Poor Quality of Life - Store Manager Starbucks Employee Review

2.0
9 Oct 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

*Amazing Benefits! Free bags of coffee each week and complimentary food and beverages every day you work. Free premium Spotify account, headspace, and 20 free Lyra healthcare visits. Medical/Dental/Vision is available to all employees. Their continued education program offers a free bachelor's degree from Arizona State University. * Extensive Training for all roles * Sense of community with regular customers and peers

Cons

* Excessive turnover—can not hire staff fast enough. The hiring process for an entry-level barista role takes an average of eight weeks. Stores already understaffed can only afford to train one or two new employees at a time. In Portland, the area hr recruiter was laid off, removing that additional support to help screen applicants. The recruiters would support entire districts in screening candidates, scheduling interviews, and organizing job fairs. * Lack of Accountability—As a manager who has taken over multiple locations with Starbucks, I can attest to their lack of accountability. District Managers are not holding store managers accountable for upholding company policy, and store managers are not following company policies either. It makes it very challenging to take over a new location without it, resulting in turning over most of the staff. I think most managers realize how hard it is to get a store fully staffed, and they make concessions to policy/procedure and allow for conduct that violates Starbucks policies. * Company Culture—Starbucks is a very Cult-Like culture creator. You need to be obsessed with Starbucks, or you won't fit in. It would be best if you volunteered your free time, attended all team-building activities, befriended all of your peers, and spent your free time with Starbucks employees. It is a company that sucks you in and makes you feel like you are a part of something, but if you fall out of their graces, they will turn on you and ice you out quickly. * Poor Quality of Life—If you work in a store with staffing challenges and culture problems, you will be managing through many callouts. As the store manager, if your team cannot fill shifts, you are responsible for coming in and covering them. I worked many open-close shifts and have had to cover barista shifts because coverage could not be found. A peer of mine worked 21 days in a row due to keyholders being ill in her store. Shortly after, she worked another 20 days in a row. She shared that her District Manager told her she needed to figure it out. No support was offered to provide her with a day off each week. * Incidents—Depending on the location you are assigned to, you may have to manage escalations and incidents. I requested to work in low-incident locations and was placed in multiple high-incident stores. I took de-escalation training to build my capabilities when engaging with a patron violating our policies. Ive had to ask people to stop doing drugs on my patio, restrict people from assaulting customers in my lobby and my parking lot, call the police when someone refuses to vacate your restroom and engage someone with a weapon in the lobby to ask them to leave. The role of a Store Manager is treated more like the role of a social worker. I spent many days protecting my team from having to engage with a mentally unstable houseless patrons. Our job is to serve coffee within our community and not run a houseless shelter and police every person inside. This component of my role made me not want to come to work most days. You never knew what kind of problem you would have to deal with. During my tenure with Starbucks, I took over four different locations throughout the Portland market. Each area had all of these problems, which are systemic and not specific to one location.

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5.0
11 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

super nice staff and everyone is kind

Cons

need to hire more workers too busy

4.0
22 Jul 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The benefits are out of sight. I was offered Starbucks stock after my first year, as well as 401k through Fidelity, and a superb Blue Cross Blue Shield health insurance plan. You can cover your whole family with that plan, and it can include domestic partners. I got a pound of free coffee every week and free coffee all day (although I think that was specific to my store, which bent the rules). There's also an Employee Assistance Hotline which you can call if you're having issues in your personal life. And HR is really responsive--they won't see you as a troublemaker if you're legitimately having an issue. They will handle it. Also, sexual orientation and gender identity are included in their anti-discrimination policy. None of the gay or lesbian people on my staff got crap for it, even though about half the staff was quietly conservative Christian and Republican. If you're a people person, you develop relationships with the regulars and it's fun to make their day. I felt it was pretty rewarding to make drinks. I loved the artistic side of it. And again, the free coffee...just awesome. They're also usually pretty flexible about scheduling, so it's ideal for if you're working two jobs or are a student. I worked with people in their 50's who had their own careers, but worked part-time at Starbucks for the health insurance. The vacation time system is also pretty sweet. I worked with a guy who was there for 10 years and took like a month vacation to his home country. The staffs can be really tight...or they can be really vicious. But a spirit of teamwork is definitely encouraged. And exemplary work is recognized. In an 8-hour shift you get three breaks: one 30-minute clock-out lunch, and two 10-minute on the clock breaks. You'll also occasionally get those amazing customers and you live for seeing them. We had four customers who every year each put 100 bucks in our tip jar around Christmas. Sometimes those people can make your day with the things they say and do.

Cons

If you work at a store worth their salt they will work you to the bone. Especially in a large or high-volume store there is so much to do, so much to clean. A morning shift person will have the absolutely insanity of a morning rush, but an evening person should be expected to handle evening rushes with a limited staff as WELL as get the place spotless in what I believe is not a reasonable time. We could get the place clean by 10:45, all right--if we broke the health and corporate rules about when to tear things down. And of course if that was ever found out we were in deep. And if we went over 10:45 we were also in trouble. Management sometimes has some very unrealistic ideas about what the job actually entails and what rules and boundaries should go with that. The pay in my state starts near minimum wage. The ceiling for a barista is $10/hr, which you hit when you've been there about five years. But tips help, and some high-volume affluent stores will have tips up to $4/hr. There's also a tendency to have fanatical management. Other "kindly" corporations like Whole Foods have this too--the managers drink the Kool-Aid and worship the company. I once spoke with my manager because my schedule was being changed with less than 24 hours notice, and that was against state law. She got this crazed look in her eye and spat "Starbucks law goes above state law!" But that's only a tendency. There are some pretty cool managers out there. Mine was insane. The customers are spoiled rotten so they also get kind of unreasonable about their Starbucks. They will stand there and demand that you make a drink five times because there's still foam on that latte and they said NO foam, not LIGHT foam. This is a business model of Starbucks': everyone is special, and we will bend the rules for everybody. And I've had people scream at me and call me a (b) and promise me that they would make me lose my job. I've also had stuff thrown at me. But, that's also just customer service. These last few years Starbucks has been obsessed with selling, too. There's a lot of pressure on the staff to make sure people go home with $15 bags of coffee and sub-par espresso machines. It's hard to maintain the relationships they want us to maintain while trying to sell stuff. Overall, if you can put up with the customers and the physical demand, and if benefits are more important than income, do it. It's rewarding in its own way. Wear insoles.

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Starbucks Response
5y
Thank you for taking the time to provide feedback. Starbucks’ culture and success are driven by our partners and their achievements. We are also committed to upholding a culture where inclusion, diversity, equity, and accessibility are valued and respected. Partners truly are the core of our company, and we strive to ask for input, consider feedback and communicate transparently around company-wide decisions. It is our intent to ensure that everyone feels supported and cared for, and we will share this with our teams to ensure we continue to improve in this area.
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