One single decision maker, extreme micromanagement - Anonymous employee Quince Employee Review

1.0
Feb 23, 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- The co-founders, husband and wife CEO and President, are determined to succeed and have created a model that works for customers. We are growing fast. - They are also transparent about long hours, weekend work and a competitive culture. They love the culture as it is, so there are no false hopes that it will change. - They are also very up front that we market as a sustainable brand but that this comes after revenue and profitability. People who are drawn to work here because sustainability is at the top of their list understand through the interview process that this is not that kind of company, which is fair.

Cons

- The co-founders (husband and wife) choose or approve every image, landing page, marketing communication, sku, sku’s cost, product description page, email and retail price. Every single product is chosen by the CEO, and the retail price is decided by the CEO. It's very inefficient, extremely demotivating and is the epitome of micromanagement.  We are a team of people executing the CEO's orders. - The technology at this company is the worst I have ever worked in.  There is an intention to be at the forefront of technology, but that is not even visible on the horizon yet.   - We are now required to have our camera on for all meetings.   - Many blame-focused emails/slacks from the co-founders with many people on copy, with an underlying tone that you may be fired, which is often true.  Public ridicule and blame happens often. - The turnover is extremely high.  Many employees leave after 2-3 months, and most leave within a year.   - PTO requests are often rejected, you get 2 weeks per year.  Do not fall for the fake reviews here that say that there is unlimited PTO, just ask anyone who works here if they or their teammates have had their PTO requests rejected.   - Bonus metrics are set unrealistically high.  If considering an offer, assume your bonus will be $0.   - There are no designers at Quince.  All product is a direct copy.  We now market under the hashtag: #dupes.   - Relationships with agencies and vendors are extremely strained, we pay late and invoices are often rejected multiple times.     - If considering a future with Quince, find someone on LinkedIn that has left the company in your function, there are many that will be willing to share their experiences.   - I honestly was not going to bother posting anything, but the fake positive reviews here made me feel that I had no choice but to do my part in setting realistic expectations for people considering a role here.

Explore other reviews about Quince

5.0
Jun 15, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-compelling value proposition and strategic vision -challenger mindset.. you're pushed to question long-held assumptions and tradeoffs that no longer need to hold -low-ego culture.. no pointless meetings, no politics to navigate -highly advanced in tech and AI.. proprietary systems are reshaping retail -direct ownership in shaping the trajectory of your work and delivering tangible results for the business

Cons

the pace is fast - if you're looking to coast on the momentum of others, this is not the place for you; expect to be challenged

1.0
May 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's a fast growing brand with lots of VC backing

Cons

The culture at Quince is relentlessly metrics-driven with little regard for the people behind those numbers. Goals and targets are set at near-impossible levels and discussed openly across the team — if you miss, you're put on blast. If you hit, the targets are quietly raised the next month. There is no winning, only surviving. Performance recognition is completely one-sided. Strong results are ignored; any dip — even the day after a major sale event like Black Friday — triggers urgent escalation from leadership. It creates a culture of anxiety rather than motivation. Workload and scope creep are constant. Responsibilities are regularly added to your plate without discussion or acknowledgment. Taking PTO means you're still expected to check in and attend meetings and are made to feel guilty for being unavailable. There is absolutely no work-life balance here! Benefits are minimal. Beyond health insurance and possible equity, there is very little on offer. For a company at this scale and valuation, the overall compensation package does not reflect the workload or expectations placed on employees. Onboarding is nearly nonexistent. You are expected to perform at full capacity almost immediately with minimal ramp time or support, which is difficult in a remote environment. The environment is competitive in an unhealthy way — individual metrics are emphasized over team growth, which breeds distrust rather than collaboration. Last-minute decisions from leadership are the norm, particularly around major promotions and campaigns, consistently forcing late nights and rushed execution. If you thrive under extreme pressure with no safety net, this may work for you. For most people, it is not sustainable.

3
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