Wayfair reviews

3.0

38% would recommend to a friend

(6,843 total reviews)
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Niraj Shah

28% approve of CEO

27% positive business outlook

Wayfair has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 6,843 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Wayfair 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).

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7K reviews
1.0
Apr 11, 2021

Absolutely terrible

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Wayfair at its core is a tech company, which means that as an engineer you get a lot of opportunities to explore different technologies as long as you can make a business case for it.

Cons

Man where do I start. First of all, upper management touts that they are transparent but the truth is that that's just a facade to make you feel like this is a great place to work. But when things go bad you'll be the last to know. Last year right before covid hit, Wayfair decided to have a massive layoff because they weren't on track to hit their projected revenue growth (which is fair since a company is a business that needs to hit goals and satisfy investors). What wasn't fair was how they handled the layoffs. What they did was they blindsided everyone with a org wide email sent at 9:59am to attend a meeting at 10am THE SAME DAY. In reality, there were two meetings, one for the people that were "safe" and another for the people that were let go. This created an uneasy and distrustful environment between employees and upper management. People were obviously unhappy with how this was handled and when asked about how we could trust upper management moving forward when they did something so terrible, their answer was equally terrible: "if you don't trust us then you shouldn't work here". And if you think they only laid off people who were bad at their job then I have some bad news for you. Many people who were incredibly good at their jobs, who had worked at Wayfair for many many years and given their blood, sweat and tears to the company were laid off, simply because Wayfair didn't see a need in their team anymore. And how did Wayfair try to help these employees? By giving them a two week severance pay... This screams the company has absolutely no loyalty to their employees and are willing to backstab you any time for their own benefit. Advancing your career based on merit is an absolute joke here. It's purely dependent on whether your manager likes you and your tenure at the company. You can give your all at work but if your manager doesn't like you then you'd have a much easier time working with Elon Musk trying to figure out how to send people to Mars than advancing your career. In my first year and a half here, I had lead multiple projects, working off hours and through the holidays, just to see people in the same position as me get promoted before they even began to run their first project, simply because I had nothing in common with my manager so he sold me short to the rest of the managers when review time came along. I also had had friends who worked 12 hour days, 6 days a week and what'd they get? A virtual pat on the back and a note that they would not be promoted for their hard work because they haven't worked at the company long enough. Oh great, thanks for letting us know our hard work was for nothing after we're burnt out and don't even have enough brain cells left to get angry. The company is also trying way too hard. The entire time working here the only things I heard was "how do we beat Amazon in this", "how do we beat Amazon in that". Like chill, you aren't even the market leader in selling furniture why are trying to compete with the largest company in the world? Relax and get more than 50% of your website working at a time before trying to compete with them. Finally the benefits are terrible. It's the barest of the bare minimum. You want a competitive salary? Sure but it'll be the absolute minimum of industry standard. You want catered lunch? Sure but you'll have to pay standard prices for food thats not even good. Want stock options? Sure but we'll give you just enough so that you can tell your friends that you get some and don't feel left out, otherwise they're absolutely worthless. The only good benefit of working here is there are two ping pong tables in the entire building for 1000 people. Oh wait, just kidding you won't even have time to play because you have to spend all your time trying to beat Amazon. And if you somehow miraculously find the time to play, there's 80 other people waiting in line.

1.0
Mar 29, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get some chance to learn something new if the team is adopting new technologies.

