Do not work here!!! - Anonymous Brilliant Earth Employee Review

1.0
16 Sept 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Mission and events for employees.

Cons

Chaotic and noisy work environment. Things go missing (diamonds and rings) and it is hard to find a manager when you need them. Inappropriate work relationships. This is not a nurturing environment. Do not think you will get proper training to prepare you for your position, you must learn everything on your own.

Explore other reviews about Brilliant Earth

5.0
8 Jul 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Brilliant Earth I feel truly cares about you as an individual. Great work life balance. Good benefits. The people you work with are very supportive.

Cons

I do not have any cons so far.

1.0
8 Jul 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits Bonus “opportunities” Jewelry Discount

Cons

Complete mismanagement from the top down. The company has aggressively expanded its showroom footprint over the past five years despite many locations struggling to generate meaningful profits. Instead of fixing operational issues, leadership continues opening new stores while the business and stock price have steadily declined. Product quality has noticeably deteriorated over the years. Precision, craftsmanship, and consistency are nowhere near what they once were. Manufacturing has largely been outsourced to third-party vendors, primarily in India, yet the company continues to market itself as a premium luxury brand. The company’s values have also become increasingly performative. It promotes a “Beyond Conflict Free” mission while sourcing diamonds from Angola under the justification that the country is “on the pathway.” At the same time, leadership seems more focused on replacing human expertise with AI wherever possible than investing in employees or improving the customer experience. Sales expectations are completely detached from reality. Sales Consultants are expected to hit quarterly targets as high as $330,000, and falling below 100% of quota can lead to disciplinary action regardless of market conditions, inventory shortages, or showroom traffic. Management roles are equally unsustainable. Managers are expected to be administrators, salespeople, recruiters, trainers, conflict mediators, HR partners, coaches, and upward managers—all simultaneously—without the staffing or support needed to succeed. The workload is excessive, accountability flows only downward, and leadership consistently prioritizes unrealistic growth metrics over employee well-being or operational excellence.

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