Face Goop

Lush hate

E: It’s time for Facegoop to stage our first intervention, M.

M: Yes. And it’s directed at Lush. Listen up, LUSH, you hemp clad bimbo.

E: Noone wants to tell you this because they are too polite BUT YOU STINK. YOU STINK STINK STINK.

M: YOU STINK TO HIGH HEAVEN. What the hell are you anyway? A flower shop? A perfumery for grannies? Some dodgy prostitute’s underpants??? MMMMMM????

E: It’s for children and hippies, M. Ones who think they are too good for the Body Shop.

M: Yes. Hippies. Hippie tramps. Who would like to think they could make their own cosmetics, but are just too fucking lazy to do it.

E: IN OUR DAY WE HAD THE BODY SHOP AND LIKED IT. Have you ever tried one of their “bath bombs”, M?

M: Bath bomb. What the fuck is that. Why would I want a bomb in my bath.

E: It’s like, this giant ball of super smelly Lush crap that you put in the ball it fizzes like a Berocca and your bath goes scummy, artifically smelling and SLIMY.

M: Wow. That’s great. If I wanted scum, I’d go bathe in cow water.

E: But it’s fun! It fizzes! we use KERAZY fonts on our products!

M: You know what else I hate, Lush? The stupid names you give your products

E: Like what?

M: “Devils on horsebacks”. WHAT THE FUCK IS THAT?? That’s a victorian breakfast dish.

E: What? They are PRUNES IN BACON aren’t they? WTF lush. Leave the lameass jokes to Bliss.

M: I DO NOT WANT TO SCRUB MY FACE IN PRUNES, LUSH.

E: You know what Lush is, M?

M: Do tell.

E: It’s POI. FOR GIRLS.

M: OH GOD. YES. Poi. The most hippie-like of all activities. Pointless. Pitiful. CRAP.

E: Whirl a couple of bath bombs in socks around and you have guaranteed M and I’s hatred forever. Ugh, I am getting an allergic reaction just thinking about Lush. My eyes are watering and my throat is closing up.

M: I’m sneezing. And wheezing a little bit. And also feeling the rage. UGH. Just the WORD “Lush” makes me want to retch. You are like someone else’s crazy grandmother, Lush. One who thinks she could still get frisky. And who likes to feel her boobs up AT YOU.

E: LUSH: YOU’RE A TOXIC GRANDMOTHER. If you were our granny, we’d put you in a home and never visit.

M: Yes. We’d pretend we didn’t know you.

E: “No, I don’t know why she’s shouting my name. Poor old dear, she’s obviously lost her wits”.

M: We’d hire a nice normal grandmother to pretend to be you. Like, maybe, Estee Lauder.

E: Yeah. Estee Lauder’s our nan now. Not you.

M: Get out of my sight, Lush.

E: And take those balls in socks with you.

Do you love Lush? Stand up for your granny in the comments. Or share the hate with us. Go on. You’ll feel better instantly.

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91 Comments

    I hate Lush, too, but that is not why I am commenting. For ten years I have been in possession of this fantastic anecdote illustrating why you do *not* want Estee Lauder as a grandma. A friend managed a used bookstore in NYC and she obtained a copy of Estee’s autobiography inscribed to a grandchild thusly:

    “My dear [redacted] You are such a good boy, here’s a merry merry Christmas, and the best of health, of course. It is really too bad you have not yet learned how truly to be a success in life and make me happy – happy for *you*. Love and kisses, Nana Esty EL:hk 12-25-85″

    So her Christmas gift to this poor bastard not only was a book about herself that she got free from her publisher, but she dictated the terrible, terrible inscription to her secretary.

  • The only think I’ll go into Lush for is the shampoo bars, one in particular actually. A friend told me about them before I went on a longer trip and was lamenting how my hair would behave with unknown product in various hotels or from various foreign pharmacies while I travelled. My hair can totally be an asshole this way so I was envisioning an angry, frizzy pouf surrounding my head.

    I muse say these are great for travel, especially what with the whole ‘liquids’ limitations on airplanes, and because it’s tons lighter to carry than a bottle of shamp + another of conditioner. There’s one bar that’s black and white, smells a little like black licorice, has both solid shampoo and conditioner in it, and it works the trick for me. It feeds my thirsty hair and leaves it shiny and in well-behaved ringlets. No easy thing to achieve with my hair even when at home. Though I’ll stick with my regular liquid shamp. and conditioner at home, I do always try to get one of these when going on any longer trip.

    Fortunately going in and getting one always takes less time than I’m able to hold my breath for.

