Not as expected - Laborer Nucor Employee Review

1.0
Dec 16, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Can make as much as the time you want to put out. Doing many different tasks during shift

Cons

They really don’t want you to have days off. Made to feel guilty about wanting a day off. They really like to cover their but by having you sign off on things that don’t even pertain to your daily work. As a laborer they are constantly training you but are never given the time to actually perfect what you have learned yet when someone calls in you are expected to be just as good as the guy who has done it for years. They claim to be worried about safety but this is where you signing off stuff comes into play. Nucor’s customers constantly give Nucor a chance to correct their product yet Nucor gives employees no second chance to prove theirs

Explore other reviews about Nucor

5.0
May 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great folks, kind community and clear expectations

Cons

Hard to leave, lot of material to learn

1.0
Apr 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Unique compensation structure that includes profit sharing and bonuses (both driven by company performance) -Exposure to a large, decentralized organization -Opportunities for long-term growth exist for employees who align with (or conform to) the culture

Cons

-Base salary lower than market, however potential for total compensation to exceed market depending on company performance (through profit sharing and ROA bonus) -Significant gap between stated values (safety, collaboration, teamwork, family-first) and day-to-day experience -Culture can feel rigid and conformity-driven, with limited openness to new ideas or different perspectives -Extremely limited work-life balance with rigid schedules and minimal flexibility (including work from home options) -PTO is very limited, especially in the first year (0-5 days depending on start date) -Hiring process is lengthy and highly intensive, including psychological assessments that can feel invasive with limited transparency on how results are used and stored -Leadership can feel traditional and insular, with limited diversity of thought and resistance to change -Inconsistent culture and policy enforcement across teams and divisions due to decentralized structure -Limited onboarding, unstructured training, and poor clarity around expectations in some roles -Benefits are more limited than originally presented (single health plan option, very restrictive prescription coverage) -Communication and transparency is lacking, making it difficult to understand priorities and decision-making

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