Great company but experience is driven by your team - Anonymous employee Crocs Employee Review

3.0
Jun 7, 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Love Crocs as a company and the corporate culture is really fun. The whole marketing campaign hype along with all of the collabs and new shoes was honestly really fun. Plus, there's a ton of excitement right now since Crocs is doing so well & growing. The company gives you 2 weeks off for Christmas and offers Friday half days all summer long. The benefits are also great. Overall, love Crocs from a corporate perspective.

Cons

Corporate culture is awesome but your day-to-day culture is going to be largely driven by the individual team you're on... and I wasn't on a good one. In my experience, those are the director level are extremely involved in the day-to-day operations of Jr staff, almost to a micro-manage level, so you should make sure to interview with your director to ensure you like them. This is true even if you have a manager above you - ask to interview with the director too. Crocs also touts work-life balance, but I found that the particular team I was on was constantly asking for late nights, weekends, early mornings, etc. and our director didn't seem to care about the wellbeing of people on the team. Good employees want to work for someone who shows appreciation, who takes time to get to know their staff, and who genuinely cares about their wellbeing. Overall, Crocs can be a great place to work - just make sure you enjoy the people you'll be working closest with on a daily basis. Those people can make or break the experience.

Explore other reviews about Crocs

5.0
Jun 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company to work for

Cons

Easy retail job. Lots of paperwork

2.0
May 9, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Strong global brand recognition and the opportunity to work with talented colleagues across multiple functions and backgrounds. The environment can provide broad exposure, fast-paced experience, and significant responsibility. Despite wider organizational challenges, many peer-level teams remained collaborative and supportive.

Cons

In my experience, the culture felt highly top-down and heavily cost-constrained, with limited openness to employee initiative or new ideas. Workloads and expectations were often unrealistic, contributing to burnout and an unhealthy work-life balance, while teams frequently operated understaffed. Significant extra effort, including long hours and cross-functional collaboration, did not consistently translate into recognition, advancement, or long-term stability. Career progression often felt unpredictable, and opportunities sometimes appeared inconsistent or influenced by favoritism. Communication around organizational changes could be abrupt, creating uncertainty across teams. Employees were regularly expected to take on responsibilities outside their core expertise without sufficient support, which negatively impacted morale and overall job satisfaction. Compensation, benefits, and flexibility also felt less competitive compared to others in the footwear industry, while discussions around salary growth and professional development lacked transparency. Over time, the internal culture appeared to decline, creating a growing disconnect between the company’s external brand image and the employee experience.

3
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All