  • Naah, Lush is great fun. I have a very keen nose and am prone to migraines. Yet Lush has never afflicted me as much as those crappy pink-packaged “perfumes” with Lilies from Hell, that twentysomethings shower themselves in.

    Don´t care much for patchouli though, anywhere, anytime.

    Cheers!

  • Ha! Patchouli. The stench of the devil.

  • i despise Lush with every bone in my body. Just walking past the place can bring out murderous thoughts in my normally placid mind. There is thankfully only one here in Liverpool and I make sure I never walk past it if I can help it. Sadly my mother appears to think that they are brilliant as I always seem to get some sort of horrid smelling product of theirs for christmas. sorry mum. another shop that smells bad is the Subway sandwich stores – if you have the dubious pleasure of walking close to one just check out that chemical smell they pump into the air.

  • Lush, meh. Didn’t really like it, didn’t hate it as much as Body Shop or similar. Kind of in the middle. But now I sort of love it for giving me this thread, and in particular a) the word “knickerwasp” and even better the phrase “knickerwasp ahoy” and b) the knowledge that someone out there is writing Lush fanfiction. Even if they defensively add it is only in jest.

  • I do quite like some of their facial products… but am always discouraged from browsing and subsequent buying by the overattentive employees. If I wanted to be repeatedly loomed over by an overenthusiastic 20 year old and forced into a conversation about my skin type (er, none of your business) I’d probably ask.

  • Margaret’s story delights me to the very bottom of my feet.

    What I hate about Lush is how thoroughly the salespeople molest you. They are three thousand times more aggressive about trying to slather you with things and show you how they are supposed to be used than any department store associate. It is alarming. Though maybe that is only in US shops?

  • Ha, somehow I missed Rachel’s comment. Suffice to say “ditto,” I reckon.

  • Margaret!

    WOW. Estée Lauder, the most evil grandmother EVER. Awesome.

  • Lush does suck. it sucks still over here in the US. the products suck and are overpriced. they have 1…ONE redeeming (slightly) redeeming product, and that is their chocolate lip balm. it smells so good and its pretty decent. i wouldnt go out of my way though.

  • Gosh you bunch of haters!! I love lush! Their products are organic, natural and ethical. I like that their products use very little packaging. Yeah the staff are friendly, whats wrong with that? You could always say that you are fine and just looking; I for one love communicating with the staff and finding new products to suit my skin type. At lush, we are one big happy family and they have one of the best customer care services (A recent customer service report, Uk). How many of you have actually tried lush’s products? Stop hating people and share the lush love!!!!

  • Lol. Poi.

    I’m agreeing with the general consensus here. The shops stink, the staff are pushy and the branding is punchably faux-chummy. But some of the products are excellent. It’s just a case of holding your nose and fishing for them among the seaweed-and-pigeon-feather bath bombs etc.

    Lush, if you’re reading – stop putting glitter and insoluble chunks in your stuff, stop training your staff to hard-sell and stop pretending to be all natural when you’re not. (But otherwise, good work.)

  • While I love their products, I have to agree with you about their shops stinking (one of their products on its own will smell lovely and the smell last right to the end, but several thousand of the things stacked up unwrapped at nose-height is overkill!) and their uber-pushy staff. I usually buy it online (Ocean salt face scrub, Tea tree toner, Coalface cleanser and Cupcake mask are the only things I’ll put near my formerly super-oily face nowadays) and on the rare occasions I do go in the shop I’d probably buy loads if not for the staff badgering every five minutes!

    Shame – they get some of their products so incredibly right but the shop experience so wrong.

  • Hi guys and girls,

    I work for lush and I try to leave people alone aside from a hello. How I see it is if you need my help – you’ll ask.

    Unfortunately, the only reason so many of the shops are “we must sell more” is because they want to do better in our sales league. The higher up you are, the better chance hq listens when we say we need a shop refit.
    Doesn’t help our targets are frustratingly high…

    It is so bloody chummy chummy though, if you aren’t besties with the manager, you get bloody ignored (sorry guys I’ve had this on my mind for a while!!)

    Anyways, I know you guys think we are punch of pushy, sales people that actually lie about what we put in the products. But we know as we get to visit the factory itself, we are sent on training days (I haven’t personally – like I said before: manager gets to choose)..
    But yeah, ask anything you want. I’m honest about what goes on behind the closed doors of lush :)

  • Hi Chrissy,
    I don’t have anything against people who work at Lush. Or, indeed, anywhere else. Apart from that beeeatch who works at… no, that’s not true.

