Crazy Town, USA - Anonymous employee Huckberry Employee Review

2.0
1 Oct 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some genuine coworkers, most seem to get along inside and outside the office.

Cons

Really high expectations, long hours, little pay. No thanks. There’s a few leaders on the product side that should be let go - they’ve been grandfathered into leadership roles because of their time with the company and they don’t give clarity to the team, don’t act like leaders and keep raising the bar for expectations without giving the teams time and resources to achieve the tasks. You’re set up to fail.

Explore other reviews about Huckberry

5.0
16 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-remote flexibility -great staff/management -simple workload -tons of perks!

Cons

-pay isn’t the best, but still worth it.

5.0
11 Mar 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I came to Huckberry really excited to join the team but if I'm being honest, I was a little skeptical that any company could live up to its own story. A lot of brands talk about culture and authenticity. Huckberry actually lives it. A few months in, and I can say without hesitation: this place is the real deal. What struck me most, and what I wasn't fully expecting, is how engaged and accessible everyone is, including the founders. This isn't a company where leadership is tucked away behind layers of process and politics. The founders and leaders are genuinely present, approachable, and clearly invested in both the brand and the people building it. That tone at the top matters more than most companies realize — and it filters through everything here. What also sets Huckberry apart is the collaborative spirit across the team. People here actually want to work together and there's a genuine sense that everyone is pulling in the same direction. It doesn't feel competitive in the wrong ways — it feels additive. If you're looking for a company that treats its people like adults, has ownership that actually shows up, fosters real collaboration, and is doing something genuinely differentiated in the market — Huckberry deserves a serious look.

Cons

The collaborative culture is genuinely one of Huckberry's strengths — but at times it can tip into over-involvement, where people are present in conversations and decisions that don't necessarily require them. That tendency also shows up in the meeting culture, where the same topics can get revisited across multiple sessions without always reaching a clear conclusion. For those who prefer sharp ownership and decisive momentum, that can occasionally slow things down.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All