Lots of Changes - Anonymous employee Freeman Employee Review

2.0
14 Jun 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits, nice people. Corporate office is nice, but the building is in a not-so-nice area of Dallas.

Cons

We are running out of room. Leadership, especially in HR, is more interested in pushing their agenda than listening to the workers affected by their decisions. Employees are sitting on top of each other and squeezed into cracker box cubicles, yet expected to still "exceed expectations" and provide "excellent customer service." Employees are expected to do more with less.

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Freeman Response
8y
Thank you for your 5+ years of service with Freeman. It's contributions from folks like yourself that have made Freeman so successful for the last 90 years. You’re definitely right about us pushing our agenda; we want to be the number one choice for great talent and will continue placing high value on our people. We appreciate the space constraint feedback, and we are currently looking at our options and excited about the possibilities to support continued growth.

Explore other reviews about Freeman

5.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good people, good culture, flexible hybrid schedule

Cons

It’s hard to come up with any. Pay is lower than many companies.

2.0
29 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pros were the per diem and the opportunity to travel. I really enjoyed visiting new cities and collaborating with kind, interesting people from across the country at different show sites. The pay was also very strong during busy seasons.

Cons

If you want to join a company where employees are undervalued, expected to obey rather than think critically, and favoritism is openly visible, then please avoid this company. The environment often felt heavily micromanaged at every level of leadership, with experiences of both covert and overt racism in the workplace. There was also a strong sense of competition and distrust among coworkers, where people would undermine one another for personal gain. Leadership and upper management appeared far more focused on optics and appearances than the actual well-being of the employees working on the show floor.

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