KIKO reviews

3.3

53% would recommend to a friend

(260 total reviews)

39% positive business outlook

KIKO has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 260 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The KIKO employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Ventas al mayoreo y al menudeo industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

260 reviews
3.0
Aug 15, 2016

Not bad

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not a bad company to work for. got some staff discount. Got to learn more about different customers and skin types.

Cons

My staff discount never got activated. I was given no product training. No other training. When the trainer came to train everyone i was told to serve instead of take part in the training. Didnt recieve any other support from manager or team. A few team members were very nasty infronte of customers. At one point a customer told me to stand up for myself and not to let people speak to me in a certain way.

avatar
KIKO Response
9y
Hello Former Employee, Thank you for your review. Recently we have distributed an anonymous employee survey to help management better support our teams. We also are reassessing our employee training and on-boarding. This will ensure that new employee experiences are of a consistent quality and more uniformly delivered. If ever you are bullied by a coworker or are being denied your employee discount, please reach out to HR directly or via the anonymous hotline so we can intervene on your behalf. KIKO USA HR
1.0
Aug 12, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Inexpensive makeup -20% discount, 40% discount on 1st of the month for select months—however, discount comes with restrictions. Later on that in cons -Frequent new launches -If you're lucky, wonderful coworkers and store manager -Their lipsticks are actually pretty bomb

Cons

Wow, where to start? I guess first off, what I want to say is, this company makes lots of promises to its employees, and then fails to deliver on them. You'll be told there's room for advancement, and if you DO manage to be "promoted" from a sales associate to a key holder, or from a key holder to a manager, do not expect a pay raise. They will expect you to do double/triple the amount of work with this "promotion" without a raise in pay or hours. Have a second job? In school part time/full time? Don't bother applying. They want complete, open availability. Even for a part time position. My personal biggest gripe is their policy on personal makeup. I've been told several times by upper management to "put on more makeup" or I'll face a write-up. I've been told that my makeup should be seen if someone is standing outside the store, and I'm at the registers. That is a huge distance, and the only way to achieve that is to pretty much don stage/drag makeup. I actually DID drag makeup one time, and was told my makeup was perfect. As someone who prefers a more natural look and feels WAY more confident and beautiful in a more natural look, this made me feel like crap, and I genuinely felt ugly. The amazing thing about makeup is that you can make it your own. Kiko wants all its employees to look like clones; primer, foundation, concealer, and powder are a MUST for every Kiko look, even if your skin is already flawless. Then you MUST use contour/bronzer and highlight AND/OR blush. Whatever you decide to use, it must be heavy enough to be visible. Heavily defined brows are a must; filled in and pretty and natural are a no-go. They constantly want you to wear false lashes. Here's the worst parts; lips and eyes, according to the Kiko Monthly Lookbook. Lips involve lip base, lipliner, and lipstick always, sometimes topped with gloss. Eyes will require 3+ shadows, plus at least one eyeliner. It wouldn't be so bad, but the lookbook pairs a very bold eye with a very bold lip. "Extended wing shape blue eyeshadow with black winged liner and bright magenta matte lip!" Not everyone can pull off that look, nor does everyone want to spend more than 30 minutes doing their makeup. Speaking on that note, however, the hypocrisy is amazing. Higher management will wear relatively simple looks (maybe a little contour/highlight, winged liner, and nude lip or the classic winged liner/red lip) that take very little time, but they will harp on you for wearing the exact same look because "you're not wearing enough makeup!" The only times they ever seemed to not say anything is if you happened to be a more mature woman rather than the 18-20 year olds they only seem to hire. If you don't look like an Instagram makeup guru, don't expect to be treated with any sort of praise or respect. They definitely play favorites. Again, the girls who looked like Instagram makeup gurus were treated WAY better than the girls who didn't, and were given more opportunities even if they haven't been working for the company as long. They have a very strict timekeeping policy; whereas most companies allow you to clock in 5-10 minutes early or 5-10 minutes late without punishment, Kiko wants you to clock in on the dot. If you have too many "early" clockings (even if it's by 2 minutes), you get written up. If you have too many "late" clockings (even if it's by 2 minutes), you get fired. There is absolutely no training; no school, no in-store training. You are pretty much shoved a skin care guide and makeup guide and told to figure it out yourself. They'll sometimes provide little tips for new launches in the weekly, but it's usually not enough to help you sell anything or help you actually know the product. If you reach out to the "trainers" for more information, you'll be told "it's in the weekly." Understandably, they want you to wear new collection/launches, but they do NOT provide gratis which is very highly unusual for a makeup company. And with a limited number of times you can use your employee discount, it's bull. Yes, that's right. You have a set number of times you can use your discount in a year. I have never heard of a restriction on an employee discount, yet Kiko has one. The return policy has been a constant pain. I understand in Italy, there is a zero returns policy. That is fine, but the American market is so different. Americans want to be able to return things they've bought if they don't like it/don't want it. Because of Kiko's return policy (30 days to return and unused product with receipt), I've had customers yell at me, threaten me, and assault me when I tell them: 1) I can't take back their used products, 2) It's been over 30 days, so I can't take it back, or 3) They don't have their receipt, so I can't process their return. Here's the kicker; upper management will get angry with you because that customer then leaves a very nasty review, and will tell you to "just take the return and make the customer happy," all while giving the customer a gift card. However, if you "just take the return" too many times, upper management will get angry with you and tell you "you MUST uphold the return policy!" There is no winning. Follow store policy, get yelled at. Make the customer happy, get yelled at. Worst of all is how upper management treats everyone like they're stupid. They treat the store management like they're stupid, they treat the employees like they're stupid. They make fake profiles of the employees (saying they worked for X companies when they didn't) and tell store management to fill in appointment books with fake appointments, all to present to the owners when they do store visits to make their stores appear far more successful than they are. They lie and will adjust your clockings to avoid paying you for the time you actually worked if you indeed had to work overtime. There is no support at all. Overall, there's a reason turnover rate is so high. This is a terrible company to work with. They do not care about their employee's individuality, they make false promises, they play favorites, and worst of all, they're extremely contradictory. You never feel like you have any support, and are always made to feel like you're to blame when things go wrong. Indeed, we were constantly told "if you don't improve, we'll replace your entire team." Threatening your employees is not how you keep them working for you.

