If you value career growth, do not work here. - Anonymous Lands' End Employee Review

2.0
Oct 3, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Laid back environment, mostly everyone has good values and ethics. I made a lot of genuine friends that I will stay in contact with for a long time. Lands' End does a pretty good job at hiring nice people that work hard and make due. As long as you are not ridiculously stupid, you will maintain your spot here. You can even be exceptionally stupid and hold a spot here that has a lot of "visibility"! Seriously though, if you are a personable individual with decent skills, you will make it just fine here. *dependent on department you are in The company has a good relocation package. The new interim CEOs, I believe, will put the company back in the right direction.

Cons

Where to start? 1) Let's start with the fact that if you are anything below a Senior Director here, you will be creating report after report after report until the Senior Directors, VPs, or execs see what they want to see. It doesn't matter how logical you are in your forecast, plan, or assumptions; if it doesn't show the half-baked margin or turn they want to see, it's a waste of time. Trust me, your managers feel the same way. In fact most senior directors also feel the same way, which speaks volumes about LE corporate executives. This could, however, go away with the most recent CEO departure. 2) There's no strategy per the first point above; and if there is, it's coming from the top week after week, changing again and again. No one seems to know the true strategy of this company despite their important, analytical positions within the company. 3) If you want a challenging career where you make legitimate decisions and analysis, refer to points above. Depending on how long you stay here, you are limiting your options post LE. This has to do with the company's lack of technology (most systems 20+ years old), leadership, and structure. The ERP system should help LE, but only if there are people still around that will understand how to use it effectively. 4) No wage increase or bonus in how long? But company morale is just as good as it's ever been? Give me a break. 5) Corporate HQ is located in Dodgeville and a decent portion of its professional work force is old and unwilling to change. Because of this and points above, there are a lot of departments that simply wait to be told what to do when in reality their positions are meant to be analytical positions.

Explore other reviews about Lands' End

5.0
Apr 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good Work Culture Great people

Cons

Very very very very manual systems

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Lands' End Response
1mo
Thank you for sharing your experience. We’re glad our people and culture have made a positive impression, and we appreciate your feedback on our systems. We’re actively modernizing tools and processes to better support day-to-day work.
2.0
Jun 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Strong place to get your foot in the door if you're an intern or recent graduate. Hybrid schedule is a positive. Most coworkers are hardworking, supportive, and understanding because they're dealing with many of the same challenges. You will gain experience quickly because teams are often stretched thin and employees wear many hats.

Cons

Compensation is dramatically behind industry standards. This is the single biggest issue facing the company from an employee perspective. For design, merchandising, technical design, and sourcing roles, the pay does not align with workload, expectations, or market rates. Many employees commute from Madison. Between fuel, vehicle wear and tear, and the cost of living in Madison, compensation becomes even harder to justify. Product teams frequently work far beyond 40 hours per week. Long nights and weekend work are common, especially around major milestones and concept presentations. During concept season, expect your work-life balance to disappear. Weeks leading up to presentations often involve the design team working until 10 or 11 p.m. and sometimes weekends. Despite these expectations, support for employees during these periods can feel minimal. There is intense pressure to drive lower costs and higher margins, often at the expense of product quality. Many employees feel products are not as good as they could be because cost targets outweigh almost every other consideration. Leadership often feels reactive rather than strategic. Decisions can change quickly, priorities shift frequently, and employees are left feeling uncertain about direction and job security. Employee retention has been a recurring issue. A significant amount of talent has left in recent years, and meaningful compensation adjustments appeared to occur only after turnover became impossible to ignore. One of the most disappointing aspects of the culture was seeing members of leadership openly discuss and gossip about former employees after they left. When a large group of young, talented team members departed, the reaction from some leaders seemed more focused on talking about those employees rather than understanding the underlying retention issues. Watching managers criticize former team members in front of current employees did not inspire confidence and contributed to a culture where trust in leadership was low. The reliance on external consultants that are conflicts of interest is unsettling. This can be frustrating when employees feel their expertise is undervalued while outside voices receive greater influence and credit. Favoritism and conflicts of interest are frequently discussed among employees. Whether intentional or not, there is a perception that personal relationships carry disproportionate influence in certain decisions.

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