Cons

- No planning. It had no long term planning, but it didn't even have any short term planning either. The team spent a lot of time in the quarter struggling to find what to do for the next one. There was no direction from above, telling us what's more important for the business. But instead they asked the teams to tell them what to do next. It might work for some companies like Google or Facebook that engineers try some new projects and see if they can work out. But here? This model only works for companies that are well established, having abundance of resources to spend, which mostly are the major players of their fields and reached global monopoly. Wayfair matched non of these criteria but it tried to copy this model anyway, and it failed disastrously: It only had limited resources it can spend and it operated at big losses every year; it failed to establish a creative environment because it treated engineers as expendables. Without top-down planning, some teams literally picked up something they really shouldn't be doing, causing wastes of resources. Some OKRs were created not because they were important, but just for the sake of OKRs. The company did massive hiring before 2020 but it mismanaged its staff like this. No wonder why the business couldn't expand but suffering with losses. - Political and back-stabbing culture Resources were very limited, but some incompetent managers were so eager to get promoted, what did they do? On one hand, they held unrealistic expectations for their subordinates, putting a lot of pressure on the team, but blaming them for not performing even they worked 10-12 hours a day, only getting paid with a below industry average salary. On the other hand, they created an unhealthy competition between teams and back-stabbed each other. All of their time was 'managing above', not 'managing down' - they spent little time with the team. They did not coach or did very little coaching yet putting new hires into immediate use and let them make mistakes. - The career paths were jokes Especially for tech track because it was not established at all. The only way up was the management track, but not everyone is capable or suitable of being a manager. Yet they wrongly promoted a lot of people to be managers, especially those who didn't have much experience but just being loyal to the company for staying for a long time right from graduating from school. Some of them were definitely not qualified at all. Like some engineer managers promoted from engineers - they might be great engineers, but managers require totally different skill sets, or even personalities. Good training might solve the problem but it turned out some were not trained well to be good managers. - Very subjective performance evaluation By subjective, yes I mean unfair. No matter what the team members evaluated you in your performance review, the final judge was the manager. Thus it was used by the management and the company to manipulate and lay off employees. Also since the evaluations were not data based but opinion based, your relationship with your manager would play a significant role to get a better reviewing result. Besides that, with some very generic performance evaluation guidelines, it was very confusing in the first place what was the expected behavior each type of roles should have. They evaluated everyone in the same framework, which meant they didn't respect different personalities, like being extrovert or introvert. It created a very exclusive environment which only welcomed certain types of personalities. Good managers put individuals into best use by respecting their strengths and weaknesses. Bad managers simply get rid of people they don't like. - Very pool engineering practices. I was shocked when I first looked at the code base, how many years of tech debt do we need to pay here? Monorepo is acceptable but we were having a monolith! How many times did our code needs to rollback because of some bugs introduced in the same bulk of deployment? Besides, many systems had scaling problems. Some important processes were throttled by DB performance. And it was a strange thing that there was no established nosql services available within the company. There were so many problems, including the 'no lock' that seen everywhere in the code could be solved by the introduction of some nosql databases. On top of those, engineers were not appreciated resources here. CTO changed frequently and they didn't have much tech experience either. No focus on paying the tech debt but still held on to the 'Move fast, fix later' company culture. Wayfair had long passed the stage of being a startup, and it should do more quality work than fast work. To sum up, Wayfair is definitely not a tech company.

1.0
Mar 22, 2020

One Big Dysfunctional Family

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people. There are some truly great and brilliant souls across all departments (but especially engineering). God bless them for sticking it out as long as they have. I hope their efforts prove enough to keep the ship from sinking. I truly wish them and Wayfair the best, as I still love Wayfair as a user. Even after my bad experience as an employee I will always be a loyal customer. I sincerely hope they somehow manage to pull through these tough times, because it is a great idea with massive value add for consumers. This also plays into my frustrations as an ex-insider, because I see them headed down that path and feel completely helpless to stop it.

Cons

Wow, where to even begin? When I first arrived at Wayfair, I was hopeful that it would be a great place to grow my career for many years in the future. With that in mind, any possible notes of bitterness peppering this review arise solely out of the fact that I came to this company with high hopes, only to have them repeatedly crushed into an unintelligible pulp by the heels of myopically incompetent leadership. The almost comical if it weren't so tragic (tragicomic?) short-sightedness is perfectly portrayed in how they offered everyone hefty *retention* bonuses in October 2019, only to conduct mass layoffs a few months later. They can’t seem to throw company money away fast enough! The painfully quixotic ‘powers that be’ preach an "every idea wins" culture, but that is the complete opposite of how it actually happens. Instead, L3 managers enforce the capriciously formulated whims of upper-level management on their team, and if anyone (even an IC on the same level) dares to push back on them, they are reprimanded for it in 1:1s and even performance reviews. It was particularly difficult to have no say whatsoever over the nonsensically awful decisions made by leadership during the hiring freezes. They actually raised the onsite interview goal by two per month. It would have been a complete nightmare if the teams had actually hit 10 onsite interviews each, since Wayfair would not have even been able to make offers to a single one of those candidates. The amount of time and money wasted on 5+ hour interviews with multiple Directors, Managers, etc making $100.00+ per hour would have exceeded the measly two weeks of severance that Wayfair paid out to most of its layoffs ten-fold. Yet, not a single one of the L4+ decision makers behind that terrible plan got touched by the layoffs. Instead, the ‘powers that be’ chose to focus on the lower level employees who were actually putting in their blood, sweat, and tears to make a positive impact on the company. It’s truly no wonder why the stock continues to tank deeper and deeper with each day... Clearly, blood, sweat and tears is not the way to get ahead at Wayfair. In my old department at least, it’s pretty much par for the course for top performers to exceed metrics and still get passed over for a promotion, while people who master the art of ingratiating themselves to the right people get promoted instead. Sadly, that seems to be the only way to advance in Wayfair’s toxic culture these days: lose your own voice and identity in order to become a "yes man" mouthpiece for the L3 and L4 Managers who will be vouching for you in the brutally toxic (to the point of being illegal, I have heard) calibration meetings come review time. Beyond that, be sure that you are working on multiple “projects” at any given time, bonus points given for increasing process and chaos with zero value add.

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