Careers

Careers at Woodstock Vitamins

Work with us — and only with the real us.

We’re a small, pharmacist-led company that says no more than it says yes. That includes how we hire. This page tells you exactly how Woodstock Vitamins recruits — and how to recognize a fake job offer using our name.

The Only Way We Recruit

Three facts that don’t change.

If a job opportunity claiming to be from Woodstock Vitamins breaks even one of these, it is not real. There are no exceptions, no special cases, and no “new process.”

1

We post on Indeed. Nowhere else.

Every legitimate Woodstock Vitamins opening lives on our official Indeed employer page. We do not recruit on LinkedIn, Facebook, Telegram, WhatsApp, Signal, text message, or any third-party recruiting agency. A message from any of those channels is not from us.

2

Contact comes from our founder — on an official email only.

Hiring communication comes directly from our founder, and only from a company email address ending in @woodstockvitamins.com or @drnealsmoller.com. We never use Gmail, Outlook, or other personal accounts, and we never use lookalike domains. If you want to confirm a message is genuinely from him, don’t reply to it — verify through our support team first.

3

We never ask for money or financial information to get hired.

We will never ask you to pay for equipment, training, software, or onboarding, and we will never request your banking details, Social Security number, or other sensitive financial information before a formal, verified offer. Anyone who does is running a scam.

Our open roles are managed entirely on Indeed, so that page — not this one — is always the accurate, current list. If a position isn’t shown there, we’re not hiring for it.

Know the Signs

What a recruitment scam looks like.

These tactics show up again and again. If you notice any of them in a message claiming to be from Woodstock Vitamins, stop and treat it as fraudulent.

  • It didn’t come from Indeed. A LinkedIn DM, a text, or a message on a chat app offering a Woodstock Vitamins job.
  • The email domain is wrong. Anything that isn’t exactly @woodstockvitamins.com or @drnealsmoller.com — including close misspellings or extra words.
  • It moves fast and pressures you. An offer with little or no real interview, urgent deadlines, or “limited spots” framing.
  • It asks for money. Requests to pay for a laptop, training, or onboarding — often with a promise of reimbursement.
  • It asks for sensitive data too early. Banking info, Social Security number, or a photo of your ID before any verified offer exists.
  • It sends you a check. A request to deposit a check and forward part of the funds, or buy gift cards, is always a scam.
  • The interview is chat-only. “Interviews” conducted entirely over messaging apps, never by phone or video with a real person.

If This Happened to You

Report it. We’re asking you to.

If you were contacted, interviewed, or harmed by someone impersonating Woodstock Vitamins, tell us. Submit a support ticket or use live chat on our website — share what you received, the sender’s contact details, and what they asked for. It helps us shut these operations down and warn the next person.

If you’ve already sent money or shared financial information, contact your bank right away and report it to your local authorities and, in the U.S., the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. Then let us know too.

Who You’d Be Joining

A small company built on restraint.

Woodstock Vitamins was founded by pharmacist Neal Smoller on a simple idea: people are better served by fewer, well-formulated supplements than by an endless aisle of hype. We’re independent, evidence-driven, and rooted in the questioning spirit of Woodstock, New York.

That same honesty shapes how we treat the people who want to work here. We’d rather tell you plainly how our process works — and warn you clearly about the people pretending to be us — than let anyone get hurt looking for a job in our name. When we’re hiring, you’ll find it on Indeed.

Questions

Recruitment & scam FAQ

Does Woodstock Vitamins recruit on LinkedIn?
No. We do not recruit, post jobs, or contact candidates through LinkedIn. We post our open positions only on Indeed. Any LinkedIn message, job offer, or recruiter claiming to represent Woodstock Vitamins is not legitimate.
Where does Woodstock Vitamins post real job openings?
We post all legitimate openings on our official Indeed employer page at indeed.com/cmp/Woodstock-Apothecary. That page reflects our current status — if a role isn’t listed there, we’re not hiring for it.
Who at Woodstock Vitamins contacts job candidates?
Legitimate hiring communication comes only from our founder, and only from an official company email address ending in @woodstockvitamins.com or @drnealsmoller.com. We never use personal email accounts, messaging apps, or outside recruiters. To verify a message is really from him, confirm through our support team rather than replying directly.
Does Woodstock Vitamins ask for money or banking details during hiring?
Never. We do not ask candidates to pay for equipment, training, background checks, or onboarding, and we never request banking details, Social Security numbers, or other sensitive financial information before a formal, verified offer.
I think I was targeted by a Woodstock Vitamins job scam. What should I do?
Stop communicating with the sender and do not send money or personal information. Report it to us by submitting a ticket at woodstockvitamins.com/support or using live chat on our website. If you’ve already lost money or shared sensitive information, also contact your bank and your local authorities.
How do I know this careers page itself is genuine?
This page lives at woodstockvitamins.com/careers. If you reached it from a link someone sent you, type the address into your browser yourself to be sure. When in doubt, contact us through /support and ask.