Do not work here unless you’re working in the back or on HEAVY DOSES of mood stabilizers - Member Frontline Sam's Club Employee Review

2.0
May 13, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Decent starting pay (giving it two stars instead of one for this reason alone) -PPTO is nice -Coworkers are fine, made a few friends (my location at least)

Cons

-HORRIBLE Members, cry at least once a shift. I’ve been assaulted and harassed at previous jobs but NOTHING is compared to these demon-spawn members. - Constant numbers pushing. If you’re not making good numbers (credit card, Plus upgrade, scan and go) they’re pulling you into the office to nag you about numbers and cut your hours big time. -No work/life balance. Didn’t even know that was possible with only part time but yeah they somehow make it near impossible. They change your hours at the last minute even if you’d scheduled your week around it, deny PTO like CRAZY, and they denied me unpaid time off for my birthday (I put it in three weeks in advance).

Explore other reviews about Sam's Club

5.0
Jun 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good management. Balanced work-play culture environment.

Cons

Hours often change weekly. You may be required to work weekends, late evenings, and major holidays when the store is busiest.

2.0
May 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

At the corporate level, the benefits and compensation are excellent. Colleagues at the producer level are standout teammates, talented, collaborative, and genuinely invested in the company's success. They consistently bring forward meaningful contributions and make the day-to-day work rewarding.

Cons

"Chaos" is not a word I'm using loosely. It's the word echoed across teams, including outside of Experience and Product. Leadership operates in a constant state of upheaval: frequent role changes, structural reorganizations, and strategy pivots that are implemented without any clear plan or consideration of cross-team impact. Incredibly talented people are let go as a result of poor leadership and people management decisions. There is no real culture of mentorship above the senior manager level. Leadership above the senior manager level made clear that mentorship isn't their responsibility and that you're expected to figure it out on your own, despite the company having training resources available. That disconnect is telling.

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Sam's Club Response
1mo
We are grateful to you for taking time to share this review and advice. This is so valuable.
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