Long unsociable hours, terrible management, all about money making and no consideration for staff or customers. - Anonymous employee SSP Group Employee Review

1.0
29 Jun 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Free lunch, working with new and regular customers can be incredibly enjoyable, training was very good and having a contract at a young age is rare.

Cons

Working in an SSP unit has been a horrible experience, the management is absolutely terrible, in fact the management bullies their staff to make sure targets are met, I have never felt so belittled in my live. Contracted to 20 hours a week I often work between 40 and 50 while studying a part time degree and it is a rare occasion that I might get my 2 days off in a row. This is a similar case with other employees I have spoken to in the unit. There is work culture between the manager and her friends who all work together and make spiteful comments to the newer members of staff. I have known of three different colleagues who have all left work in tears within a two week period. This should not be happening in any workplace. It is manipulative, and quite frankly bullying.

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5.0
4 Jul 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team members and make money depend on the season

Cons

management aren’t on site all the time due to managing multiple locations.

1.0
24 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The employee meal discount is genuinely helpful since bringing food into the airport or buying it from outside is difficult. Many hourly employees are friendly, supportive, and hardworking. Most frontline managers try their best and often go above and beyond despite the pressure they face.

Cons

Senior leadership in the Northeast region operates with intimidation, ego, and favoritism, creating a toxic and unprofessional environment. Schedules are changed constantly with little notice, and employees are expected to work long, exhausting hours without regard for work–life balance. When employees speak up about burnout or need to call out due to exhaustion, they are often targeted instead of supported. Union employees frequently earn more than the supervisors responsible for managing them, which creates tension and undermines morale. Promotions are based on personal relationships rather than merit, and nepotism is widespread across multiple levels of leadership. HR functions more as a disciplinary weapon than a neutral resource for resolving issues or supporting employees. The overall culture is retaliatory, inconsistent, and not aligned with ethical or sustainable business practices.

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SSP Group Response
4mo
We are sorry to hear about your negative experience. Your feedback is important to us,
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