If you like apologizing to customers, work here. - Outside Sales Representative Graybar Employee Review

1.0
Feb 19, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will not make money working in sales for this company

Cons

Management is disingenuous and does not reveal the true compensation plan. After your second year you will be forced into a lower salary and commission plan. They offer a profit sharing plan, but fail to mention that you will not qualify for it until after 18 months with the company. Has the worse compensation plan of any electrical distributor.

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Graybar Response
8y
Thank you for your review. We are sorry to hear you were not satisfied with our sales compensation program. We introduced a new sales compensation program a few years ago that allows for uncapped commissions plus a base salary, allowing our sales representatives unlimited earning potential. This plan drives profitable growth by rewarding top performing salespeople for their contributions. We are always trying to continually improve and be the best we can for our employees.

Explore other reviews about Graybar

5.0
Jul 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of experience, hands on learning

Cons

Lack of compensation ( money-wise)

2.0
Jul 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Employee owned so profits are shared with both employees AND employee stock holders

Cons

Graybar is trying to keep pace with the digital transformation of our industry, But, most senior leaders lack the experience needed to execute true digital change. As a result, the company has made several costly missteps. Graybar needs more outside senior talent with a proven track record of building and deploying customer‑facing digital solutions that both simplify the customer experience and reduce Graybar internal labor. Our current AI initiatives are unlikely to deliver meaningful results because our data is too inconsistent to support AI and other inititives. Without significant changes soon, Graybar’s long‑term outlook risks mirroring companies like Blockbuster, Borders Bookstores, Sears, and JCPenney—businesses that failed to adapt when customers shifted to online purchasing instead of relying solely on brick‑and‑mortar service or phone/fax to place orders.

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