Possibility for rewarding income.....but only sometimes - Interior Design Assistant Ethan Allen Employee Review

4.0
8 May 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Quality product, good business reputation, keeping current styles, wide options for customization. If you like working pseudo-independently- it's great for that. Resources and training regularly offered. This location has incredibly supportive team and leadership.

Cons

The amount of hats you wear, and the amount of time you put into your work is not always in sync with the income. This is 100% commission, and regardless of your level of commitment, quality of work, or effort, it's very much a feast or famine situation lately.

Explore other reviews about Ethan Allen

5.0
31 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great management, experience, and work environment

Cons

I don’t have any cons

3.0
29 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's a well-known name and carries weight on a resume. That's about where it ends.

Cons

Leadership operates with little to no regard for the people actually doing the work. The company has slashed headcount while increasing workload, and salaried employees are reminded of their status as a way to justify working nights and weekends. Performance reviews and raises are virtually nonexistent, often for years at a stretch — which means staying loyal actually costs you money, since your pay loses purchasing power to inflation every year you go without an increase. Compensation is well below market for the industry and region — low enough that part-time second jobs aren't uncommon among corporate employees. Decisions come down from leadership abruptly, with no real communication or context, and middle managers are too afraid for their own jobs to push back or advocate for their teams. Office politics are constant, treatment is uneven, and advancement is reserved for a select few, so tenure and loyalty mean nothing. Systems and processes feel decades behind. Overall, it feels less like a workplace investing in people and more like an operation focused on extracting as much as possible while giving back as little as possible.

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