Corporate office disaster!!! Don't apply not even if you need a job it's not worth it!!! Run!!! - Anonymous employee Mor Furniture Employee Review

1.0
Sep 9, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Coffee machine, big break room, paycheck, benefits after 90 days but their super expensive, Buffet in the parking lot, eateries near by.

Cons

The owner of this company Rick H you need to seriously get a clue the company you're running is unprofessional. You don't stand by your product, no refund policy, furniture is damaged upon arrival, backordered, or discontinued! If drivers are late or don't show at all no delivery fees refunded if you ask a manager your told no!! Highly unprofessional customer service! You're hiring process is bad, as well as the training! Two weeks to learn a severely lacking and outdated DOS like system! It's 2016, there is no excuse why you would use a outdated program!!! They won't mention that to you during the interview process because their to busy acting like their in high school trying to get into your mind! Interview process should be based upon experience not on a high school level. Managers, act as if their all in high school, very clique high school environment, very hard to make friends, cramped outdated office building poor chairs poor desks, no events to make your employees happy, sweatshop like atmosphere, they say they don't micromanage that's wrong they do!! Founding truths is a joke it's not followed!! You will be watched and micromanaged got forbid if your in after call, you'll get a message to get out! While other people in the call center are passing around a menu for food. And your the only one doing the work, no sense of urgency from managers, their to busy walking around, or talking to one another, If you have a manager call good luck they give you push back and won't take it. Make you call the warehouse or the showroom! Sales reps are shady and unprofessional managers don't work with you they work against you!! The right hand dosent know what the left hand is doing warehouse reps rude and extremely unprofessional they will curse at you on the phone. Mandatory overtime your not asked your told. If you wanna go on vacation and want a 10 day that won't happen here they won't hire enough people to cover a vacation that long. While your gone people will have to cover you! You have a vacation coverage list your not asked your told! If your late once it goes to a written!! Benefits after 90 days and and their super expensive $100 extra out of your check for one person!! Is a rip off!!! It's not worth the headache!! For what your paid and the sweatshop micromanaged high school environment

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5.0
Mar 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Great coworkers and managers who support you

Cons

There is no birthday PTO

1.0
May 23, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The best part of working at Mor Furniture is the moment you get to leave. Whether that’s at the end of the day or the day you land a new job offer. That’s not a joke. That’s genuinely the highlight.

Cons

Mor Furniture presents itself as a locally rooted, community-focused company, but the reality is notably different. The company is owned by a large international corporation, a detail they’d rather you not Google. That lack of transparency isn’t a mistake, it’s a feature, and it sets the tone for absolutely everything that follows. The internal motto is literally “we’re building the plane while flying it.” They say it proudly, like it’s bold and visionary. It’s not. It’s an out of touch confession that leadership didn’t plan well enough and decided everyone else should suffer the consequences. Decisions change daily, direction is nonexistent, and when employees push back the go-to response is “that’s just retail.” No, that’s just chaos with a business license. Rather than developing an original brand identity, the standing directive was largely to copy competitors which is a bold strategy for a company that apparently has no idea what it stands for. The only consistent decision-maker in the building is AI. If “the AI” ever goes down, so does the entire operation. It’s less of a tool and more of a life support system for a leadership team that can’t find north on a compass without it. Compensation is its own special kind of disappointment. New hires are recruited with promises of raises and growth, only to be told there’s no money once they’ve already signed on. You’ll be doing the job of four or five people, paid for one, and micromanaged like you can’t be trusted to breathe without approval. Salaried employees are treated like hourly workers. Raises, when they miraculously appear, don’t keep pace with inflation. And once you’re capped? There’s no cost-of-living adjustment. They’ll also dangle the opportunity to work with an international team like it’s a perk. Don’t be fooled. What they’re really doing is having you build out processes from the ground up, only to quietly hand the pieces they find convenient off to an overseas team — piece by piece, role by role. You’re not building something for the future. You’re training your own replacement and writing the manual while you do it. Give it a few years and that “international team” you’ve been collaborating with will absorb your role entirely because it’s more “efficient.” The writing is on the wall. They’re just hoping you don’t read it until it’s too late. The culture is where things get truly impressive, and not in a good way. Leadership has openly bragged that some employees have gone years without raises, as if taking loyalty for granted is somehow a flex. When staff ask for fair compensation, they’re told there’s no budget yet management made it crystal clear their own pay was untouchable. The audacity is truly breathtaking. Burnout isn’t a risk here, it’s part of the onboarding process.

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