    I’ve never been able to stand in Lush for more than 5 seconds, so powerful is the aroma. So I can’t comment on the pushiness of staff. It sounds a bit unpleasant from your description though.

    Stay a while. Let us foster rancour and bile in your blackening heart. Ewww, bile in the heart? Gross.

    Mx

  • Hi i love lush and i agree the smell is strong when u walk in has made me sneeze and given me a headache b4 but once i get the stuff home i love it also people who work there get used to the smell and dosent affect them after a while. one qustion i have always wonderd thou if lush is a natural company y r the things so coulfull i mean one of the reasons i wanted to buy lush atuff was 2 aviod dangerous coulours. are the couours u use safe and natural ones ? x

  • Lush is a wonderful place. Why would you waste your time creating this site for something you don’t like? My advice to you IN LIFE is to focus on things that make you happy and that you DO like instead of putting others down, especially when it comes to a great place like Lush that creates FRESH products with environmental care that MOST PEOPLE DO LOVE… everyone except your hateful a$$.

  • Down with Lush. They treat their employees like crap and have a HUGE turnover rate. Do you know why the sales employees are pushy as shit? Because they will get fired if they don’t attack every single customer. True Story. I don’t mind the products, but when a company pushes “ethics” and shoves these ecological issues in your face and then turns around and mistreats their sales associates, i would rather take a bath in bacon grease then purchase one product from those hypocrites.

  • I too am an ex employee of Lush. They do, in fact, treat their sales associates very bad. I was bullied by a team member really really bad. I was asked to have pre work hour meeting with my manger (with no one else there to witness) and was literally verbally berated until I cried. Then, I was told that if i wanted to keep my job I could sign a waver stating that I was the one in fault and that i was voluntarily demoting myself and taking a pay cut…

    Not very awesome :(

    This makes me sad to hear others have have bad experiences with them.

  • Lush is amazing, I love SOME of there products *Ha patchouli, the stench of devil* I agree with you there, but quite frankly what youve said so far, is offensive. I have a massive lush collection so far and have spent over $500 in there. Im just shocked how pathetic you can be to start a blog against lush, if you dont like them, then fine, but dont start blogs about it like sad, pathetic, lonely people

  • Natalie wrote ‘Lush is organic’. Ha! Not according to the EWG reports. Go to http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/brand/LUSH/ and you will find some of their products high in toxic nasties. Also most of their shampoos contain SLS which are notorious these days as a cosmetic chemical to avoid. I’ve used lush products and even considered myself a lush devotee until I discovered that their Karma perfume and soap were some of the products with the most toxic elements. Not to mention that their SLS laden Ibiza shampoo kept my hair all itchy and uncomfortable. Like them if you must but don’t fool yourself into thinking that they are ‘organic’, its simply not true. I’m not a Lush hater just a Lush realist.

  • I completely agree with redteddy.

    I will give Lush this – they have done a great job of advertising their product and pushing the “natural, therefore good for you” crap on people who jump on the latest green trend while not really knowing much about chemicals or cosmetics.

    First of all, it is meaningless when some salesgirl bounds over to me and says, “Our products are all natural!” as if this is supposed to be a good thing. Venom is natural. Poison ivy is natural. Plenty of stuff they use in their products are not suitable for a lot of people’s skin and are potential irritants. Lime juice, which they use in their exfoliant “Ocean Salt” is a huge irritant. If any of it isn’t washed off properly and you go out into the sun, you can develop a photodermatitis. It happened to me. There’s a bunch of other stuff in their moisturizers and shower gels like almond oil and coconut oil that are TERRIBLE for people with acne-prone skin. I also dislike that they use cheap ingredients and then sell them for a ridiculous price while trying to pass it off as some luxury product. I think their packaging is really tacky too but that’s the least of my problems with the brand.

    I do like some of their soaps and a couple of their cleansers/face masks/toners/foot scrubs that I have used for a long time without any problems.

    I guess my main problem is how they advertise themselves, counting on the gullibility of many eager consumers, claiming to be “natural”, knowing that most people equate natural with “good for me/harmless”, and implicitly disparaging other long-standing brands that do not claim to be natural but instead use quality synthetics that are not irritating to most people.

  • I worked at Lush and yes they’re products aren’t “natural”. However everything must contain certain preservatives and many, many “natural” products have them. If you really want natural, DYI it and there are many sites that can show you how to make masks, etc. I don’t like their skin or hair care. The skin cleansers/moisturizers broke me out. It was one of the worst breakout I’ve had in years. I went back to Proactiv (even though it’s full of chemicals!) and it works for me.

