Great pay, horrible company - Locomotive Distributor CPKC Employee Review

1.0
22 Mar 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great pay check, decent benefits package.

Cons

You have to hook up your arm to the company and watch them drain your blood out, no questions asked. Management could care less about anyone, except themselves. It is a dog eat wolf mentality. They do not follow their own policies (which incidentally they go above and beyond to print everywhere on giant posters). They claim safety first, but its actually the last thing they consider. Don't care about the mule, just load the cart with more stuff and get it moving. If you do not ever move a train, then you can claim to be the safest railroad in North America; however, you loose a lot of money doing that, so just fire everyone, and force resignations to cut back the work force. Once that's done, they overwork those remaining till they go home and off themselves.

Explore other reviews about CPKC

5.0
20 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great pay, and benefits, good environment,

Cons

First 3-5 years stressful until you get familiar and understand how railroads work.

1
2.0
29 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lots of opportunities to provide value

Cons

Poor leadership at the C-level. CIO has no control over the direction of the IT landscape beyond what is dictated to her by the CEO and other business owners. The IT environment is almost solely controlled by the demands of the business at the cost of being able to manage and adapt to needs. 20 years behind the market in the adoption of cloud technology. Existing cloud strategy was built by engineers pressed into the role of architects and learning as they progressed along. No automation or DevOps presence whatsoever outside what the platform teams use to simplify their own workloads. Remote work is considered a 4-letter word and is extremely frowned upon as anything other than an as-needed and pre-approved option. Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery are still done using backups and shadow copies of key infrastructure, and those key systems are decided upon at the time the tests are planned instead of testing the company's infrastructure in its entirety. Data centers are geographically separated, but are significantly disparate in what is physically hosted and accessible. Recognition and rewards are overtly encouraged, but are covertly handed out based on the level of visibility and impact to the business and stakeholders. Senior leadership constantly touts open-door policy and approachability, but give off vibes and impressions opposite of the overt policy. The company puts on a show of being diverse and inclusive. Case in point, the hiring of a female CIO. The problem is that working within an 'old boys network' leadership, it doesn't matter how inclusive and diverse the company appears because those elements are never given the opportunity to show their value.

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