Overall good, depends on which location you work at if not a corporate employee - Director of Operations Best Western Employee Review

4.0
31 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Corporate employees generally care about their role in the overall success of the individual hotels they serve as well as the guests and the overall reputation of the company

Cons

Corporate restructuring has changed the level and quality of corporate support available to successful hotels due to much focus on underperforming locations which further erodes the quality and reputation of the brand

Explore other reviews about Best Western

5.0
11 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company to work for!

Cons

Great company to work for even though I had change in careers!

1.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most employees genuinely care about their work, the hotels, and the success of the brand. That commitment is what continues to make the work meaningful for many individuals across the organization. There are numerous highly skilled, talented, and dedicated professionals within the company who consistently strive to support one another and deliver value to hotel partners. Employees generally want to collaborate, engage, and help each other succeed; however, heavy workloads often limit the time and capacity needed for effective teamwork. In several departments, workloads have grown to the point where maintaining a healthy work-life balance is difficult, frequently requiring employees to work weekends and holidays to meet expectations and avoid retribution. Additionally, the organization’s relatively flat structure provides limited opportunities for advancement, promotions, or meaningful salary growth over time. This has contributed to frustration among long-tenured employees who continue to perform at a high level without clear pathways for career progression or recognition.

Cons

Senior leadership at the C-suite level lacks deep hospitality experience. CEO Larry Cuculic’s only prior experience in the travel industry was serving as Chief Legal Counsel for Best Western International. As a result, he appears to have a limited understanding of hotel operations and hospitality culture. His leadership style often reflects a “guilty until proven innocent” mentality, which he seems to use as a method of gaining understanding and control. He appears more focused on maintaining favor with the Board, hoteliers, and international delegates than on supporting employees and fostering a healthy internal culture. During staff meetings, he has publicly belittled and mocked employees, at times in the presence of both HR leadership and members of the legal department. This behavior contributes to a culture of fear and disengagement rather than accountability and collaboration. He also continues to boast about returning money to hotel owners at year-end instead of investing in employees, infrastructure, and technology. Along with the CFO, leadership appears focused on cost-cutting measures to the point of being penny wise and pound foolish — attempting to save their way into prosperity rather than strategically investing in long-term growth. At the same time, the brand is losing hotels, and the property count promoted on the company website appears inflated or misleading. Despite this, the legal department continues to approve these representations in public-facing materials.

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