Restructuring and Layoffs - Anonymous employee JD Power Employee Review

2.0
10 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work from home and good pay

Cons

Excessive micromanagement, with even routine leave approvals requiring senior leadership involvement. Lack of transparency around workforce changes and restructuring decisions. Communication gaps between senior leadership and employees, creating uncertainty and speculation. Concerns about employee retention due to frequent organizational changes. Hiring practices perceived as favoring external (Sterling) or former employees over existing talent development.

Explore other reviews about JD Power

5.0
12 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

unlimited PTO, supportive managers, flexible schedule, Great benefits

Cons

lots of travel can get exhausting but its still worth it

avatar
JD Power Response
10mo
We are glad to hear you find the role rewarding and enjoy the flexibility, benefits, and support available to you. Travel is a core part of this particular position, and while it can be demanding at times, we’re glad to see you find it worthwhile. Managers are expected to hold regular 1:1s with their teams, and we encourage employees to use these meetings to share feedback, ask questions, and stay connected. We encourage you to speak with your manager or HRBP if these are not already set up as a regular occurrence on your calendar. Thank you, J.D. Power
1.0
16 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote job that pays market rate salaries and offers decent health benefits.

Cons

It feels like the executives at this company are sitting in first class in an airplane behind a giant metal door instead of a curtain, completely sealed off from the rest of the organization that is all sitting in coach. We are told to stay seated, stay comfortable, and be grateful, cramped seats, stale peanuts and all. Every so often, a voice comes over the intercom with an announcement, and you have no choice but to accept it. Sometimes that announcement is that your colleague has been fired, so they can clear some salary cap for another former Sterling employee, and you'll need to increase your work load. This executive change honestly feels like a cash grab for the executive team and their friends and does not feel like the transformation the company desperately needed. Every executive working here is a nepobaby. They only hire people and vendors who have previously worked with the CEO and the COO at other companies, even if they are not the best candidates or companies to work with. They are also paying them obscene salaries. None of these folks have any experience in the industry that drives the company profits, automotive, nor have any interest in getting up to speed. J.D. Power used to be a place where speaking up was encouraged. Now, one wrong look at the wrong executive can cost you your job. They removed internal anonymous feedback because "it's not productive." But I am 1000% sure they are reading still reading these reviews.

4
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All