Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts - Anonymous employee Four Seasons Employee Review

5.0
Oct 24, 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Respect. Education & Training. Service. Variety of positions. Travel and work in various locations for the same company. This company respects the employee and practices "The Golden Rule." As an employee of Four Seasons, we are an admired member of the business community since Four Seasons sets the bar for which the rest of the hospitality industry reach. Education and training are a given when first hired, although continuing education seems curtailed both by the economy and the hotel manager who wants to save money. If you want to be of service in any manner, if you desire to provide a high standard of service in all that you do, then, Four Seasons will give you the opportunity to do so. With many locations around the world, all employees may transfer and try another position and location - not just managers.

Cons

Time consuming. Not enough workers for the work. Lower management personnel or supervisors not as "bright" as could be. Hard to acquire in-house upgrading of job skills. Its managers seems to expect you to be married to the Four Seasons - they want more and more of your time; that is a given, whether in an administrative position or face-to-face with guests. And, as they're always looking to save labor costs, they want one person to do the work of 1.9 employees! They could save more money by having less managers. Some lower management or supervisors were people that may be just marking time, incapable of improving managerial skills, unwilling to use advanced technology but expected the hourly worker to do so, or were possibly "parked" in position by upper management as they are not bad enough to fire but not good enough to promote. Once trained for your position, your time is spent on meeting standards. Formal training or upgrading your skills in a classroom setting seems to end unless your whole department is undergoing a change (say the focus of your wine list). On-line training was not as good as it could be - access to computers for training (during employee's time off) was available, but hard to find any educational programs on the computer. Had to take a night school hospitality industry class and requested days off to coincide with college day classes.

Explore other reviews about Four Seasons

5.0
Jun 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very friendly staff. Straightforward job with good pay. Overall an enjoyable job.

Cons

Inconsistent hours. Burnout can occur if you're looking for something easy. Other than that its pretty much exactly what you'd expect. Good job to have.

1.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Travel benefits Free health insurance

Cons

Underpaid, working for 3 properties. Definitely no work life balance. Tenured employees are not valued, they would hire NEW employees for remote only. Unable to be remote if you have been there for awhile, always get denied even if you have shown yourself with metrics and training new people. Leadership only cares about operations they only want good things to be heard, no negative things are said, no improvement. Everyone there always say something on what to improve on but nothing has happened. They always say that our department has made MILLIONS for bookings but our pay is low even with commissions with crazy schedules. Also, same salary with new hires. Alot of former employees in this reservations department leaves all the time. They would place you in different schedules even force you work overnight. Also they only release schedules a week before or 3 days before. Because they said “if there are no call outs, then we can release the schedule 2 weeks or a month before” All I can say is save yourself

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