iBUYPOWER Reviews

2.7

31% would recommend to a friend

(83 total reviews)

Alex Hou

25% approve of CEO

24% positive business outlook

iBUYPOWER has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 83 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The iBUYPOWER employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

83 reviews
1.0
13 Jun 2019

Don't. Work. Here.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people. Some of the greatest people I have worked with; fun, joking, and nerdy. Highly capable and intelligent people held down by a terrible business style.

Cons

Where to begin... Bosses have zero idea of how to run a business in this century, despite being a "tech" company. If the constant pointless meetings, high pressure/stress environment, or ego driven decision making don't crush your spirit, the purposefully misguided and lack of direction will. This place will eat your soul. Picture this: You're in a meeting, you have two people telling you completely different ways of doing something, and you're expected to do both and neither at the same time. This was not discussed by those giving the direction beforehand, and they will never talk to each other about it. You have to be the one to figure out just what to do about this, and which direction to go. Did you choose correctly? Impossible. It was a trick scenario. Because you failed, you will now be berated in front of everyone for your failure. Which is definitely not a failure from management to actually give you any sort of direction. No, it's your failure because you failed to figure out what you were supposed to do with constantly changing directive, in the off chance you get some. I was hired with a clear indication of what my role would be. The FIRST day, I got called into one of the partners offices, and was told that everything I thought I was going to do, was completely changed. I was grilled to "test my knowledge", and though I had a lot of right answers, I didn't know the answers to questions that no one would know on their first day at a new company. This was a test, that I not-so-surprisingly failed. After this, I worked for 3 months without any idea of what my role was, or what I should be working on. I created my own work, took on different responsibilities, all because no one would give them to me. Finally, after those 3 months, I got clear directive for my role, so I was excited to actually work on something concrete. Except it wasn't, because nothing I worked on was ever really implemented. All they cared about was what you presented in meetings, and didn't care at all about the actual execution or follow-through. In total, I worked there for 6 months before I quit. Can't say I'm really proud of any of my work there, and I didn't learn anything. Overall, if it wasn't for the people or the compensation (which was actually decent), it would be a big dark spot in my career. You want to stick out and shine at this company? Over over over-promise. No one cares about if you actually follow-through with the things you present. Make a bunch of promises that you know you can't keep, because it doesn't matter. They will love you for it.

1.0
1 Nov 2021

Apply at your own risk

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Many coworkers are helpful and friendly, the bonus is adequate, and company throws an end of the year party (except for last year). Benefits include health, dental, vision, and life insurance (after probation) along with 401k (albeit eligible after working here for at least a year)

