Lidl reviews

3.4

59% would recommend to a friend

(8,078 total reviews)

Kenneth McGrath

73% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

Lidl has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 8,078 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Lidl employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Einzel- & Großhandel industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
1.0
May 13, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The salary and holiday allowance are alright.

Cons

In order to ensure clarity, I will separate the cons into different areas of the experience. Rotas: - supposed to be released 3/4 weeks in advance but are often only released a few days to a week or two in advance - if you need to swap/change a shift you need to fight tooth and nail to get it done (I once had to remind them 7 times and even then it was only sorted the day before said shift even though they repeatedly promised to sort it out earlier). They really do not want to make even the slightest changes, its as if the rota is set in stone. BUT if the need to change rotas comes from the company and not the employee, they're immediately changed on short notice and the employee is usually not notified or asked for consent - 5am starts and midnight finishes scattered throughout the space of a week means you don't get to have a sleep schedule - closing shifts don't end until everything is done and if other team members are being unproductive or if the expectations are out of line, that just means you have to stay much, much longer and you can't do anything about it. - holidays are booked for you if you don't book them yourself in time which is understandable but they never tell you that you need to book more holidays to avoid having to take holiday whenever they want you to which leads to disappointment for new starters who don’t know this Management: - area managers have no understanding of the reality of running a shop and expect you to achieve amazing results with laughably low resources - very little consistency in what different managers expect meaning you will be told off for doing something another manager has told you you should do. - managers criticise assistants for the tiniest mistakes but can't perform their basic duties properly (such as the rotas. I’ve also seen managers break food safety regulations on numerous occasions) Health and well-being: - Managers are very rude when you call in sick, I've had them hang up on me. I understand that its inconvenient when people call in sick but its not my fault I'm a human person. Sickness comes with employing people. I shouldn't have to feel bad for being human. - Chill chain is almost impossible to not break leading to the sale of goods that are not fit for sale. For example, large chiller pallets are often worked by one person and it is impossible to get all that done in 20 mins, it normally takes 40-60 minutes, slow employees might even take 90+ minutes meaning that backstock will be room temperature by the time the pallet is worked - I’ve seen loose blades/sharp items in non-food numerous times and that puts both workers and customers at risk of injury - Security is never there when you need it. Even when there had been armed robberies, security was not increased and thats only because Lidl cut corners on everything to save money. Diversity and discrimination: - Pregnant employees are criticised, called "useless" and even forced to carry out tasks they can't possibly perform without putting themselves and their child at risk - The workforce is diverse on the lower levels but diversity completely disappears at higher levels. Throughout my employment, there were roughly 15 managers that I worked with and every single one of them was a white english man with the exception of one white welsh man. - Eastern European workers are routinely mocked for their accents by management - Managers openly express racist and sexist views Pushing brand propaganda: - Lidl got off the ground by saving tons of money from completely ignoring workers’ rights and only having company interests in mind. In the recent years they have realised that its more profitable to have the image of a good employer so they’ve devised tactics to fool people into believing they are a humane employer - This can even be seen here on glassdoor with responses from the Brand Team designed to push brand image. They know they’re getting bad reviews so they respond seemingly caring about their former employees but its all because they want to make it seem as if they care, there is really no solution offered - It was soul-crushing to walk past posters in the staff area about how we’re a team and how great it is to work at Lidl knowing that we all know none of it was true - They conducted a staff survey to make it seem as if they care and all we got as a response was a poster in the canteen where non-essential concerns (such as “Why can’t we have music in the warehouse?”) were addressed. Serious concerns about safety and discrimination were conveniently ignored because of course, why would they address these things when the sole purpose of the survey was to push brand image? - They have an internal hotline for reporting misconduct which makes it seem as if they’re responsible but its only there so that employees would report misconduct to the company itself and not external authorities because unlike the company, external authorities are likely to take real action and cost the company money in the process Training: - lots of focus on common sense things (I remember having to drag bits of rubbish into a bin on a touch screen as part of my training, god forbid you have any ideas of your own) - essential things are missing from training (I had to show a new starter how to turn on the till belt because the training doesn’t include that. It does however dedicate a whole section to telling you to switch off the kettle when you’re done using it) - They never tell you in training about the priorities (there is a list of priorities you’re supposed to keep going over if you’re not on till and not been told to do something specifically) and then they tell you off for frequently asking what they want you to do - staff are often made to do things they have not been trained to do, I spent countless hours on the self checkout and the only training I had received was being shown how to press “Ignore weight” when items are incorrectly weighed. - some things in the training module are completely different from what you’re actually expected to do, for example the module tells you to keep the cache box key in your pocket and later on I was told off for not keeping it inside my till - employees get criticised for not knowing how to do things they have not been taught how to do

avatar
Lidl Response
7y
Thank you for your review. It's important for us to hear from both current and previous employees, so we appreciate you taking the time to leave such in-depth feedback on your experience. We would genuinely like to discuss your points in more detail – so please do contact us at careers.sm@lidl.co.uk when you have the time. We wish you the very best for the future! - Team Lidl GB
1.0
Aug 16, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary is ok, holiday allowance fair

Cons

'God complex' possessed by some Area Managers Labour spend low so any absence (even holiday) tips the store past breaking point Limited hours to train new starters so training ends up compromised Productivity too high in store, all managers are glorified customer assistants and don't get time to run the business as you'd like Long days, weeks, lack of support from field-based management You are just a number on a system; would be nice if there was some sort of recognition that humans work in your stores and not just machines. Channel of communication - PWC is well and good, but don't believe they have any sort of power to do anything. If the unions were allowed and recognised, they'd have a field day.

avatar
Lidl Response
7y
We appreciate your feedback – as well as your hard work while with us! To discuss any of your points in more detail, you can contact us at careers.sm@lidl.co.uk. We wish you the very best for the future. -Andy, Recruitment team
1.0
Mar 20, 2018

Inefficient ways to work, incompetent people

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ok salary and benefits ... Respected company and employer in Europe but not yet (by a mile) in the U.S.

Cons

I have worked with a number of multinational companies and compared to my previous experiences, Lidl US is the rock-bottom, however it seems the inexperienced employees there don’t know anything better. The company has a lot of room for improvement with internal communication, job descriptions, process flows, recruitment process and most importantly, ensuring the employees live the company values (in my department discriminating, bullying and other unprofessional behavior was present and accepted). This company is a total disgrace to Schwarz Group.

Viewing 184 - 186 of 8,078 Reviews

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