Some pros, some cons - Designer HB Workplaces Employee Review

2.0
8 Apr 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are some awesome people at HB. All of the offices/showrooms are beautiful, so it’s a nice place to work in-person. They have pretty good health benefits. They are a very reputable and established company, so their processes are well-baked, they’re well-organized, they have solid training for new employees and a lot of experience in the industry, especially on the furniture side of things.

Cons

They’re not very flexible with remote work and don’t promote much of a work/life balance. They encourage and congratulate pulling all-nighters or working weekends to get deliverables done. Super easy to burn out. It’s a very sales-oriented company, which means that anyone who isn’t a salesperson (designers, project managers, installers, etc.) almost never gets recognized or rewarded. There is also more of a focus on making as MANY sales as possible, rather than focusing on more careful work that would result in fewer errors, higher project margins and the customer's needs truly being met. The salaries are low (especially in design) and there has always been a lot of turnover in the design department as a result. It’s very hard to get raises, especially ones that are large enough to even keep up with inflation, let alone grow in your career. In order to get ahead and be truly valued by the leadership at HB you have to be a shark, you need to be in the clique run by higher-up salespeople, and you need to be dishonest. There are a few superstars and a lot of peons at HB.

Explore other reviews about HB Workplaces

5.0
15 Oct 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible workplace. Friendly leadership. Family friendly. Great work environment.

Cons

Small privately owned workplace. Not a corporate beheameth.

1.0
5 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people work at HB.

Cons

The CEO demonstrates that he is out for himself and comes across as greedy. Many employees are salaried and are required to log 60 hours per week for that salary. Sales people anticipate good commissions but once "other" expenses are taken out the commissions are much lower than anticipated. CEO treats vendor Reps. poorly and tries to control their destiny if he doesn't get his way.

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