Pros
I am extremely grateful for the opportunities I received over my time with GameStop. I started as a store manager and when I left had been a district manager for several years. I worked with an amazing group of store managers, district manager peers, and store associates, and learned so much about leadership and myself over that time. The opportunities are endless thanks to the company's growth, and unfortunately also due to the increasingly high turnover. If you can survive in GameStop's sales culture with so many priorities to juggle, you can thrive in any other retailer.
Cons
Despite the "Protect The Family" message, associates at all levels often feel like just a (replaceable) number. While this tone of course comes down to the particular manager, it is increasingly pervasive in the company's current climate. At the district level under current leadership we are only as good as the current day's performance, and it is challenging to not pass this unhealthy tone down to the store level. The company's message and direction for the year is promising, but in actual practice will likely not change much. Payroll in stores is absolutely terrible, despite the ever increasing workload. The pressure to stay relevant combined with the tight margins of electronics have led to some of the challenges, but the approach executives have taken to combat this has largely drained the engaging culture that made this a great company of which to be a part.