Talbots reviews

3.4

53% would recommend to a friend

(1,625 total reviews)
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Lizanne Kindler

68% approve of CEO

52% positive business outlook

Talbots has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 1,625 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Talbots employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Oct 1, 2017

store manager

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great employee discount. New online ordering system and POS enhanced system is very user friendly and quicker so there is a better customer experience

Cons

Store managers are expected and consistently told to do more with less. Payroll is always an issue and there is never enough, so to help keep costs down, some managers work 6 days a week. I have people on staff that have one 4 hour shift a month because that is all I can afford. Full time assistants in my store have been brought down to 32 hours a week from a full 40 hour work week and we are heading in to holiday season. We have a culture of doing what is right for the customer...how about doing what is right for your customer facing associates? They just spend millions of dollars on crates, totes, bins, etc to organize our backrooms and most of it doesn't work for smaller stores. They sure know how to waste money..they should invest that money in payroll where there is going to be the biggest payoff. How about a raise? 2% over the last seven years really isn't cutting it for the amount of work we do for you. And your yearly corporate meetings? We love to hear about how drunk everyone gets when our DM talks about the meetings after she returns. Then we are told to be creative with our scheduling due to lack of payroll.

2.0
Mar 1, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Classic clothing store that has a passionate and loyal customer. They want their customer to leave there with a positive experience so much that you can literally say "Yes" to anything the customer wants. This is a wonderful concept but in practice it's not practical.

Cons

I have been a manager for more than 3 years. I was hired as FT but in 2015, they changed their definition of FT to 30 hours a week. What professional can live off of that? They want you to know your customers names and have all associates introduce their customers to the MOD. So we need to keep up with 10 or more names at a time and 75 or so in a day? But not only that, you have to know whether all of these customers have a credit card.(you need to convince them that they are missing out if not) not only that, you have to ask a lot of personal questions about them(not about their clothing style but about friends, family,life) and secretly write this info down on a card. I f this was not enough, they want you to "hug" the customer. (This means give her a personal gift but whatever you suggest is rejected as not personal enough. They say dig deeper and get back to me). We still have to sell the clothing and do all of the other tasks associated with a store and they have decreased our payroll hours as a store too. But wait, now you have to solicit donations not out of the goodness of your heart but to make your DM look good to the other DM's. Talbot's, please re-evaluate your priorities. You are abusing your employees and mangers by constantly pitting them against each other and the district by measuring everything even if it shouldn't be measured.

1.0
Jan 19, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I would say the 50% employee discount, but there are so many sales it becomes meaningless. What are the real prices here?

Cons

I'm 55, have a graduate degree, have worked at small retail stores and a Fortune 500 company (in sales). I only lasted ~five weeks at a Talbots store before I quit. I had been looking forward to a fun retail environment and customer interaction, as I've enjoyed in the past, but the lack of professionalism at Talbots sent me running. Details are many but here are some: I was never adequately trained, and my manager did not make sure I could log into the company Web site to see my hours, request days/hours, and see paystubs. I kept mentioning that I couldn't get onto the site, and my manager never addressed it, so I had to take a photograph of the next week's work shift calendar and just take the hours they gave me. (Turns out, on my last day before quitting, that Manager 1 simply gave me the wrong Web address. Couldn't be bothered to make sure employee was on board properly.) There were many Managers in the store and a couple of serfs like me. All the Managers each individually reminded me constantly that they were Managers, and they gave me conflicting advice. Manager #2 would start the day by admonishing me for the many infractions others had committed in my three-day absence, many of which were just the sysiphean tasks of retail (the clothes aren't hung properly, yadda ya). Manager #3 would interrupt my helping a client to give me some gratuitous advice on how to word something, Manager #4 would tell me to work Petites, and Manager #1 would then admonish me for not working the Missy department. I was never adequately trained on the register or the ordering system, yet the Managers would toss me a tablet and tell me to do an exchange/order/what-have-you for a customer or answer a phone call with a complicated request. I would be told to "ask for help" but when I asked I was ignored or admonished. E.G., another employee passed me a phone call she couldn't handle (probably got training as good as mine) and went on break. I tried to handle it ("Where's this garment in the store?" was typically answered with a general "over there") but, being new and stepping in in the middle of a transaction, I couldn't. So I want to Manager 1 for help and she said, in front of everyone (including customers), "So you're passing this off on me?" As a minimally-paid sales associate who spent most of the day hanging clothes, I tried not to take this personally. I'm a hard worker -- I would learn eventually. But when Manager 4 complained about me to Manager 1 and I was called in for a barrage of Reprimands, I was astonished. (I had that day asked a corporate Manager who was visiting whether the problem with my getting into the Web site was a corporate matter, and she said that wasn't her problem but no doubt told Manager 1). As newest employee, I was receptacle for all irritations. I did my best to note my perception of the general dysfunction of the store. (Meanwhile, Manager 1 saying "You look like you want to punch me. Take that look off your face." No one has ever spoken to me that way before.) Series of reprimands was topped off with a personal insult about my arms showing, with a look that indicated they were Not Attractive. This couldn't have waited for another day? Went home, thought on it for a few minutes, and submitted my resignation. Other things: store hot, I would get sweaty running around all day. Employees actually bickering with each other on the floor. Trickle-down irritation -- managers taking things out on those below them on the pecking order. So, during my big Reprimand, Manager 1 complained about the corporate visitor saying that the atmosphere in the store was negative. As if this were my fault. Store was understaffed (wonder why?). It was one of the worst working experiences I've had. When I worked at McDonald's as a teenager it was much better.

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