Pros
The pay is steady, the work is consistent, and you will stay physically active. You’ll learn warehouse systems, equipment, and how large-scale food distribution operates. Some coworkers are solid and do their best to support each other in a demanding environment.
Cons
worked in inventory control, and the role was far more demanding than it appears on paper. It combines physical labor, compliance checks, and constant administrative accuracy all at once. On a daily basis, you’re handling product coming back from dry, refrigerated, and freezer areas. That means checking temperatures, inspecting for spoilage, verifying expiration dates, scanning items back into the system, selecting the correct return codes, printing paperwork for drivers, unloading pallets, verifying quantities, and stacking everything according to internal color-coded systems. The physical environment makes it even tougher. You’re frequently working in tight, narrow spaces, constantly unloading and restacking pallets, sometimes moving between regular warehouse areas and cold or freezer sections. You’re expected to stay in motion almost the entire shift. It’s not just physical work it’s nonstop physical work combined with detail-heavy tasks where accuracy matters. That combination can wear you down quickly. One of the most frustrating parts is how difficult it is to stay informed. Unless you’re in a lead or management position, you don’t have access to a company email. That makes it hard to stay in sync with updates, process changes, or expectations unless someone tells you directly. In a role where procedures and accuracy matter so much, that lack of communication creates unnecessary stress and confusion. The time policies are also extremely rigid. The clock-in rules and lunch policy are strict, and the way shifts are structured makes work-life balance very difficult. Instead of breaking schedules into three more manageable shifts, operations are structured in a way that leaves you with long, draining workdays and little time to reset. It feels like the schedule is built around the assumption that work is your primary focus in life. The schedule really only works if you already have an established home routine or don’t expect to have much of a life outside of work. When your days off aren’t even consecutive, it becomes hard to recover physically or mentally. You spend one day recovering and the other day preparing to go right back. Over time, that kind of schedule wears on you. Another major issue is how quickly people are cycled in and out. There’s a lot of time spent training new hires on equipment, procedures, and systems, but if someone struggles in a specific role, it doesn’t feel like there’s much effort to find them a better fit internally. Inventory control is very detail-driven and not everyone thrives in that type of position. Someone might perform well in a more straightforward, movement-based role like shipping or receiving, but there doesn’t seem to be much emphasis on transferring employees into areas where they might succeed.