Be Warned - Trip Leader & Trip Expert Backroads Employee Review

1.0
30 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great community. The company allows you to learn a great skillset for the industry.

Cons

It's a huge red flag that Backroads seems to accept the turnover in their office staff as just the nature of the industry and appears not even to begin to question their management. The unilateral way of ruling the executive team has put in place, is often short sighted and protects their own interests, not their staff. Propped up by excellent hiring and training, they have managed for years to get by on slotting highly capable individuals into key roles, but then burning them out with workloads, deadlines, and expectations that are quite frankly disrespectful. When these individuals ask for help, they get nothing, at best, or a guilt trip, at worst, and with few exceptions, they leave prematurely; only then do their roles get split or obtain additional support/resources. As the company has grown, these highly capable and experienced individuals are becoming too few for the number of roles that turn over, leading to a deterioration of workplace quality that is often manifested and measured through surveys, yet they care only about their bottom line. There seems to be very little logic as to who the favorites are, but performance certainly does not seem to be the highest priority. With regards to leaders, a very twisted marking system has been set up where guests score the leaders thinking said leaders will never see the feedback directly, when it actually gets sent straight to their mail box. The scoring system itself is based on likability rather than actually evaluating if leaders are good at their jobs. All the while Backroads prefers for leaders not to mention this yet pride themselves on transparency. The result is harmful attacks on the leaders’ morale, rather than constructive feedback. The company loves using buzz words of empathy, radical candor, and being feedback based, to pretend that they have a caring and supportive company culture, but it is not something that matters, never acknowledging issues employees bring forward, with growth and profit being far and away their greatest values. Upper management is totally out of touch, existing in an insular bubble that quashes any criticism that they get wind of (this despite claiming that there will be no negative consequences to including one's name on the yearly employee survey instead of submitting anonymously). They continue, whether delusionally or manipulatively, to act as though employees should feel lucky to get what they give while continuing to be underpaid and undervalued. Loyalty does not exist as they try to create a "big happy family" atmosphere while on their end they show time and time again that they see their staff as easily replaceable, squeezing people out if they don't guzzle the Kool-Aid. Furthermore, they have no qualms behaving in illegal manners across various payrolls, in an attempt to pay their employees at rebait. They engage in considerable gaslighting regarding pay, throwing nice-looking numbers around while keeping details opaque. On top of mediocre pay and complicated payment structures, numerous employees (a startling proportion of those who do the work to check) have managed to reclaim significant unpaid wages after investigating their pay slips. It is difficult not to say that Backroads has a distinctly toxic company culture.

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Backroads Response
1mo
Thank you for sharing your perspective and for the many years you contributed as a Trip Leader and Trip Expert. We appreciate your acknowledgment of the community and professional skill‑building that can come with this work, and we’re disappointed to hear that your experience left you feeling undervalued. We want to address a few of the themes you raised. As Backroads has grown, decision‑making, resourcing, and workload management have evolved and we recognize that growth can create strain if not continuously reassessed. We do not view burnout or turnover as an acceptable outcome, and feedback from surveys and direct conversations is actively reviewed to identify where additional support, or structural changes are needed. While we’re currently seeing all‑time high retention across both our field and office roles, we remain deeply committed to finding ways to be an even better place to work. Guest feedback is a core part of a guest‑facing role, but it is not intended to be a measure of likability or a punitive tool. It is reviewed in context and alongside training, experience, and leadership input, with the goal of supporting development rather than diminishing morale. We also want to be clear regarding compensation and payroll practices. We are committed to complying with all applicable wage and employment laws for our multi-national employee pool. Our pay structures and payroll processes are reviewed regularly both internally and with external legal partners, and as we’ve expanded, we’ve invested significantly in localized payroll entities and contracts to improve transparency, compliance, and employee satisfaction. Finally, while company values and priorities naturally evolve as an organization grows, our commitment to treating people with respect and care has not changed. We appreciate the time and energy you gave to Backroads and wish you the best in what comes next.

Explore other reviews about Backroads

5.0
10 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

nice people to work with

Cons

a little behind the eight ball in terms of latest tech

5.0
11 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The product (luxury active vacations) is phenomenal. It's great to be able to have confidence in what we're selling and know we are leading the industry in quality. Coworkers are great - hard working and fun. They also do a good job with benefits, especially trip credits and retirement plans.

Cons

Bay Area cost of living is quite high and while the sales role isn't a tech sales job, increased compensation would go a long way considering working remotely (full time) is essentially not an option.

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