Toysmith Reviews

2.5

41% would recommend to a friend

(37 total reviews)

Todd Spang

33% approve of CEO

30% positive business outlook

Toysmith has an employee rating of 2.5 out of 5 stars, based on 37 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Toysmith employee rating is 29% below average for employers within the Retail and wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

37 reviews
1.0
30 Jan 2023

Dishonor to the REAL Toysmith

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Proud that I was an employee during the OLD Toysmith years....who knows, we may be seeing a giant ALL MUST GO SIGN - ALL SALES FINAL in the near future.

Cons

This is not the "original" Toysmith.  The Toysmith prior to new ownership was a family who valued and cared deeply for their employees. These employees had deep friendships with one another, watched one another grow, get married, raise families.  The "Toysmith" name and company was considered gold in the industry.  A company who valued their customers and rep groups. Now the current owners/CEO/Executive Leadership have dishonored the name and the company it once was. I'm not saying that as a business ages, changes shouldn't be made.  It's important that you can pivot in other directions to grow and adapt to changes in the industry when necessary, but they have completely disrespected the Toysmith name and created a very negative, ugly reputation in the toy industry. Their heartless, ruthless ways have shown over the past several years, including massive layoffs, but then posting new "similar" positions for more money. The industry is very aware of the treatment they've shown past and current employees. They work you to the bone, long days, volunteer work in the warehouse, now that so many quality, knowlegeable employees who understand the business are no longer there. During these layoffs, no empathy, no care, no value to employees who put their hearts and souls into everything they did to support the Toysmith brand and direction of the company.  If you want to feel valued, supported and be able to trust leadership, this is not the company for you - that Toysmith is gone.  Whoever this company is now, they are not the true Toysmith.

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Toysmith Response
3y
As a member of the leadership team, I can confidently say there is no 'fire sale' on our horizon. It is unfortunate your experience working for us was so negative and I hope that wherever you have landed is much better suited. The recent restructure lay offs came with severance packages, an extra month of benefits and transition assistance to support those laid off as much as possible. These are heavy decisions for leadership to make and I can assure you each of us did not take this planning lightly.
1.0
9 Nov 2018

Beware

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Toys are supposed to be fun, right?

Cons

The department I work in cannot effectively carry out their duties, we get little support. Inconsistent management practices. Lack of direction at times is crippling to the company. Immature and reactionary treatment of employees. HR powerless as a change agent (they would initiate change if they could!).

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Toysmith Response
5y
UPDATE - I am very sorry to hear of your negative experience while working with Toysmith. I am the new HR Director for the company and I 100% invested in ensuring our employees feel supported and consistency is implemented. 7/18/22 Several positive changes to increase efficiency and effectiveness have been implemented since November, 2018. Moving forward, the team is aligned in achieving our shared strategic goals while we continue to provide both: internal support to team members and a gold standard of service delivery to our customers whom we partner with to grow their business.
1.0
25 May 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I met a (very) small handful of genuinely nice humans there who were friendly and helpful.

Cons

Working at Toysmith was a downright toxic experience. I received next to no support from management, dealt with a rude/abrasive manager that seemed more interested in scolding me than providing direction, and an HR department that could not have cared any less about making a new hire feel welcome. Things started OK, but soured very quickly. The first red flag was the complete lack of any kind of training plan. The expectation was that I asked for everything I needed instead of giving me comprehensive training and acknowledging that I was brand-new to the company and role. The harsh criticism from my manager started soon after. I would do plenty of things correctly and not hear a word but then I wouldn’t have perfect recall of a single sales order and somehow that was worthy of derision. While I did make errors, it has to be noted that nothing was outside of standard “getting up to speed” mistakes that are part and parcel of the new job learning experience. Despite having just started, I received an avalanche of negative reinforcement that crushed my excitement and enthusiasm for my new position. With less than 2 months on the job I was put on an action plan, which completely blew me away. Most companies have more realistic expectations for your performance/output after literally just getting started, but I guess the company that sells fart slime has standards I could never hope to meet. I would ask for feedback on how I could improve, but I didn’t really receive anything other than vague demands to “be more proactive” and “own my role,” on top of my manager growing hostile that I’d ask for feedback at all. My manager told me that 60 days was the amount of time it was expected that I’d know my role forwards and backwards, which is so wildly out of touch with reality that it’s laughable. Setting aside the fact that's not even remotely feasible in most jobs, I didn't even get the 60 days. This was after I was told that my role was “too big” for me, which is not how a supportive manager behaves. Actual training is the solution, not a completely new employee having to be in charge of their entire learning plan. Even when I asked questions it was met with irritation and incredulity that I’d need help at all. The atmosphere overall was negative and tense. You would assume HR would be concerned and try to assist a new hire in getting acclimated, but nothing could be further from the truth. HR was dismissive, with zero credence being given to my complaints and concerns. After I went to HR, I was told that my concerns were invalid and I’m only getting treated this way because I really am that bad in my role (after maybe 30-ish days on the job). In a follow up conversation I was told, by HR, that there was "no hope" from them or my manager that I would ever improve, which is so unprofessional and mean-spirited that I still have trouble believing it happened. HR immediately sided with management and left me completely alone. No effort was made to understand how I felt about the situation or any validity given to my issues. HR is fully on the side of management and no one else. I could go into more, like how poorly I was treated after a medical emergency or HR's over-reliance on a personality test called the "Culture Index" which is just astrology for HR, but I have to stop somewhere.

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Toysmith Response
3y
It is unfortunate you decided to come to a public forum and air grievances that are entirely inaccurate. You were hired into a role that required technical expertise and while your interview went well, you were unable to deliver on the necessary skills for the role. You were provided with a comprehensive training plan during your first week via a Google document. You were also provided with repeated training in areas where you were struggling, however, after multiple training sessions you were still unable to grasp the responsibilities. An Action Plan is given to employees to clearly lay out expectations and provide support for improvement - this did contain specific metrics that you were unable to meet. As the HR Director for Toysmith, I take all employee feedback very seriously and ensure everyone is appropriately supported. However, there are times when an individual is just unable to perform their role and this was one of them. We wish you all the best in the future.
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Glassdoor has 38 Toysmith reviews submitted anonymously by Toysmith employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Toysmith is right for you.