avatar
KIKO Response
9y
Hello former Keyholder, Thank you for taking the time to write such a thorough review of your experience at KIKO USA. You have raised several important things that we as company are currently working to address. If you ever witness someone falsifying personal performance metrics, playing favorites or inconsistently enforcing company policies I encourage you to reach out to our HR hotline. There you can anonymously communicate these issues and we can intervene on your behalf. KIKO USA HR
1.0
Aug 5, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- if you're working with a nice team of girls/guys in your particular store you'll get by ok - 20% employee discount - you aren't required to do a scary make over style interview - no animal testing

Cons

- The 20% employee discount you get given is rationed, you'll have a certain amount per 'term'. even so, when new collections are released (all the time) you're expected to wear them daily.... but you're not paid to come in early to put them on therefore your only option is to purchase (or come in early to apply with no extra pay), which makes the discount feel very minimal. - During my time at Kiko I've experienced lots of different types of area manager/product trainer (I use that term lightly because in over a year I've never even met / seen the product trainer. So that means little to no detailed training for me) therefore, when, as a sales assistant on 0 commission, I am asked to push a certain product so we can sell a certain percentage, I am improvising off of a badly translated information booklet and no demos... this makes it so hard to get excited about the products and know them in depth and consequently very hard to push. Funny thing is when the managers do eventually bother to come around they quiz you on the products and you'll get sarcastic responses and dirty, condescending looks if you don't know the answer. It's very rare in this company for the management teams to accept responsibility for anything that goes wrong. Including the lack of product knowledge. - Nobody knows what they're doing!!!! If we ever have management in we are constantly told 10 different, contradictory pointers e.g. "sit more people down for applications", "you're sitting too many people down", "sit people down for at least 20 minutes to properly up sell a product", "only sit people down for 5 minutes", "don't do a full face on someone who doesn't look like they're going to purchase" - (how do I judge that?), "you should have at least 2 appointments booked in per day", establish your brand and what you want out of it before you even open your stores, it's that simple! - Brand is not on trend, they have begun paying bloggers large sums of money to promote collections which aren't selling well / have been made lazily and with apparently no knowledge of the current market/ demand. - Lots of the area managers have a massive complex whereby they seem to think acting like a hard faced, pushy, inhuman woman will get the results they 'need' to impress whoever's above them. If Kiko as a brand were compassionate, understanding, motivating, and had any exciting ideas whatsoever, they would achieve great things. Unfortunately due to recent changes in the company anyone with an ounce of personality has been removed. (or paid off) - Area managers have been known to say things such as 'i wish i could shoot everyone who works in your store' (with regards to us not selling enough of the required collection despite working very hard each day), 'you're not going to cry are you?' (in response to an employee who's going through an extremely hard time and said she was struggling with the pressure) I'm utterly disgusted by the way this company has gone from a positive, nurturing environment into a hard selling, nasty, sneaky, backstabbing place to work. The women who I worked with in my team were all brilliant, confident, hard working, wonderful people with a passion for the brand. Nearly all of us have been driven to tears by the lack of respect shown from high up in the company and people's confidence and self esteem have been ripped out from underneath them. Good luck to the brand in the future, I hope you go back to where you started out.

Viewing 247 - 249 of 260 Reviews

Glassdoor has 662 KIKO reviews submitted anonymously by KIKO employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if KIKO is right for you.