Spoonflower reviews

2.8

28% would recommend to a friend

(91 total reviews)
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George Chao

27% approve of CEO

23% positive business outlook

Spoonflower has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 91 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Spoonflower employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

91 reviews
2.0
Feb 19, 2017

Night and Day

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Spoonflower was a dream when I first started working there- nice benefits, free fabric, great people, decent leadership, lots of snacks, job advancement, random acts of recognition, regular raises, and elaborate holiday parties. Cut to some time later and check out the con section below...

Cons

After about a year of working there, poor business planning led to the CEO laying off 30 + people to help save money (this was with one day's notice). This company has completely changed, they only care about making money by working the life out of their poorly paid employees. The shifts are terrible and impossible to change, we get paid next to nothing and raises seem to be a thing of the past. Morale is at an all time low since there is no recognition, even though we are producing more with less people. The management is super stingy with opening overtime and hasn't granted full time status to the hard working and deserving part time people that have worked there for over a year. You should only work here if you want to be poor and miserable.

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Spoonflower Response
9y
Thank you for taking the time to provide feedback. I am sorry to hear that your​ ​​experience with ​Spoonflower has taken a turn in the wrong direction. We try to be open and transparent in all we do and yet sometimes our intentions and decisions aren't communicated ​as clearly as we hope they would be. I agree with you - 2016 was a tough year. Although we had enjoyed tremendous organic growth for the past 3 - 4 years, our reliance on this kind of growth caused us to miss the boat regarding changes to paid search. In response, at the start of 2016, we added highly talented and experienced people to our marketing team in order to take advantage of digital advertising strategies for which we had been missing out. ​ Still, we had some catching up to do, and our revenue was just not able to support the ‘lifestyle to which we had become accustomed’. Operating at a loss each month meant we had to dip into our savings to keep going. That kind of financial situation isn’t sustainable for anyone, whether it’s on a personal budget or a company budget. You are correct in pointing out that we scaled back on some of our wonderful perks. Our fabric benefit went on hiatus for 2 months and this was one of the many difficult and disappointing decisions we made last year. As soon as we started to see small incremental improvements in our financials, we re-instated a modified version of it for the last three months of 2016 and the first three months of 2017. At the same time, the benefits for which we are most proud remained intact and untouched. We continue to pay 100% of the medical premiums for employees and their families and continue to fund employee HSA accounts for 100% of the deductible they are required by law to pay in this kind of health plan. Indeed, the most painful decision we made last year was to let some of our Spoonflower teammates go. Reductions in force are never easy. There is no perfect way t​o ​manage changes of this kind. What was important to us ​throughout that process ​was that we managed the communication of these decisions in a way that was compassionate, respectful, discreet and supportive; we truly believe that we met these goals. We helped the employees that were impacted by these decisions make the transition to another role by providing everyone with a generous severance package, even for employees who had been with us for only a few months. ​Since then, ​we have made significant changes to the company's marketing, product, and customer experience strategies. In Operations, ​improvements in efficiency have had a huge impact on ​Spoonflower's results. I've heard - from others in addition to you - that we are not the 'same Spoonflower' that we used to be. This is often the case in growing and evolving companies and Spoonflower is no different. We have always been focused on revenue, efficiency and margin. What has changed is that we are doing a better job of being transparent about Spoonflower's goals, results and overall health. Our hope is to share strategies and successes and to collectively learn from things that might not have gone as well as we planned. At the same time, we are as resolute as we have always been in providing meaningful work for our employees and maintaining a robust work environment that is collaborative, egalitarian and respectful. ​ Since its birth, Spoonflower has experienced many of the advantages and many of challenges that come with successful start-ups. We remain committed to maintaining the virtues and values that are the hallmark of the kin​d of company we are and the kind of company we want to be. For example: - In the past 2 months, we have promoted 5 employees from our Operations team into positions in Customer Service, Accounting, Distribution and Human Resources. - We became a Durham Living Wage employer and raised the pay for all employees below this wage threshold. - Our 2017 merit raises in a few weeks will focus on employees who demonstrate exceptional performance and take on added responsibilities. Raises will also be made to ensure our commitment to market pay is realized. These are the same compensation strategies we demonstrated in the 2016 merit increase process. - All of our part-time employees - who are interested and able to - will become full-time in a few weeks. In addition, over the past year, all part-time employees who worked full-time hours over the course of the year were made full-time and offered medical and other Spoonflower benefits. As we continue to move forward this year, I encourage you to reach out to me, Gart or Allison to express your concerns and let us hear your feedback. Thank you again for writing.
3.0
Mar 8, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits, HSA, lunch, drinks, PTO is generous.

Cons

Long shifts, monotonous tasks, horrible floors. Once Shutterfly purchased Spoonflower, everything changed. It is no longer the cool company with a young, diverse, progressive vibe,

3.0
Jan 4, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lunch is provided some days Get to learn new tasks Most people are nice Easy job Creative community

Cons

After being at Spoonflower for some time, I’ve noticed that people of color are heavily watched, monitored, & micromanaged, while others are not. I haven’t had this happen to me specifically, but I’ve observed it on MANY occasions. It’s to the point where it’s pretty obvious and blatant with certain supervisors there. They don’t even try to hide it, so if you pay attention, you’ll easily see it. I’ve watched someone who isn’t of color take numerous extended breaks, leave their station continuously, & arrive late to work many times for months to close to a year before anything was done about it. If a POC goes to the restroom once, it’s automatically thought that they’re taking extra breaks or leaving work to horseplay. They don’t get NEARLY as many chances to correct themselves as much as those do who aren’t of color. Most POC there are treated like children by their supervisors & obviously aren’t given the same respect as those who aren’t of color. Not all of the supervisors do this, but a lot of them do. It also seems as if supervisors get away with doing inappropriate things in the workplace simply because they are supervisors and have become friends with other higher-ups. If they do something wrong to an employee, it’s likely that nothing will happen and they won’t get reprimanded for it, which has also left some POC & non POC feeling super uncomfortable in the workplace. There are MANY more examples I could give that I’ve seen. To wrap it up here, it can get pretty depressing at Spoonflower for POC because they feel as if they’re one “bathroom break, wrong look, or perfect little lie told by a higher-up” away from getting fired or written up at all times.

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Glassdoor has 98 Spoonflower reviews submitted anonymously by Spoonflower employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Spoonflower is right for you.