What's worse than terrible? - Retention Specialist Quince Employee Review

1.0
Oct 14, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None. We don't even get paid on time.

Cons

I've worked at plenty of startups before and Quince is the absolute worse. Every aspect of this position is terrible. As a retention specialist we are supposed to get bonuses at the first check of every month and that bonus never comes when it's supposed to and there is never any clear communication on when it can be expected. The bonus structure itself is terrible and from what they expect we don't make enough money. Also the benefits are horrible. The health insurance is laughable and expensive, and you only get 2 paid holidays which are Thanksgiving and Christmas. There is no work life balance. I've never been at a company where the higher ups know of a detrimental problem and do nothing about it because it doesn't directly affect them until Quince. And unless you're dubbed a golden child or apart of an alternative lifestyle, the culture is trash and toxic. They preach promoting from within, but that's also a lie.

Explore other reviews about Quince

5.0
Jun 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to grow and learn

Cons

Increasing workload and not so great benefits

1.0
May 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's a fast growing brand with lots of VC backing

Cons

The culture at Quince is relentlessly metrics-driven with little regard for the people behind those numbers. Goals and targets are set at near-impossible levels and discussed openly across the team — if you miss, you're put on blast. If you hit, the targets are quietly raised the next month. There is no winning, only surviving. Performance recognition is completely one-sided. Strong results are ignored; any dip — even the day after a major sale event like Black Friday — triggers urgent escalation from leadership. It creates a culture of anxiety rather than motivation. Workload and scope creep are constant. Responsibilities are regularly added to your plate without discussion or acknowledgment. Taking PTO means you're still expected to check in and attend meetings and are made to feel guilty for being unavailable. There is absolutely no work-life balance here! Benefits are minimal. Beyond health insurance and possible equity, there is very little on offer. For a company at this scale and valuation, the overall compensation package does not reflect the workload or expectations placed on employees. Onboarding is nearly nonexistent. You are expected to perform at full capacity almost immediately with minimal ramp time or support, which is difficult in a remote environment. The environment is competitive in an unhealthy way — individual metrics are emphasized over team growth, which breeds distrust rather than collaboration. Last-minute decisions from leadership are the norm, particularly around major promotions and campaigns, consistently forcing late nights and rushed execution. If you thrive under extreme pressure with no safety net, this may work for you. For most people, it is not sustainable.

3
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