Pros
Working at Theory will make you appreciate any other employer beyond measure
Cons
This is a company that expects luxury-level results from a bare-bones operation — and then acts surprised when stores can’t meet their expectations. They care more about perfecting the mission statement (revised and re-rolled out every year) than providing stores with the tools they need to provide customers with high level service.
Stores are chronically understaffed, often running on solo coverage, while still being held accountable for insane amounts of trackers, checklists and compliance. Turnover is high (predictably), yet remains a core metric. The system creates the problem and then they evaluate you against it.
“Do more with less” isn’t just a phrase here — it’s quite literally the business model. What’s labeled as “support” is largely performative: store visits that don’t change conditions, schedule adjustments that don’t add labor, and deadline extensions that keep the pressure but shift the timeline. You’re not given more resources — you’re given more ways to absorb the same problem.
There are also major operational disconnects that directly impact results. Inventory allocation often ignores basic retail logic — like the northeast being OOS on outerwear in winter while the product sits in warmer markets. These issues are acknowledged, repeatedly raised, and then dismissed as “unchangeable,” while expectations somehow remain unchanged.
Leadership is where this becomes most difficult. There is a consistent pattern of “do as I say, not as I do,” along with favoritism and an inability to accurately identify or develop talent. Feedback is heard, labeled as “good stuff,” and then goes nowhere. Over time, this starts to feel like a form of gaslighting.
Getting the correct product for your store feels like an excerpt from the hunger games. If you aren’t a flagship door- forget it- you don’t even exist to them.
The stores are afraid to speak on calls or post a question in the teams chat- corporate partners will snap at you for pretty much anything.
This company is toxic and abusive. They make everyone read the books of Mr. Yanai, FR philosophy, notes on becoming a business leader etc- but none of his fundamental values are displayed by “leadership” at theory.
Executives expect everyone to be able to speak about business from “tops down” but what they should be focused on is ACCOUNTABILITY FROM TOPS DOWN.
Being out of touch with reality is putting it mildly.