Cons

Weak organizational structure: Managers/supervisors across departments are not on the same page when it comes to meeting company goals and various departments will establish SOPs in ways that do not mesh well with others, leading to bottlenecks in the workflow. The hierarchy of management is saturated to a select few running multiple departments and adverse situations will easily get over their heads. The information systems used here are also outdated and have barriers to vital data that certain departments need; this results in heavy reliance on asking for info from other departments such as customer service asking for an ETA to purchasing, some of these follow ups can take days to respond. Blatant favoritism: Personal favorites by many higher ups tend to get away with a slap to the wrist even with egregious decisions while others making minor mistakes would be put on the limelight (i.e. one employee who habitually calls in sick will get the okay even on an abrupt notice while another will be demanded a doctor’s note to authorize use of sick leave); same manager who continuously swept a former supervisor’s appalling behavior towards customers under the rug up until a YouTube content creator exposed it online. Questionable KPIs: Most of the evaluations of work here are based on raw numbers and meeting quota. Managers and supervisors don’t factor the complexities of certain assignments such as building products with delicate and expensive parts, which leads to departments such as production going for the easier tasks first at the of tedious ones not being handled in a punctual manner. Workers not being met with those quotas despite given complicated assignments would still be subject to disciplinary action. Poor handling of COVID: The company initially had the right idea of implementing work from home protocols during the height of the pandemic but kept efforts adjacent to the bare minimum. The work from home procedures were temporary until early 2021 and even the setups were still questionable to following CDC guidelines (i.e. work from home was only rotational for employees with call center and data entry tasks with no proper social distancing, and no preventative measures to stop or mitigate the spread of it during winter season until it was significant enough to potentially shut the building down) Unethical business practices: Sweatshop labor tactics are a common practice here; the web department is complicit with greenlighting management’s negligent practices that severely affect other departments (i.e. ignoring alarming requests from accounting to fix their website that was systematically duplicating credit card transactions during the holiday rush, creating an excruciating amount of work for customer service and accounting while flooding bad PR for marketing and social media teams) During the 2020 holiday season, they’ve also falsely advertised guaranteed deliveries of all Black Friday / Cyber Monday orders before Christmas on their website without any input from other departments if it was feasible; most of those orders did not fulfill that promise, and led to production rushing their work to mitigate damages that were already done; shipping working with severe bottlenecks while expected to meet unrealistic quotas; customer service, sales, marketing, and tech support getting constantly bombarded with angry customers; RMA and tech support ill-equipped to keep pace with the staggering amount of parts and repairs needed to go out; and accounting having to process a bottomless amount of paperwork to clean up web’s mess. OSHA violations also happen on occasion: An employee who had a wrist injury with a cast still had to drive to work and perform ergonomic tasks such as typing; the water systems had a roach problem that wasn’t addressed until a couple of weeks later while the water was still running despite alarming concerns to HR. It’s clear the modus operandi of this company is to sell as much products as it can, consumer feedback or employee morale be damned; only reason this company is able to stay afloat in its current state is because of the global chip shortage. Dysfunctional management: Management expects workers to go above and beyond for pay well below industry standard and have the audacity to complain about their employees being unproductive while failing to provide reasonable solutions to address those issues. They are notorious for creating a hostile work environment such as throwing personal tantrums (i.e. kicking an employee’s chair and yelling at that person around other employees over mistakes that could be corrected with civility); another instance is threatening to cut employees' bonus over “whining” that were simply concerns on follow ups for information unavailable to their reps to help around the company; there were also allegations of racism that played into the rampant favoritism, rather than trying to make amends with employees, management aggressively dismissed the allegations, swept it under the rug, and the culprit played victim over them. Fundamentally, management just lacks the emotional intelligence to deal with disgruntled / uncomfortable employees and it strongly reflects on their turnover rate of a revolving door even before COVID.

1.0
3 Nov 2019

2 Years At Most & Get Out

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Employees get along with each other very well, however that is the only positive thing to say about this company.

Cons

There is so much potential where iBUYPOWER can flourish, however they waste their opportunity to make this company great. Upper management only cares about themselves and not the employees. There is a reason why the majority of people that work at this company are only there for two years average. The pay is low when it comes to working at iBUYPOWER which makes it tough for employees to make a living. The majority of employees are a younger demographic. The reason for that is because they are willing to accept the fact that they are going to be underpaid, since finding a good job their age can be difficult. There is no room to advance at iBUYPOWER unless someone gets fired. A perfect example is what happened in the Tech Department. There is almost a 2 year wait when it comes to parking at the facility when it comes to males. You have park at another company, which is about a 10 minute walk. The majority of the company is an Asian demographic, so favoritism does come into play since upper management prefers to speak in their own language. In my opinion this company is great for someone who doesn't have anything on their resume. Once you put in your work and hone your skills at whatever department you are in I suggest you leave iBUYPOWER. This company is a great stepping stone that will lead to a better job where you can call your new occupation a career. With that being said, it all starts at the top and upper management has failed when it comes to satisfying their employees.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 83 Reviews

Glassdoor has 85 iBUYPOWER reviews submitted anonymously by iBUYPOWER employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if iBUYPOWER is right for you.