Leadership
- The leadership structure at Gymshark feels heavily focused on visibility and optics. A lot of the time, I genuinely struggle to understand what some senior leaders actually contribute operationally to the business beyond representing it publicly. From my perspective, there is a huge amount of time spent attending social events, networking, travelling, speaking at company functions, or appearing at launches and activations, while the people actually delivering the work day-to-day receive very little recognition.
It often feels like the business values perception more than contribution. The people lower down the structure who keep things moving are rarely acknowledged in the same way as those representing the brand externally.
Culture
- When I first joined Gymshark, the culture genuinely felt strong. Teams supported each other, people cared, and there was a feeling that everyone was building something together. Over time, that culture has changed significantly.
- Now, the culture feels manufactured rather than real. A huge amount of money and effort goes into creating highly polished events, internal productions, social moments, and experiences that look great online, but they don’t reflect the reality many employees experience internally.
The business is very good at creating content that makes it look like an incredible place to work, but behind that there is a growing disconnect internally. A lot of employees feel undervalued, disconnected, and exhausted.
- Leadership talk constantly about culture, but from my experience the actual day-to-day culture within the business has deteriorated massively.
Pay, Bonus & Business Priorities
- One of the biggest frustrations is the contradiction between how the business spends money and what employees are told internally.
- We constantly hear about how successful the business is financially, while at the same time going through redundancies and “restructures” every couple of years. From my understanding, there have been around three major restructures in five years, yet despite that, the business continues spending heavily on large-scale productions, overseas trips, events, and social-media-driven experiences designed to make the company look aspirational externally.
- There are regularly situations where 30-40 staff members are flown abroad for launches, activations, or events that are presented as business-critical, when in reality a lot of people attending simply do not need to be there operationally. It feels excessive, especially when employees are simultaneously being told the business needs to save money.
The same applies to athlete and influencer spending. Athletes receive huge amounts of free clothing as part of their contracts, much of which ends up being given away on social media. On top of that, events involve gifting athletes expensive products and experiences constantly. We’re talking branded tracksuits, premium apparel, shoes, AirPods Max, Apple accessories, and high-end gifts for 15-20 athletes at a time.
Meanwhile internally, employees are being restricted on how they can use their own 50% staff discount. Staff fight for bonuses, basic recognition, or even small morale boosts, while the external-facing side of the business receives endless investment.
-Performance Management & Micromanagement
Gymshark has a bonus structure linked to performance, but there is no proper performance system behind it.
Over the last three years, both old and new People & Performance teams have tried to implement performance structures, but from an employee perspective there still isn’t a clear or measurable framework that people trust. There are no consistent standards, no transparent scoring systems, and very little clarity around what genuinely leads to progression or reward.
A lot of it feels subjective and opinion-based. If you are well-liked internally or aligned with the right people, you are generally fine. If you are not, it can feel almost impossible to progress regardless of output or contribution.
This creates an environment where micromanagement becomes common because expectations are unclear from the start. Work gets heavily scrutinised, but there is no agreed framework defining success objectively. Bonuses are supposedly performance-based, yet performance itself feels based largely on perception and internal politics.
Progression
- Progression at Gymshark does not feel merit-based.
The phrase “it’s who you know, not what you know” genuinely feels accurate internally. I have seen people move sideways into different director-level roles simply to create the appearance of progression, while lower-level employees struggle for years to get development opportunities or promotions.
I have also seen situations where employees returning from long periods away from the business receive promotions while long-serving operational staff remain stuck in the same roles despite consistently delivering.
For a company that talks heavily about development and growth, there is very little meaningful investment in helping employees actually build their skillsets or progress in their careers. If anything, it feels like people stagnate.
In my opinion, Gymshark is not a strong place to work if your goal is to genuinely learn, improve your craft, and progress based on capability. It is a place where visibility, relationships, and internal perception carry far more weight than actual contribution.
Overall
- Gymshark is an incredible brand externally. The marketing, branding, events, and social presence are world class. But internally, the experience often feels very different from the image being projected publicly.
There is a growing disconnect between what the company says it is and what many employees actually experience day-to-day.
- From my perspective, the business has become far more focused on appearances, social media perception, and protecting the brand image than building a healthy internal culture that genuinely values and develops its people.
I wouldn’t recommend Gymshark to someone looking for transparency, structured progression, or a people-first working environment. The external image and the internal reality feel very far apart.