sub par proudcts at a another typical fashion company - Anonymous employee Tory Burch Employee Review

2.0
Nov 13, 2013
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Summer fridays are nice, BUT that is only if you can finish up your work on time to enjoy them -Employee discount & employee-only sample sales -[Most] coworkers are very nice and friendly, albiet they are all workaholics

Cons

-Stressful physical work environment. There seems to be no reasoning behind the way teams are physically grouped together. You have sales people on top of seamstresses who's desks are all in front of a PR director's office. The office is already kind of loud and crazy, and its hard enough to focus and get your work done. There also aren't enough large rooms for meetings. A lot of time is wasted everyday either waiting for a room to open up or searching for a open room (or space) to hold a meeting. -On the topic of meetings, there are so many pointless meetings... Meetings to discuss or revise the flood of 'new' processes or onboarding people who constantly need things re-explained to them in person. You can sit in meetings that aren't even relevant to you all day. By the time its 6pm, you'll finally have time to do your own work. -The company grew way too fast for its own good. The company is still operating as a small company, leaving its understaffed employees to 'wear multiple hats' and take on responsibilities that are not in their job descriptions. Important teams and overworked assistants are not getting enough support. Its one thing to 'earn your due' and climb the ladder. But so many heavy responsibilities are laid onto assistants & associates who do not have enough experience or time to manage everything. So often, things fall through the cracks b/c there is not enough people to handle all the crazy things that happen. Instead, the company focuses its time and resources hiring higher level executives who may or may not have the knowledge or experience running and growing a fashion company. The company seems to like hiring upper management from outside industries who try to run the business and implement strategies as if it is a tech giant. Hello - you're trying to sell clothes and shoes and wallets, not iphones and laptops. Of course, a lot of these strategies fail for this reason, which means more work for everyone when things have to be changed over night. -Things only ever seem to happen if it is an emergency, and everything needs to be done so urgently. People only seem to react to changes in the business rather than implementing smart strategies that can really produce long-term growth. -Working at Tory was like working in the dark ages, where everything is so disorganized and no one knows the answer for anything. Since the company grew so fast, and has not properly invested the resources needed to establish the necessary systems to support such a large fashion company. Instead, everything is tracked and done in excel. So much time and energy is wasted in creating manual reports and manually updating multiple outdated systems.

Explore other reviews about Tory Burch

5.0
Jan 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Store Manager is very supportive!

Cons

Other management and staff are almost in a clique

2.0
Jun 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• Strong brand recognition and a loyal customer base. • Employee discount and sample sales are excellent perks. • Talented and hardworking teams across many functions.

Cons

• Work-life balance is extremely challenging, particularly at the leadership level. Long hours and constant availability are often expected rather than the exception. • The culture can feel transactional and driven by a "got you" mentality rather than collaboration, coaching, and development. • Favoritism and nepotism are noticeable and can create inconsistent standards across teams and individuals. • Leadership accountability is lacking. Expectations are often high, but accountability is not always applied equally across the organization. • Decision-making can feel political, with perception carrying more weight than actual performance or results. • There is a significant gap between the company's external messaging and the internal employee experience. While the brand publicly champions women and female empowerment, many employees may find that the internal culture does not consistently reflect those values in practice. • Transparency, integrity, and trust can be lacking, which contributes to an environment where employees may feel unsupported or undervalued.

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