Lush Reviews

3.7

58% would recommend to a friend

(2,210 total reviews)
avatar

Mark Constantine

52% approve of CEO

36% positive business outlook

Lush has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 2,210 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 Retail and wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
8 Mar 2020

no support

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

nice 50% discount, good co-workers

Cons

Lush as a company is seeing a huge downfall in sales, unfortunately it is the lowest employees that cop the negative affects of that. I worked there for ten years and saw product quality take a nosedive while prices almost doubled for many products. When people don't buy the products sales assistants have their bonuses taken away and are rode into the ground with pressure to be SUPER pushy with sales. Consistent feedback is that customer's don't want to be accosted when they come through the door but management refuse to budge on that sales technique. One of the only chains i know of that won't hire area managers so whoever is in charge of the store you work in may or may not run it like a dictator and you have nowhere and nobody to got to. I've worked in 3 different stores and the bullying has ranged from some managers giving all Sunday shifts to their friends to actual severe psychological abuse. One manager had her entire staff report to fair work some saying they need to go on stress leave and head office gave her promotional opportunities and just moved her to a different store where the abuse continued with other employees. Head office is like mean girls- if you're in with them you're in if you don't fit the mould don't even think about it- you'll be bullied out in no time. The stress you endure for a simple retail job isn't worth it. Oh another thing they under paid staff wages to the tune of 2 million dollars and we're still waiting for our backpayment 2 years later- not very ethical.

1.0
19 Oct 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working autonomously, hiring your own staff and setting a good example in store for your staff.

Cons

It's like working for a cult, nothing is ever good enough, budgets will be increased if you look like you're going to hit target to avoid paying bonus', You will be subjected to gas lighting, ghosted if you make a complaint and the HR dept is the biggest joke. There is no room for progression unless you're part of the 'in crowd' and favoured by retail support. The company claims to be ethical but is in fact one of the most corrupt companies that hides behind No Animal Testing & being 83% Vegan.. They unfortunately don't practice what they preach and unfortunately nepotism is alive and well within this company. I'd highly recommend thinking twice before agreeing to work for this company, they will bleed you dry emotionally and physically and hand hang you up as a trophy claiming you are the one at fault.. Its very sad considering it attracts some many amazing people to the business and they just leave disgruntled and unhappy.. It's actually really sad.

1.0
24 Oct 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good Discount, Knowledgable team, arguably good morals in terms of sustainability and supporting grassroot charities

Cons

Where do I even begin. Firstly don’t bother if you are external to the company heading into a management position. They provided me with no foundational training in the mere basics of the role. They threw me in with little to no support, I had to devise my own goals so I had structure and I submitted them to their retail support area (I did/didn’t have a boss just a big group of people who were in charge... make sense of that wacky scenario, anyway I digress) I got no response on my goals until midway through my probation when I was accused of underperforming (the store has never been more profitable since I arrived...) they raised my mental health in the discussion basically wanting me to quit as it would be to much, I refused and they then accused me of not being a culture fit for the company. They had this dumb idea of “frank and honest” discussion instead of proffesional and structured, and blamed the probationary meeting snafu on that, all I got was an apology but not an investigation into the matter or a mediation between me and the individual. This probation meeting was verging on unlawful and was a fine line towards discrimination for the mere fact that I suffer ADHD and Anxiety related disorders (apparently those things are limiting, which is a load of crap and I have been a successful manager at other companies and made a transition to one that is a dud) I then went on to find out they wanted to conduct a staff survey on my suitability for the role, the staff had been difficult from day one and considered me to be an enemy as I wasn’t from within Lush and they were toxic as hell, but hey I didn’t let that get to me at first until I realised they will make or break my ability to still be employed and they used that to their advantage. I was basically a servant in my own store to them and it was awful. As some backstory the team hated their previous manager and used the supervisors long standing with the company to treat her like dirt and undermined her then attempted to do the same to me, and hey it worked because retail support would not assist in any way in helping put an end to this. They simply kept saying “it’s a soft skill, we can’t help you”, I mean they could have cleaned up before I arrived and set boundaries and I don’t know, put effort into it. Given this I decided to leave. Some more back story, until 2017 the company didn’t have a established HR department, nor did they have a safety officer, the stores are unsafe and basically a death trap, I have heard of awful injuries from long standing staff and horrible breaches of the fair work act from retail support and management on a whole and witnessing this was just horrible, I tried my hardest to raise these issues with head office and it was not acted on, it’s only a matter of time until something serious happens and then they will be guilty of not listening. They have one safety officer over looking 45+ stores and manufacturing... like one person dealing with all that, and if we did have safety reps, I have no clue who they were. I had no safety training when I arrived nor did my team, I had to google safety modules for retail and train them myself. This company has the potential to be a utopia for all retail companies to look towards, but instead they are stuck in a period of transition and don’t seem to be rushing to make the company a better place for external managers to enter into, but hey... bathbombs... yay... I guess

Viewing 1 - 3 of 2,210 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,753 Lush reviews submitted anonymously by Lush employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Lush is right for you.