Route sales - Anonymous employee PepsiCo Employee Review

3.0
14 Aug 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great pay(for the time being) and fun meeting new people

Cons

Moral at the warehouse is shot! Driving around in trucks with Zero AC when there is a heat advisory is in my opinion unsafe and talks about changing our pay scale to performance base is making everyone uneasy at the warehouse making the moral even lower. Hard having a life when working 55 hours plus a week and working a split week

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PepsiCo Response
9y
Thanks for sharing your advice to management and explaining your concerns.

Explore other reviews about PepsiCo

5.0
25 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working conditions are acceptable. Fellow employees are friendly and helpful.

Cons

None that I can think of.

4.0
6 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Worked for PepsiCo for 10 years across four locations in Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Florida. Gained experience in multiple sales and operational roles while supporting account growth, merchandising, and customer relationships. Florida locations were especially well-operated and efficient. PepsiCo provided competitive pay, solid benefits through Keystone, and a good vacation package compared to competitors in the beverage industry. The company also offered strong sales incentive programs, earning rewards such as Orlando Magic floor seats, Pro Bowl tickets, Apple Watches, and Yeti cups for exceeding performance goals and driving sales results.

Cons

While PepsiCo promotes internal growth opportunities, many promotions and leadership opportunities appeared to favor college internship hires over long-term internal employees. In some cases, newer college-based management pushed corporate initiatives without fully understanding local market realities or account volume trends. For example, innovation products were sometimes forced into low-volume accounts where sell-through was unrealistic. Operationally, certain delivery processes could be improved, particularly with Tropicana products being stored in coolers on trucks for extended periods, which could impact product quality and increase waste. Work-life balance could also be challenging, as sales representatives commonly worked 50–60 hour weeks. Expectations from corporate leadership were often unrealistic, especially when customer representatives and drivers were expected to fully stock stores while servicing 15+ accounts per day. Experiences could also vary depending on whether locations were union or non-union operated.

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