Would not recommend a soul work there as long as David Ruff is in charge. - Warranty Administrator W.W. Williams Employee Review

1.0
Jan 13, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

3 weeks vacation after 5 years employment.

Cons

Unjust management and abuse of power. Work moral is garbage. No team appreciation and micromanagement to a pulp. The pay is trash and individuals working there are smarter than management. Career opportunities only for those favorited by management. Compensation and benefits are like everywhere else - not a selling point. No diversity all white, occasional latino, an african american man was once hired as a diversity hire - he spoke up about racism in the work place to management and shortly after was fired for "under performing".

Explore other reviews about W.W. Williams

5.0
Jun 7, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Small feel, been around a long time, always improving

Cons

Can feel too small, overly diverse, expensive insurance

1.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people are the best part of W.W. Williams. Throughout my career I had the privilege of working alongside talented, dedicated employees who genuinely cared about one another and about serving our customers. There are many long-tenured professionals with deep institutional knowledge who want to see the company succeed. For many years, that collaborative culture made W.W. Williams an enjoyable and rewarding place to build a career.

Cons

Over the past couple of years, the culture has changed significantly. Communication has become increasingly top-down, and many employees no longer feel that their experience or input is valued. Leadership often appeared to make significant organizational and operational decisions without trying to understand how existing processes worked, why they had been implemented, or the tenured knowledge held by the people responsible for maintaining them. As a result, established practices were frequently changed or discarded before their purpose was fully understood, leading to repeated shifts in direction, unnecessary disruption, and declining morale. Expectations continued to increase while staffing and resources became more limited, creating a persistent "do more with less" environment. As a manager, I ultimately found it difficult to effectively lead my own team when important decisions affecting them were made without my involvement. That loss of trust was the primary reason I chose to resign.

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