Dôen Reviews

3.3

47% would recommend to a friend

(29 total reviews)

54% positive business outlook

Dôen has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 29 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Dôen employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail and wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

29 reviews
1.0
4 Apr 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I met some of the smartest, kindest, most talented and hard-working people I've ever known while working at Dôen. Most of them eventually quit because they were treated so poorly, but I'm glad to have had the opportunity to meet some truly inspiring and excellent people while I was there!

Cons

Working at Dôen was one of the most disappointing, disillusioning experiences of my life. The swerve in values and treatment from the company's first year to my last day was so drastic in terms of quality that it's clear that everything I was presented with at the beginning - the familial friendliness and appreciation that drew me in, the we're all in this together mentality that spurred such great and dedicated work - was all a facade as easily shattered as glass once the company found success and the owners started believing that this made them better and smarter than everyone around them. Everything about Dôen since then has been little more than a performance. It's true that employees are charged to attend the holiday parties and were not offered health insurance for the first two years of the company. Holiday party ticket proceeds go to Planned Parenthood. The first year, employees paid $50 a ticket to attend the holiday party - a party that Dôen then touted all over social media as an event resulting in over $10k being contributed to PP and the cause of women's health, while they did not bother to offer healthcare to their very own staff of mostly women. The designer trumpeted how great it was that she now had a business where a woman could take more than the standard maternity leave and would not have to return to work right away; she neglected to mention that this only ever applied to her, and that, when Dôen finally developed a parental leave policy, it would consist of only the state minimum they were legally compelled to offer. While the C-suite jets off to faraway locations for their beautiful shoots on the company dime (bringing their entire families along each time), and the CEO talks about how vacations are soooo important, new hires are offered a pitifully substandard five days vacation in their first year. Any early intent to create a better company than the ones they previously worked for was abandoned with head-spinning swiftness by the owners as soon as they realized they would have to care about anyone but themselves; so, indeed, they have created a company that has only ever been better for them. They desire complete control over everything down to the most minuscule and pointless detail while also acting as if their jobs are their very last priority in terms of how often they need to come in to the office or show respect for other peoples' time by showing up for meetings that they chose to schedule. The designer's insistence on complete control has resulted in everything always being behind schedule due to the expectation that her every whim will be catered to, to the great detriment of the staff and the customers who pay at the time they pre-order for items that may not be delivered for months. The higher-ups absolute unwillingness to listen to any suggestion for improvement has resulted in a culture where only yes-women succeed; where standing up for yourself, the customers, or just what's right will only result in your career advancement grinding to a halt. The owners are quick to jump to conclusions on an employee's performance when their assessments are based on their own failures of memory or communication (accusing you of not doing something they asked, only to - maybe - back down once you prove they never asked, or that they dropped the ball on responding), and prefer to assume the worst of an employee rather than bothering to treat employees like humans and ask for clarification. This aggressive, accusatory style of management benefits nobody, and yet they persist with it despite being proven wrong in their assumptions again and again. Rest assured that you have heard about every good thing that Dôen has ever done; this is because the owners do good not for its own sake, but so that they can raise themselves up as Instagrammable paragons of engagement-seeking virtue. Concerns about the lack of racial and size diversity on the site were brought to the owners' attention as early as the brand's first season in 2016. After years of inaction on that front, they received an honest, bravely written letter from an employee sharing years of customer concerns, and offering a list of suggestions on how to improve. This was basically shrugged off, and they continued to hire only white, size XS models until there was a great customer outcry later that year. They proceeded to then take every single suggestion from that letter; this was not only done without a thank you, but that employee received a negative, confrontational end of year review and was never promoted thereafter despite dedicated, exemplary work. Sadly, that is generally the result at Dôen when you speak up. Management is allowed to speak to employees in rude, condescending ways, and bringing concerns to HR will often result in HR justifying and supporting said treatment in an attempt to make you believe you deserved it. The gaslighting runs deep here, in an atmosphere where an employee may be reprimanded by HR for expressing that they feel bullied, while the person who bullied them will not bother to look inward and improve their own behavior. In fact, as an employee you may be expected to change who you are as a person entirely, with no support; while you may achieve personal change as the result of the difficult work of growth, this will never, ever be acknowledged by those who expected it from you - and they will never bother to change themselves, even when confronted with evidence of how they've hurt people. Should you ever desire an apology for poor behavior from higher-ups, know that you will only receive an "I'm sorry you feel that way" or similar phrasing that removes their own accountability entirely. Unfortunately, this is also how they approach customer relations, as if the hurt they have caused is something you manifested out of thin air unrelated to their harmful actions. Genuinely ethical companies have no reason to demand employee confidentiality when it comes to the salaries they offer, as they should be proud to compensate employees well and have management share salary rates freely to let employees know that they and their coworkers are being paid fairly. That said, please note that on the subject of salary I am referring only to my own experience. After several years in this toxic environment, things got much worse with the dawn of COVID-19 as my salary was cut; my department was forced to work with drastically reduced staff, taking on additional duties I was never thanked or compensated for, and I was taken wild advantage of as I and others worked from home on days that stretched to up to fifteen hours long. Upper management expected the same amount of hours they worked from me despite what must have been a dramatic difference in pay based on my knowledge of industry standard rates in LA County and my own deeply substandard salary of $60k/year after five years at the company doing the work of (at minimum) two people, including duties acknowledged by supervisors as management-level work that I was tasked with for years without ever having Manager in my title. Upper management consistently modeled an expectation of incredibly long days with no offer of comp days/hours, and perpetuated a stressful atmosphere where everything is deemed as urgent as a house fire despite this being a company that sells ruffled dresses. My salary cut continued through the end of 2020, long after other companies had ended theirs, with no promise of ever returning the back pay I was owed. Those in the greatest positions of power use it only to get away with lying to the people that find their (many) mistakes, while never acknowledging the skill and talent of the people working themselves to burnout for them. Hierarchies are invented and dismantled on the spot to serve the company's needs, then treated as immutable despite literally all of this being made up. Upper management will make themselves into liars just to get revenge on direct reports who stood up to them. It isn't worth it. No matter how poorly they treat the people who work so hard for them, they don't deserve their punishing schedules either - everybody deserves better than this, and it's a sad and pitiful thing to watch the mistreated go on to treat those beneath them even worse. Dôen could have been a great place to work. It's a profound shame that that possibility has been sacrificed in the name of profits and an unbelievable amount of ego.

