Pros
- The people are the best part of working at Wayfair. There are so many bright, caring, and genuinely friendly people that work here - Work/life balance. You have to be diligent and it can depend on the team, but for the most part, many teams seem to support a good work/life balance - Easy internal mobility. If you want to move to a different internal team, it is fairly easy to do so and people are always jumping to different teams
Cons
- No top-down strategy. Every team is working on their own goals to further their own agendas and there is no overarching goal. We say we want to make it easy for the consumer to bring their dream home to life, but none of the work we actually do ladders up into achieving this goal. Instead, our actions prove that we really only care about moving through as much cheap furniture as possible. - Weak leadership. Everyone in leadership has spent either their entire career at Wayfair or most of it at Wayfair, but none of it building subject matter expertise, which has resulted in leadership adopting a "spaghetti at the wall" strategy with no long-term vision. We're constantly pivoting and hustling to execute last-minute plans with no real strategy in place. - No growth opportunities, at least not in compensation or title. There is plenty of room for growth in scope though! Everyone's scope for their role grows beyond what they initially signed up for and often times under the pretense that they can take on additional work in order to get a promotion only for that additional scope to quickly become the standard which you're now held against. - Zero efforts to retain top talent. Wayfair has adopted a "churn and burn" mentality of hiring the cheapest talent they can find (usually in the form of campus hires) and then shuffling great talent out the door by increasing workloads, providing zero opportunities for actual growth within the company, and having no real strategy in place to make the business a long-term success