Nice Perks but Over-Managed and Under-Trusted - Anonymous employee REI Employee Review

2.0
9 Feb 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

REI, as a company, enjoys a somewhat over-elevated "halo effect" from the great working environment at headquarters, which is a much different experience than the other 90% of the company's employees have. However, they have some great perks too. REI employees do get great deals on gear, our health insurance is pretty good and REI contributes anywhere from 5-15% of your salary to a retirement plan. That's all good. It's a good place to work in a general sense, ie vs Wal-Mart, with all the basics like health insurance, retirement, etc covered, but if you are looking for fulfillment and an opportunity to move up, you better keep looking.

Cons

REI has been on the “Top 100 Places to Work” for a long time. However, this honor is disingenuous at best, and totally deceptive at worst. For one thing, many of those special, unique “Only at REI” kind of perks you see on the videos and in the articles are actually “Only at REI Headquarters” perks; employees in Direct Sales and at the stores (which is 90% of REI!) do not enjoy things like 1 ½ hour bike rides on their lunch and workplace dog kennels, as mentioned in the recent CNN video. Implying that these benefits are available to everyone in the company is laughable. I work in Direct Sales where I answer the phone to take orders for products. I've worked here for a couple of years. The following comments refer to Direct Sales. I have never worked in a store so I don’t know what the conditions are like there. And headquarters? Well, I’m sure it’s great, if you can get in there. But the hiring process is very “clique-ish” and your qualifications don’t really matter; if you want a job at headquarters, you really, really need to become best friends with the people in the department you want to work in. Don’t worry about being qualified for the position – it’s not necessary. The working environment in Direct Sales is pretty horrific for a “Top 100” company. Everyone is friendly on the surface but below the surface, it is an environment of total micromanagement and distrust. We are constantly told how great we are but the rules we have to follow say otherwise. We actually have to punch a special code to go to the bathroom! This is so management can track our “personal time”, and employees have gotten warning emails if their “personal times” have exceeded some limit. We are not allowed to eat at our desk, (exceptions include stuff like granola, fruit rolls and hard candy - try imposing that rule at Headquarters and see what happens!), we are not allowed to put up Christmas decorations or for other holidays, and everything we do is tracked by our phone times – breaks, lunches, etc . We are totally micromanaged to the nth degree in everything. The overall feeling is that employees cannot be trusted to use their judgment about anything. The simultaneous "Friendly / Spying on You" thing is actually kind of creepy.

Explore other reviews about REI

5.0
16 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People and incredible work culture. REI truly walks the walk when it comes to company culture. Significant amount of focus on people and values in a genuine way. Exceptional benefits and pay. Making medical coverage available for all employees part time and full time.

Cons

Not many negatives to share.

3.0
9 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most coworkers, some managers, discounts, outfitting people properly without extra nonsense

Cons

Some truly horrible managers, pressure to sell credit cards is a morale killer, the union people. Employees drinking the union kool aid fail to see the company’s position, REI cannot give higher pay, better benefits , consistent hours, etc… with the erratic revenue stream that comes in , if a 5 year average is X in revenue and 5 year average is Y on wages and costs, how are they supposed to increase wages and benefits? It’s numbers and they don’t line up, if REI gives the increases which increases the expenses greatly, they will cut staff, a lot fewer employees which will eliminate a bunch of union supporters, an REI job is not supposed to be a lucrative deal, when you get hired the part time , part time plus and full time options are there and you choose what you want fully understanding what hours you are going to get at minimum, they will hire those positions on a need basis, to cry later that you don’t make enough money is your fault, the terms were clear and you signed off on them. The union is promising rainbows , reality will be far different, careful what you wish for

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All