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Powder Mountain

Is this your company?

Great department and co-workers, but layoffs disrupt morale. - Front of House Powder Mountain Employee Review

1.0
10 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loved my department, co-workers and managers. Genuinely loved what I did and loved to go to work everyday.

Cons

New management has decided to “restructure” and in the process has blind sided multiple hard working and kind workers who don’t fit their billionaire ski resort “image” by laying them off no notice. They want to cut the high paid hard workers to hire lower wage and spread thin even less employees with more work.

Explore other reviews about Powder Mountain

5.0
14 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great employee perks, kind & thoughtful co-workers, beautiful place to work.

Cons

None that I have come across at my time here.

1.0
27 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Powder Mountain has some truly incredible people who care deeply about the guest experience, the mountain, and each other. Many employees are passionate, resourceful, and willing to step in wherever needed, especially during peak season or when operations get stretched thin. The work itself can be meaningful because you are close to the real guest and employee experience. There are opportunities to build programs, solve complex operational problems, and make a visible impact quickly. For people who enjoy hands-on work, cross-functional collaboration, and being part of a unique resort environment, there is a lot to learn here. There are also leaders and team members throughout the organization who genuinely want to do the right thing. Some departments have strong talent, deep institutional knowledge, and a real sense of pride in the mountain.

Cons

The biggest challenge is that the company often asks teams to operate at a high level without giving them the structure, staffing, resources, or decision-making clarity needed to succeed. Priorities can shift quickly, and teams are often expected to absorb those changes without enough communication, planning, or support. There is also a noticeable gap between the company’s ambitions and its internal systems. Powder Mountain is trying to grow and evolve, but many processes still feel reactive, informal, or personality driven. This creates confusion, duplicated work, and unnecessary stress for employees who are trying to execute well. Leadership communication can be inconsistent. Decisions are not always explained clearly, and employees are sometimes left to interpret changing expectations on their own. In some cases, people are held accountable for outcomes they were not fully empowered or resourced to control. There can be a tendency to celebrate big ideas while underestimating the operational labor required to make those ideas successful. Frontline and support teams often carry the weight of last-minute changes, unclear ownership, and competing priorities. The culture can feel supportive on the surface, but difficult conversations are not always handled transparently or consistently. As soon as they dropped the "who pick up the trash" from "big hearted champions" it lit up a dark pathway for the future trend of the company. Employees who raise concerns, identify risk, or push for more structure may not always feel heard, even when their intent is to protect the business.

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