The Fall of WillScot: Greed in a Box - Sales Associate WillScot Employee Review

1.0
Oct 17, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Once a trusted name in modular space and portable office solutions, WillScot was quietly gutted from the inside by a band of greedy executives who valued stock prices over people. Driven by short-term gains and personal bonuses, the leadership team—bloated with micromanagers and yes-men—suffocated innovation and crushed morale. They slashed resources, ignored customer needs, and ruled through mindless KPI’s, not vision. Now, customers are fleeing, employees are disillusioned, and the once-promising company stands as a cautionary tale: a brand undone not by competition, but by the hubris and greed of those at the helm. Saddled with over $3 billion in debt, the company is left with an aging, largely unrentable fleet and is now scrambling to survive by pivoting to products adjacent to modular offices.

Cons

Micromanagement is rampant in what feels like a 90s-era call center environment. There are too many mid-level managers who don’t seem to understand what they’re supposed to be doing other than checking call logs. Not enough people who actually understand the business anymore. There are no SOP's for anything. Training is lackluster at best. Management is only interested in self preservation, not supporting their teams in any meaningful way.

Explore other reviews about WillScot

5.0
Dec 4, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

PTO Insurances Corporate culture Fellow employees

Cons

Corporate culture can be tough but is still fair.

1.0
Jun 12, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

the only big pro here is the schedule is Monday-Friday and low OT on weekends only when it gets busy.

Cons

Management culture at the Sacramento location is extremely challenging. The GM has a pattern of targeting employees he personally dislikes, creating an environment where people feel unsafe speaking up or making mistakes. Promotion promises are frequently made but rarely honored unless you are part of the GM’s inner circle. Advancement is inconsistent and heavily influenced by favoritism rather than performance. Although the company advertises unlimited PTO, taking more than two consecutive weeks results in significant pushback from leadership. The culture does not support actually using the benefit. Overall, the environment feels inconsistent, stressful, and dependent on staying in the good graces of a single manager.

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