Tom James Company reviews

4.0

75% would recommend to a friend

(890 total reviews)
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Todd Browne

90% approve of CEO

79% positive business outlook

Tom James Company has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 890 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tom James Company 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

890 reviews
5.0
Mar 12, 2026

The right company for me

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Company built on principles not, amazing training, quality/driven people, uncapped commission, equity for all employees, amazing clients, great product

Cons

Our job is hard, but very rewarding. The challenges I’ve faced here have undoubtedly turned me into a better man.

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Tom James Company Response
1mo
Thank you for taking time to write a review. We are truly happy to see that you are pleased with your career at Tom James and are taking advantage of some of the lucrative opportunities we offer. It is important to us that each person at Tom James Company has the opportunity to build a long-term career for himself or herself. Feedback from current and past employs allows us to continue to grow and develop our opportunity for everyone.
1.0
Aug 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pros are that when you are successful, people in the company will constantly tell you how great you are (That can be infectious because who doesn't like to hear what a winner he is?), and that a successful salesperson can earn in excess of $100,000. Conceptually the business model is terrific.

Cons

I've heard the culture of Tom James Company described in terms of a cult-like environment, or drinking the Kool-Aid, and I absolutely agree. I was a salesperson and sales manager there for more than 12 years, and I received numerous sales and leadership awards (President's Club, President's Cabinet, Team Leadership Award, and many others). I did earn more than $100,000/year for about 10 years, and while I was still there, I didn't object very much to the brainwashing. In fact, as a team/organizational leader, I now see that I helped perpetuate that cult-like culture. One of the primary ingredients in the Tom James Kool-Aid is to constantly self-promote. Everybody and every company must highlight their strengths, but Tom James takes it to a much higher level. They self-promote to the point of almost ridiculing the fools who work anywhere else. The leadership talks about how much more money Tom James salespeople earn than anybody else in the clothing business working elsewhere, and they harp on it A LOT. I realized after I left that it simply was not the truth. Another important ingredient in the Tom James Kool-Aid is to require employees to sign a souped-up non-compete agreement, and it doesn't matter the circumstances. The latest one I saw was so restrictive that the purpose was to actually restrict a former salesperson from working in the same industry in any capacity in the ZIP CODES where his clients reside or work. The fact is that most long-term salespeople at TJ have clients scattered all over the place. One of my friends who left several years ago said that his client list included more than 65 zip codes he would have been prevented from working in for 2 years. As a result, many former salespeople ignore the non-compete, but when TJ wants to make an example out of someone, they will spend $250,000 or more litigating against the former salesperson. Thirdly, the company promotes their privately held stock as if it is more valuable than gold and diamonds. Their own board of directors determine the price. The board of directors also determine the dividend, and they almost always over promote the potential dividend (It is always measly.). The company leadership encourages the salespeople often to project their stock value to grow to enormous wealth, and the gullible salespeople dream of buying their own islands and yachts upon retirement. The problem with that is that the board of directors and they alone get to decide when and if a person can sell his stock. They have been known to limit the buyback to $10,000 per year for several years. And if they don't want to buy it back at all because they don't like what a former salesperson does after he leaves TJ, then they just refuse to buy his stock back at all. The stock purchase agreement clearly states that there is no other market for the stock besides selling it back to TJ. Near the end of my career with TJ, I became convinced that the stock is a farce. I can't think of anyone who was ever "allowed" to cash in his stock and really retire. I can think of many people who after 25-30 years tried to retire and learned that their stock was still controlled by the TJ Board. And that sums it up: Control. Tom James leadership tries to exercise control over every aspect of the lives of the salespeople. The Kool-Aid drinkers who allow that to happen LOVE the company. Keep that in mind when reading the reviews written by current employees.

1.0
Jan 23, 2017

Take Warning - Scam

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The fact you have at least Benefits and 401k Sales Role - no annual salary, what you make of it

Cons

Makes sales reps eat losses. For example, if clothes come in bad and the customer wants to return the garments it comes out of YOUR pocket which is insane as the sales reps don't make the clothes. Rip in the suit and the clothes need alterations, that also comes out of your pay. They will try and make your client pay for it but if you have a moral conscious you take the hit. They try and preach principles and values yet don't own up to their shortcomings. Cut you out of commissions rightfully earned. Tax you like crazy on sales bonuses and never give notice until you find it in your pay check 3-4 months later you essentially 'build your own business' but if you leave these clients are Tom James' clients. Very misleading in making you think you're building your own business. Not very good for a women who is thinking of raising a family or if you happen to get sick - there is NO monetary support health benefits are awful - copay exceeding $50 for a normal doctor visit. Culture is only good when it is beneficial to them, otherwise expect verbal abuse, cult like activity, and brainwashing Accounting is very shady - You don't fully reap the benefits of your hard work with their half down method. You think you're earning one thing and get something else No return on investment - meaning the sales people run around spending their own money to obtain the client and not compensated a dime for it. So when a client returns a garment you're not only out of your commission, you're out of the money you invested in to get that client. - double wammy and for the amount you earn it's not worth it. ALOT of Turnover - Churn and burn system False advertisement on president club level earnings.

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Glassdoor has 962 Tom James Company reviews submitted anonymously by Tom James Company employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tom James Company is right for you.