1.0
9 Sept 2020

Extremely disappointing.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I liked my coworkers on my team.

Cons

I was not surprised to see there were similar experiences shared here-- but it did help me come forward and share my negative experience. I was truly so excited to start this position. One of the reasons I took this job was because I really believed it would be a respectful, women supporting women, exciting environment that would foster growth. Quite the opposite. The owners are extremely bias, judgmental, and frankly— mean. It is all true what the other reviewers wrote. If you don't fit the club you're out. It is a true fashion-bullying company. They will never give you a chance because they won't train you. If you do one wrong thing (and you will because you will not be trained), you’re out. To be honest I was just so disappointed in the owners. I really believed the Vogue stories, the press, blah blah— but it was a horrible experience and it took me a while to realize it was never me, it was them.

2.0
18 Sept 2023

Disillusion, Disappointment

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Like so many, I was drawn to the company by its outwardly expressed value system, its alleged diversity, and impeccable design. These recruited some of the most wonderful people I have ever met, many of whom I now call close friends. These colleagues are passionate, wildly creative, and kind beyond measure. The company risks losing so many of them if they don’t make necessary improvements. My experience with the company began with a close-knit, unwaveringly supportive team, lead by a manager that was wholly set on advocating for her employees, supporting them whenever humanly possible, and even going so far as to continuously seek opportunities for growth for each one of us. I really cannot stress how refreshing and revitalizing it was to work with such a compassionate manager; it inspired me and solidified a real pride in working for DÔEN. As for the clothing, it is on the whole very beautiful––if inaccessible to certain body types. Don’t know if will ever be more inclusive in sizing but other brands do far less.

Cons

Predominantly white decision-makers. Proves tiresome when trying to explain when something could be more inclusive, accessible, diverse. Imagine fighting tooth and nail to ask for less gendered language in order to adopt a more inclusive brand identity. Or being asked to work on a list of potential nonwhite creators only to hear that they won’t be using it because they already do so much. Cliques in the office: can remember feeling relieved when certain employees signed on, promising to lessen the feeling of “working in silos” and promote teamwork between departments. What happened instead what those individuals joined the very cliques that made parts of the office unapproachable. Being asked to be included in meetings and instead being met with an almost hostile “what for?” Did little to invoke feelings of teamwork, to be sure. On toxicity and accountability: the Director of Editorial Content has harbored a toxic/disrespectful (and, frankly, just mean) attitude to anyone outside their team and founders––unless of course they need something from you. How many times have people gone to HR, to their managers, to the People Manager, seeking resolution for the hurtful ways they were spoken to by this individual? The last time I spoke with a manager I was told that because it was them, nothing could be done. Was also told that this person does not accept feedback. What self-proclaiming ~women supporting women~ brand endorses this kind of behavior?

Viewing 1 - 3 of 29 Reviews

Glassdoor has 34 Dôen reviews submitted anonymously by Dôen employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Dôen is right for you.