Higher Growth Means Additional Stress and Exhaustion for All Employees. - Anonymous employee KITSCH Employee Review

1.0
Aug 14, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

As an employee, you will get plenty of project exposure at this workplace. It can be a good thing for some people.

Cons

The company is chasing growth quickly. The leadership isn't doing well in keeping everyone in the loop. As a result, most employees feel left out. The amount of stress an employee has to endure has also risen considerably. Employees' work-life balance has become poor, and many can't handle the insane pressure. For them, the only way to avoid the terrible pressure is to quit. So, they do. Things would be different if the upper management adopted changes in a better manner.

Explore other reviews about KITSCH

5.0
Apr 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working at KITSCH has been a great experience. The company has a strong brand identity and a creative, fast-paced environment that keeps things exciting. It’s a great place to learn and grow, especially if you’re interested in beauty and lifestyle products.

Cons

No cons. There’s a positive culture where employees feel valued and motivated to contribute.

1.0
May 24, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good experience to have on a resume if you can manage a high-stress environment, but generally unsustainable for the long term.

Cons

Toxic Leadership Dynamics: The company is run by a married executive team whose personal conflicts frequently spill into professional meetings, creating an unstable and uncomfortable working environment. Poor Governance & Micromanagement: Financial management and operations are handled poorly, with management relying heavily on micromanagement, snide communication, and an insincere HR department that fails to support staff. High Turnover & Burnout: The corporate culture relies on burning out employees and replacing them within a year. There is a distinct, aggressive shift in how employees are treated once they give notice or are targeted for departure. Compromised Workplace Culture: To succeed, employees are expected to assimilate into a toxic, highly political hierarchy. True employee well-being is entirely disregarded in favor of profit margins, despite leadership publicizing a contrary, people-first image. Undercompensation: Compensation is significantly below market rate for the workload and emotional toll expected.

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