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Fresh Clean Tees

Is this your company?

Look forward to work everyday - Anonymous employee Fresh Clean Tees Employee Review

5.0
May 10, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Relaxed, genuine culture where it's easy to be yourself at work every day. Tons of opportunity to learn and grow with the support you need to get there. Leadership team who genuinely cares. Really smart people who can solve any problem thrown at them. Incredible office location - love taking walking meetings to the ocean everyday.

Cons

Has grown really quickly so there are sometimes growing pains as you would expect, but the team is always working towards resolving those and making things better for everyone.

Explore other reviews about Fresh Clean Tees

5.0
Dec 3, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loved the people and the firm. Felt like I was surrounded by some of the smarted people I'd ever worked with.

Cons

Usual considerations with startups: priorities change constantly. Big initiatives were not always planned far enough in advance. Primarily, the firm's core product (T-Shirts) have a clear seasonal window between March and July. Things tend to get bumpy outside of that season.

2.0
Dec 9, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people you work (in the trenches) with are great. There is a strong product-market fit. $60M+ brand is a legit brand.

Cons

The CEO lacks a clear long-term vision, relying on a leadership team composed of former consultants (ex-McKinsey, ex-Bain, etc.) with minimal real-world experience in Apparel or DTC ecommerce. This lack of industry expertise has led to recurring layoffs every 6-8 months, as the organization struggles with cash flow issues the CEO is unable to resolve. Strategic direction is erratic, with no actionable plan for scaling beyond $60M revenue, leaving the company stagnant while competitors with strong brand investments dominate the space. Operational missteps, such as overbuying inventory (invoices signed off by CFO), incurring high warehouse fees, and poor sell-through, resulted in the COO's firing. A lack of cash then hindered the ability to stock inventory during peak seasons, which contributed to declines in customer acquisition and revenue growth, culminating in the dismissal of the entire marketing team. The CEO often deflects accountability, shifting blame onto others despite claiming to prioritize empathy and care for employees.

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