Not worth what it pays, but it’s easy if you let it be easy. - Anonymous employee Tory Burch Employee Review

3.0
13 Jun 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pays more than minimum wage. Full time employees get 10 days paid vacation and a handful of sick days every year.

Cons

Company structure is incredibly siloed with very poor communication between corporate org and store management. Marketing seems to always be weeks behind new product rollouts and regularly pushes digital campaigns for items that are almost entirely sold out leading to frustrated customers. Corporate struggles with inventory management and reporting basics. Very limited as to when you can take vacation days. Blackout days for vacation start in mid September and last to the end of January for most stores. Vacation days do not roll over and are not paid out if unused by end of year. Over all the impression is that the company was set up to be very hands-on from corporate management and is now to large to fulfill that goal. There are incredibly manual processes across the entire organization that should not exist in a company this large.

Explore other reviews about Tory Burch

5.0
9 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company and great incentives. This company truly cares for its employees and makes the work enjoyable.

Cons

The need to satisfy unpleasant customers.

2.0
5 Jun 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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