Lush reviews

3.7

58% would recommend to a friend

(2,209 total reviews)
avatar

Mark Constantine

54% approve of CEO

36% positive business outlook

Lush has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 2,209 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Lush 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

2K reviews
2.0
Jan 28, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent salary for managers at high turnover stores, reasonable salary for mid range, easy to attain large bonuses, autonomy over the store you manage, attracts high quality, diverse staff. Good progression from shop floor assistant to manager. Ethical buying, large charity donations, support for grass-root groups and charities.

Cons

Very little useful training for management - left alone too much - no support - unless you are deemed to be doing something wrong and then you are literally harassed. No consistent review system, no support at all during probation with the 3 month review period passing by unnoticed so you are left wondering if you have a secure job. No area manager. No training on difficult situations like dismissals and employment law or long term absence. No HR department - just people that have worked elsewhere in the company and drafted in and trained by doing free on-line courses who make you feel like you are bothering them when you ask them questions. No direction in what to do. Employment law breaches occur regularly due to lack of knowledge and go unchecked. There is an on-line library you have to refer to when you need help. The team that provide training for managers are somehow cherry picked for personality/who they are friends with rather than skill. They are out of touch and incapable of the roles given to them. There is also a certain amount of victimisation and bullying - if you are a 'face' your management skills are irrelevant but if you are not, you may as well give up as you will not progress. The managers in larger stores get paid very well but if you manage a smaller store, the pay is poor for what is expected of you. However, your bonus is so easily attainable that you can top up your salary sometimes as much as double your basic. Trainee managers and supervisors are not paid well at all for the work they do and sales assistants get over minimum wage but not the living wage. There are barely any benefits - travel season ticket and an employee support scheme but nothing else. Even the support scheme is not used to its full capacity. No support for long term ill health. They have these enormous and lavish manager meetings every 3 months - the first one I attended was in Europe. People flown in from around the world. I couldn't believe what I was seeing. It was very nice but then they say they can't pay people more money (supervisors especially) or they pull you up on spending too much on tea and coffee and biscuits for your team or having too many staff and going over budget. Yet they still pay huge bonuses. The company is all the wrong way way round. The parties must cost millions each year. Overall, a sad experience for me and I will be moving on. They are just not who they say they are.

1.0
Jul 8, 2023

Do not work at this company.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are a few people in this company who are absolute gems, they truly care about the business and about its ethics and will always try to help when they can. Lush also do a lot of genuine charity work that doesn't get talked about enough, particularly the annual Spring Prize, which gives money to fund alternatives to animal testing. 50% discount.

Cons

There are so many things wrong with Lush it's difficult to know where to start. There is a complete lack of management within the Digital business, and what management there is tends to be friends of the CEO's son, who know nothing about Lush, nothing about modern digital business, and do not care about anything beyond lining their own pockets and giving each other pats on the back. The leadership within Digital is basically one big tech bro nightmare, where one unqualified person will come up with a ludicrous idea to waste half a million. This idea will be partially construct by one of the R&D guys, afterwhich it will go out untested, unvetted, and without supporting documentation. Due to pressure from leadership these projects will often go live without any knowledge of what this means for customers, or the teams who will have to support the product going forward. Digital leadership do not care about digital ethics. There is a lot if talk, a lot of headlines, but when it comes down to the nitty-gritty of applying digital ethics, leadership do not want to know. They do not want to spend the money or the time to implement good digital ethical practices. They want to make money and make headlines, and that's it. They do not care. There is no process for escalating issues or complaints. There is no management structure. It is impossible to make a positive change due to every complaint eventually ending up on the desk of the CEO's son, against whom you cannot speak a negative word. The work environment is demoralising. Deadlines are set without any knowledge of what work actually needs to be carried out, with crunch culture being the only way to reach these deadlines. Services are turned off without any proper planning, leading to complete chaos across the business. Other services are left to rot, creating an infrastructure that is one failure away from complete collapse at all times. In general Lush also refuse to deal with interpersonnel issues, often leaving store staff to fend for themselves. There is also a clique culture in every area of the business, if you aren't in with the right people you will not have a good time at Lush. There is also bullying and discrimination in the highest levels of the business. As a result Lush is not a safe space. The pay at Lush is at times 50% that of the market average for similar roles. Bonuses were stopped in 2019 without any real explanation and have never fully returned, however, the CEO's son and his mates are allowed to spend more than half a million on a jolly to Texas. Employees are expected to work themselves into the ground for zero bonus, low wages, no accountability, no management, and no other benefits. Lush also has a toxic "we're a family" ethos. Lush is not a family, unless you are one of the CEO's family members, or a close friend, you are just a pleb to make them money. I have watched bad management run this company into the ground over the last ten years. It's sad what they have done to Lush. Do not work at this company.

1.0
Apr 29, 2024

Greedy Directors, Underpaid Staff. Not ethical to employees!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Staff discount Diversity encouraged Free tea and coffee

Cons

Despite the company making a loss and refusing to pay its support staff a bonus (let alone give them a fair salary for their role) the directors will happily pay themselves a £1million + bonus each. For a company that claims to spearhead ethics it's shocking how badly it treats it's staff, refusing to meet market rate salary and underpaying mid level roles massively. A bullying culture is known about by the people team but buried under the carpet so senior staff are protected. A toxic culture which serves only those at the top, leaving others the only choice to turn a blind eye or leave. This sadly leaves an environment led by the nepotistic leaders and their friends who will continue to be out for their own gain and profit.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 2,209 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,752 Lush reviews submitted anonymously by Lush employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Lush is right for you.