Business Unit Eliminated - Territory Sales Representative Grainger Employee Review

2.0
19 May 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Grainger was a great place to work for a long time. I don't know if upper management really had a plan beyond rolling the program out, but it was clear that there were too many sellers getting experience to promote internally. It was a great job to get great sales experience, the sales training was first rate, and I worked with a lot of great people.

Cons

There was no plan for how to maintain a high-activity sales force once they had some success. The accounts that grew to be too large to manage while still uncovering new business became a millstone to those that had some success, and too few of those were reassigned to more low-activity, high-impact sellers. The writing was on the wall for at least three years that they had no mechanism for (or apparent interest in) providing career paths for this massive number of sellers that were gaining experience. Something creative could have been done realign account packages to create a middle-tier sales force, which would have allowed the TSR team to continue focusing on the high potential, low spend customers. Instead, Grainger is going back to an inside sales force (which was previously disbanded because the TSR program was having so much success). I suppose in 5-7 years they will restart this process again and send out an outside team for small and mid-sized customers to recover the share of business that deteriorated by losing the local presence.

Explore other reviews about Grainger

4.0
6 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are decent and reasonably priced. They offer a 401k match, BCBS insurance, FSA, HSA, dental, vision, life insurance, and accidental D&D coverage. They also do a 3‑to‑1 match for donations to non‑religious 501(c) organizations. There’s a big emphasis on volunteering, with plenty of opportunities to get involved. The building itself is beautiful, with a free on‑site gym, a coffee shop, real trees in the atrium, a waterfall, and a large cafeteria (though the food can vary). They’re also flexible about which days you come on‑site, depending on the team’s schedule. If I needed to switch a Monday for a Thursday, it was never an issue. My manager was also supportive of remote work on days when the weather made commuting difficult.

Cons

Admins do not get an annual bonus. They're really strict on Overtime, really weird about worrying about mini costs. Like they'll spend 50k on a week-long training but freak out if people want to rent a car while being in town. Can't buy lunch for this 3 hour meeting to cut costs, but we'll drop 10k on this other thing. It's also so unfair that some people get to work remotely and others are forced to come in 3 times a week, for the exact same roles. Every meeting is basically online, so it's just silly and a power trip.

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