Vantaggi
Some good coworkers and local managers. The job can teach you a lot about operations, customer service, collections, sales. That’s about it
Svantaggi
There is very little real advancement or meaningful pay growth at the store level. Extra Space talks about career growth, but in practice the raises are usually extremely small usually only a few cents even when employees take on more responsibility. The company also removed bonuses, which were one of the few ways store employees could actually earn more. After the bonus changes, many employees are effectively making less this year than they would have under the old structure, while the workload has not decreased at all. Stores used to have much more consistent double coverage. Now, many locations are expected to run with one person doing the work that used to be handled by two people. The workload increased but the pay did not meaningfully increase with it. Store managers and assistant managers are expected to do everything: sales, customer service, collections, cleaning, vendor coordination, maintenance follow up, deposits, security concerns, customer escalations, and administrative work. The job is much more than just renting storage units, but the pay does not reflect the amount of responsibility. Promotions do not feel meaningful either. Moving up often comes with a small increase but significantly more responsibility. Assistant managers and store managers can end up very close in pay, even though the workload and accountability are completely different. The biggest issue is that the pay structure does not motivate employees to go above and beyond. When raises are tiny, bonuses are removed, and “advancement” does not lead to meaningful compensation, employees are naturally incentivized to do the bare minimum. There is no real upside for working harder, taking ownership, or staying long term. Store level employees are often treated less like adults with judgment and experience, and more like task completion machines. There is a lot of focus on metrics, checklists, calls, reviews, and task completion, but not enough focus on whether the workload is realistic for one person or whether the policies actually make sense in the field.