Pros
you can get 30% off things that are already cheap with the employee discount (even things $1.90 are eligible for an additional 30% off), so that's nice ... That's about it though
Cons
UNIQLO culture normalized the 18 hour work day. The direction from upper management was "if you can work a 6th day... you should" (yes, that is an actual quote from one of the Chief Officers. At first, I was a raving fan of UNIQLO... even enough to move with the company across the country. Now that I am employed with an american company, comparing the benefits and the culture, UNIQLO is honestly a really awful company to work for. You are expected to achieve UNREACHABLE metrics, with absolutely no help from upper management to achieve these goals. While SSC (corporate) does work hard, the store operations team is slaving away working every single holiday, and working 10+ hour days... all while being told we need to achieve more of a result. Not only this, but the amount of retaliation you face when you dare say something that is against the UNIQLO status-quo is crazy. 2 of my supervisors got blacklisted from the company because they put in a transfer to NY (which was previously planned a year in advance) while their home store in Boston was facing a staffing issue. Instead of honoring their request (which; again, was planned prior), they were just told to quit because "there was no need for them in NY." The staffing issues of the store does not fall burden to that of a supervisor level. The amount of backwards direction you get from every person that visits the store is not efficient and causes double work too. You get a store visit from someone in corporate every other week, and every time they visit, they have their 2 cents about what you need to do to achieve more result, even if your store is carrying the business already. Lastly, the overall benefits of working at UNIQLO are sub-par at best. UNIQLO prides itself on its "great" benefits, but when you compare them to american companies, it is WAY behind the times. Store managers and ASMs hadn't seen a pay raise in 10+ years until recently over 50 store managers quit which FINALLY made them give a pay raise... one that doesn't even take into account the accumulation of inflation within those 10 years, I might add.