Overall, a good place to work - Class 2 Driver GXO Logistics Employee Review

4.0
28 Nov 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I’ve been working here for nearly a year now, and it’s been a pretty good experience so far. The recruitment process was really easy, and Magda has been amazing—super helpful and always on hand if you need anything. The team onsite is brilliant. Everyone’s friendly, and the atmosphere is great. It’s nice to work with a good group of people who make the job enjoyable.

Cons

The only downside is the fleet—it’s a bit old, and sometimes you get delays because of vehicles being off the road. Would be nice if they upgraded it!

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GXO Logistics Response
1y
Awesome review, thank you for mentioning Magda, we shall pass on your feedback over!

Explore other reviews about GXO Logistics

5.0
7 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay, myself and my team are all paid really well for the area we are in. Our compensation team reviews often for relevance.

Cons

Work life balance can be hard during structural changes, bit settles down pretty quickly.

2.0
9 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great coworkers and talented engineers who genuinely support one another. Opportunity to work on impactful projects and solve real business problems. Exposure to modern BI and data technologies. Strong team members who are willing to go above and beyond to deliver results. Good learning opportunities for self-motivated individuals.

Cons

Leadership and management style can create unnecessary stress and turnover risk. Frequent micromanagement and excessive focus on responsiveness rather than outcomes. High meeting volume reduces time available for focused engineering work. Priorities and stakeholder commitments are sometimes established before consulting the engineers responsible for delivery. Limited trust in experienced employees and their ability to manage their own work. Internal growth and mobility can feel restricted. Work-life balance can be impacted by shifting priorities and urgent requests. Lack of recognition or compensation alignment when additional onsite expectations or workload demands are introduced. Having a non-technical BI manager overseeing technical engineering work can sometimes result in unrealistic timelines, misunderstandings of development complexity, and decisions being made without sufficient technical input.

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