6. Collaboration is a sacred word invoked only when a teammate is asked to fall in line. Collaboration only occurs at the c-level where aforementioned turf wars rage—everyone else just needs to take orders. I was explicitly told, more than once, to not offer any feedback on creative work although I developed the original brand with the product design manager. 7. Leadership's approach to agile development comes from an uninformed place. The individuals with product development expertise are ignored for those who can say "yes" to whichever promise the CEO has made to Lithia investors. The end result suffers, the product unusable but, hey, it has a nice veneer and the product looks like it works.

1.0
May 29, 2018

Don't do it.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Coworkers are awesome and hardworking. The only notable benefit is the employee stock purchase plan.

Cons

Out of touch with the current job market/world. Pay is 20%+ below market average across the board, raises are 1-2% if at all. Look elsewhere if the position requires any kind of degree because they don't pay enough to justify the degree. PTO is a joke. No PTO for the first year. 40 hours PTO for the second year, PTO and sick time are shared. No accrued sick time after the first year. If you get sick say goodbye to your PTO time. Can't afford to take personal time off because the pay is too low. Benefits are nothing to write home about. Everything is paid nothing is given, which is fine but options are limited and poor. Shareholders are more important than employees driving profits. Management is always trying to cut costs at every corner which sacrifices quality of work done. Actions speak louder than words when it comes to culture and core values, the core values are seeded in every corporate email but never held up. It's a joke.

1.0
Apr 22, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A few kind and competent teammates, most of whom left or were laid off.

Cons

Driveway masquerades as a forward-thinking tech company, but the reality is a toxic, outdated boys’ club where diversity, inclusion, and integrity are nothing more than branding buzzwords. Women were routinely paid less than men, overlooked, and boxed into low-impact work, while less experienced men - including interns - were paid more, promoted more frequently, and praised. Teams of women left after being micromanaged, manipulated, and gaslit by toxic managers and senior devs whose behavior was reported and ignored. Layoffs were cruelly handled, with employees locked out of their systems mid-day with no warning, including people returning from bereavement leave. These cuts weren’t driven by hardship but made during a year of expansion and record profits. In 2023, Lithia Motors CEO Bryan DeBoer gave himself a 73% raise, earning $19.3 million while employee wages declined. That tells you everything you need to know about where priorities lie. PTO was scarce, HR existed to shield leadership, and the product was as outdated and bloated as the culture behind it. Despite the "innovation" branding, the tech stack and internal systems are stagnant.

Viewing 4 - 6 of 1,008 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,041 Lithia & Driveway reviews submitted anonymously by Lithia & Driveway employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Lithia & Driveway is right for you.