L'Occitane reviews

3.3

47% would recommend to a friend

(1,111 total reviews)
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Reinold Geiger

78% approve of CEO

43% positive business outlook

L'Occitane has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 1,111 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The L'Occitane 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

1K reviews
4.0
Dec 6, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-The pay is competitive for the current retail market. -The brand is easy to sell because L'Occitane makes quality products and have created long-standing brand loyalty like nothing I've seen before. Most clients I have come into contact with have either been shopping for years (many times they were first acquainted with the company in France) or have recently been gifted a L'Occitane product and were very pleased with the results. That speaks volumes. -Another thing that makes L'Occitane easy to sell? The fact that they are fair trade and that they make it a priority to employ those with disabilities! I feel good about selling a quality product, and that the company I work for cares about the people who help produce their products. -When I first on-boarded with L'Occitane, I had quite a bit of retail experience, but no skincare experience. My manager at the time had me attend a two day class session, which I found very beneficial. My travel expenses to the class were paid for, and each day of the class I received a very nice lunch. I learned a lot about skincare, a lot about the company, met other local sales associates, and learned some sales techniques that I hadn't tried yet. I didn't feel like my time was wasted, and I saw direct results in my subsequent sales. -My manager at the time was a pleasure to work for. Very inspiring, non micro-managing. Sad she left for a different position. -Our district manager is very nice and is a reasonable person. Her feedback is always constructive, and she's a people person. She's perfect for the job. -Some have complained about the Gratis. I think the Gratis has been pretty generous in the 6 months I have worked for the company. I don't know if Gratis is different region-wise. For us, it's been solidly good.

Cons

-Working by yourself. I got used to it after a while, but I find that when we get a wave of foot traffic, sales are lost even when I try and do my best to sell to multiple people at a time. I would love for our store to consistently keep high sales! I also feel safer in the mall having a co-worker with me. -I've been working over 32 hours pretty consistently (L'Occitane's full time is 32 hours)...and yet at 26 years old, I'm still considered a part time employee with no benefits. ?? -I'm not sure about our current store manager. She's a great sales person, but as a manager it remains to be seen. -In continuing with the working by yourself issue...it's unfair to market "free mini-facials" around to customers without appointment when you have just one employee on the floor. You could be very slow, but the minute someone else walks through the door you basically have to stop doing the facial and sell to other customers as well. Facials require your undivided attention for the service to be most effective for sales. I shy away from throwing around the idea of facials unless I know we're dead slow, or there are at least two of us on the floor. -Basically they really should have two people on the clock most, if not all the time. -The company has recently been pushing "lease-lining", that is, standing at the entrance and handing out samples during periods of low traffic. Sometimes this works, and gets people into the store, and sometimes it doesn't. The problem I see, is that you look like an annoying kiosk person. I get a lot of people turning down samples (they're free...who wouldn't want a FREE sample?!) but it's because they don't want to be harassed. That's not our aim, but it is what people have been conditioned to expect when they see that sort of thing. So sometimes I think lease lining has the opposite of the intended affect. I guess they figure you lose some, you win some. -I keep seeing the software issue brought up on here. It's true, the computers are slow and not only that, the computers have quite a few issues. If there is one thing I'd tell corporate to get right on...it's software. Not only does it make processing sales slower at times, which is annoying for the customer, but if you're the only one in the store (which is quite often) then it's inevitable that sales will be lost. As a L'Occitane employee, you are trained to multi-task and sell to multiple people at a time. BUT, there's only so much you can do when there is a computer issue. It takes your undivided attention to process a sale in a timely manner so that you have a customer who isn't frustrated.

2.0
Nov 19, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great product - Involved in various charitable pursuits (though somewhat vague as to how much) - Environmentally conscious - Cool sales associates - Relatively manageable dress code - Tons of samples - Great employee discount

Cons

- Unrealistic sales goals - Demoralizing, clueless management (the product and their titles) - Trained to twist the arm of the customer to buy and creating low return customer rate - On-call, especially if they're trying to get rid of you and give you no shifts - Having to sell in a robotic, formulaic way that values perkiness over knowledge or overall rapport with customers - Told to lie to customers about how natural everything is (there are still parabens and other manufactured preservatives in various products) as well as "not testing on animals" (China requires every beauty product to be tested on animals, having supplies shipped to a third party is still participating in animal testing whether company owned or not.) - Group sales, but places significant value in individual sales goals that can't be tracked due to sales floor zoning - Customers who will fight tooth and nail for samples and never buy anything - Non-incentive incentives - Registers that regularly freeze and shut down which will make customers storm out before finishing the transaction - For a company all about environmental concerns, have never seen one recycling bin in these stores - Spend a large percentage of time teaching people how to pronounce the name or fending off "Comment allez-vous?"

Viewing 1045 - 1047 of 1,111 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,984 L'Occitane reviews submitted anonymously by L'Occitane employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if L'Occitane is right for you.