Applicants:Beware - Assistant Manager Guitar Center Employee Review

1.0
29 Mar 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most co workers are very smart, funny, and great people to work with. Awesome discounts on gear and gig leave with the gain program. Meeting with reps to better understand products, companies, and music. Free swag from vendors. No drug test.

Cons

-DOS operating system for store front sales. (Makes for a long sales process) -Compensation."Fading" your pay (This makes the task of merching and cleaning the store undesirable. Be prepared to clean up after others) -Price management, Coupons and price matching take away profit. Making it more difficult to "fade" your pay. -Unrealistic sales goals -Company policy and guidelines unclear -Poor training -Corporate unfriendly -Pro Coverage. (Try selling a repair warranty on a guitar through a third party when the store has a repair technician working five days a week.) -Customers I have seen someone quit their first day. I have seen grown men cry under stress at this job. I have seen people clock out for lunch and never show up again. I have seen used car salesmen burn out and quit within three months. I have seen plenty of unfair treatment. GC is no longer the decent or caring company it use to be.

Explore other reviews about Guitar Center

5.0
16 Jul 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Management takes good care of you

Cons

No complaints that I can think of

1.0
21 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Plenty of capable individual contributors doing real work. - The brand and the business itself are legitimate — the problems are organizational.

Cons

- Senior leadership is politically driven rather than outcome-driven. Strategic initiatives stall out, and leaders spend more energy assigning or shifting blame than actually diagnosing and fixing problems. - Some parts of the org operate on deference to the top. Honest assessments get softened into whatever narrative leadership wants to hear, which makes real cross-functional work difficult. - Senior leaders do not consistently advocate for their own teams. When things get political, self-preservation takes precedence over backing the people underneath, and capable managers end up exposed.

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