Great part time during the semester - Retail Sales Associate J. Crew Employee Review

4.0
31 Aug 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Hours did not interfere with my school and studies. - Employee discount is amazing - A free outfit for work on the first day - Great coworkers when permitted to speak with each other

Cons

- Holiday is fun because it is busy but after that it's slow and time moves very slowly. - Some managers can be mean and rude to part time employees. - The stylist can be jerks since they make the most money often they steal sales

Explore other reviews about J. Crew

5.0
13 Nov 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

great people, good benefits, flexible schedule

Cons

slow, not a lot of hours

3.0
19 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The talent at J.Crew is genuinely exceptional. Direct management and leadership are some of the most capable, committed people I’ve worked with in this industry. They advocate fiercely for their teams and have gone out of their way to create an environment where people feel valued and protected. The brand itself still has real creative soul, and the cross-functional collaboration among people who truly care about the product is something you don’t find everywhere. Many employees have given 10+ years to this company because of exactly that.

Cons

The disconnect between the people running the day-to-day business and the PE ownership making strategic decisions has become impossible to ignore. Policies are being handed down that disproportionately impact specific employee populations (particularly long-tenured corporate associates who built their lives around arrangements the company itself championed not long ago). The most recent example: a return-to-office mandate requiring corporate associates to come in three days a week beginning September 2026 (with four days explicitly signaled as the near-term direction). This comes after years of remote and hybrid work and landing on employees who have built childcare, housing, and their entire daily lives around the flexibility this company once proudly promoted. Leadership once publicly praised hybrid work and work-life balance as cultural pillars, with initiatives like year round half-day Fridays framed as genuine investments in employee wellbeing. The reversal has arrived with no such warmth.. just policy language and HR directives. What’s notably absent is transparency. The stated rationale around culture and collaboration doesn’t hold up to scrutiny and many employees are quietly connecting dots between these policy shifts and a financial picture that points more toward managed attrition than genuine culture-building. When the people closest to you at work are doing everything they can to protect you but are ultimately powerless against board-level directives, that tells you everything about where decisions are actually being made

3
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