Avoid if you can - General Manager Gopuff Employee Review

1.0
16 May 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Peers were nice to work with

Cons

They are a very young company with potential, but the culture and the structure are horrendous. The turnover is constant. The only job I've ever had where if someone calls out, the supervisor is working their shift. Workflows change almost weekly. The company has no direction and gives the impression that everyone is just flying by the seat of their pants. Below average benefits. Work-life balance is zero. You are expected on-call as long as the business is open. This place may be great for new supervisors who have never been one before, but experienced managers can see the writing on the wall how fragmented it is. Maybe in 15 years, they will get it together. Right now I would not recommend.

Explore other reviews about Gopuff

5.0
26 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great work atmosphere great opportunity to deal with community.

Cons

Honestly, there's nothing I didn't like about that job. Except for going in the freezer lol.

2.0
4 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Supportive Regional manager for sites

Cons

Lack of Accountability (Passing the Buck): Decision-making often lacks ownership, resulting in frustration and confusion when problems arise—issues are shifted rather than addressed. Unrealistic Expectations with Reduced Labor Budget: Increased performance expectations paired with significant cuts to labor budgets leave teams stretched thin and unable to meet demands effectively. High Turnover Among Operational Associates: The combination of workload pressure and no up-word movement leads to frequent employee departures at the associate level. Burnout Among Site Leaders: Site leaders are overwhelmed by the demands of managing intense workloads with insufficient staffing and appropriate labor hours support, has led to burnout and diminished morale. Insufficient Support Structures: There is a noticeable gap between what is expected of employees and the support (training, tools, manpower) provided to help them succeed. Reactive Rather Than Strategic Planning: Operational strategy often feels short-sighted, with decisions made on the fly rather than through proactive, long-term planning.

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