Pluspunten
You get real management experience fast.
You can honestly say you handled:
Inventory control
Cash handling
Customer conflict
Sales goals
Scheduling pressure
Loss prevention
Store operations
Merchandising
Trade-ins
Tech/product support
Opening and closing
Problem-solving without backup
That is valuable on a resume.
You also learn independence. If you can run a store alone, you can handle pressure, prioritize, and make decisions without someone holding your hand.
It can also be good if you like games, collectibles, tech, consoles, and talking to customers who care about that world.
And if the store has decent traffic, you can build strong customer relationships. Regulars matter.
Minpunten
Being “store manager” but also being the only person there is often exploitation dressed up as responsibility.
You may be expected to do the work of:
Manager
Sales associate
Inventory clerk
Security
Customer service desk
Tech advisor
Cleaner
Cashier
Loss prevention
Complaint handler
All at once.
The biggest cons:
You are accountable for problems you may not have enough staff, payroll, or authority to fix.
Upper management may push metrics, warranties, memberships, preorders, and sales goals without giving enough labor or support.
You may get blamed for shrink, low numbers, customer complaints, late tasks, missed calls, or messy inventory even when the real issue is understaffing.
Breaks can become fake breaks. If you are alone, you may not actually be able to step away.
Safety can be an issue, especially with cash, consoles, theft, angry customers, or closing alone.
The title can sound stronger than the pay. GameStop management responsibility has historically outweighed compensation in many stores.
Burnout risk is high. You are constantly “on,” and there may be no one to absorb pressure with you.