    Sales associates are made by corporate to shove them down your throat. The conditioners are a joke with the no silicone BS…”it’ll soften it naturally”. They always want an average sale of $35 sooooo skin/hair care is the area to get those customers to shop! We don’t want you just buyin’ a bath bomb now! They also blame fellow co-workers if customers return products. Corporate is really awful and they treat they’re employees like garbage….despite all the blabber of having growth opportunities in the company.

    I noticed the only people that swallowed their crap, like “we don’t believe in sales because it cheapens the product” were the dummies. I still think some of their soaps, lotions, powders, and shower products are decent. In the end, there are much better high-end products out there. Lush isn’t the best thing since sliced bread.

  • I must enquire- are the photographs from the London South Molton St shop?

  • “artifically smelling” try reading the ingredients for lush products before saying stuff like this. Lush uses actual essential oils in their products nothing artificial about them!

    Also try using proper grammar what you meant to say was artificial smelling.

  • Oh my, you guys really have a vengence… eek
    So I’ll let you what I have to say about lush…
    1) The body shop bought the rights to a lot of Constantine & Weir’s first cosmetics… in other words, The Body Shop has Lush to thank (partly) for their success.
    2)Their bath bombs are slimey because they have butters and oils in them. It’s like bathing in lotion rather than drying your skin out with soap… Kind of genius actually…
    3)The names are pretty stupid sometimes. But they are fun if you get the cultural references ( remember ‘business time?’ that made all the Kiwis proud…)
    4)Ouch…. hating on Poi are we? Poi IS for girls. It’s a Maori performance art USUALLY performed by women. And it requires skill. I won’t even start on the cultural insensitivity here…
    4) Lush lists all it’s ingredients to ensure that allergic reactions are minimal. Of course, this is only effective if you KNOW about your allergy. But realistically, come on – you are more at risk using estee lauder products which only list their ingredients on the outer packaging…

    I think you’re just hating on Lush because you haven’t gotten to know it properly…. :(

  • Hello! I currently work for Lush. I was initially very excited to work at the store because I liked the products I tried and I (I know some don’t, and I agree it is strong) do like the smell. Well…I had no idea what I was in for. I’ve worked other jobs in sales but going to work at this point is depressing. I understand stores need to make money but getting yelled at for leaving someone alone after they had requested to be left alone? If it’s really bad I have to follow them around with a towel and fake clean and try to compliment them or observe what they’re looking at until it’s mildly appropriate to interject again…still awkward! When I can, I let people do there thing, and the other day I sold $250 dollars worth of stuff to a first time customer and guess what?! I had asked her how her day was, made sure she was okay, and let her do her thing and I did mine. I didn’t stalk her and pretend I LOVED her shoes and omg that’s my faaavorite condition…when it’s just not. I have been very aware of sales associates now at other stores and I’ve noticed Lush is very different. I feel…at a store revolving around bathing, we should be at least sort of peaceful. I hate fearing for my job when I don’t attack some poor old lady who just wants to read the signs to herself.

    I think I need to find a new job even though I love the products. I’m very disappointed in the methods regarding sales and blame. If someone didn’t buy Aquatic Toothy Tabs because they didn’t want seaweed in their mouth without sushi involved? Please don’t give me a talking to, I really tried.

  • arrghh lush, no good if your allergic to peanuts as (as found out the hard way) everythings made in the same factory with the same equipment. After asking them to at least put up a sign to warn people that they use alot of peanuts in other products i got the reply they are unwilling to because no one else has complained! maybe they couldnt as died of their throat closing up. Lush kind to skin PAH

  • I worked for Lush up until today. What anonymous above said is COMPLETELY true. Being a company based on ‘ethics’, I assumed that the way they treat their staff would at least be reasonable. I have seen people sacked for not approaching people and in my first staff review was told that I shouldn’t leave people alone even when they want to be left alone. This makes the job very awkward! I was one of the 20 year olds that also has to get involved in a conversation with you about your skin type! Today I was told that I couldn’t keep my job basically because my manager doesn’t like me – don’t worry I will going in tomorrow to argue my case!

    As well as them being the most ‘green’ company in the UK, they throw out the most rubbish I’ve ever seen! And NOT recycled either! I am so angry at them now – a majority of them are incredibly false and talk behind customers backs even about their skin type and think they are the elite.

    So glad to be rid of them. Anonymous above – get out as soon as you can!

  • Hi guys. Just went for a job interview at Lush and got rejected and have been upset all night. So glad i came across this though!I thought it was just me who thought their sales technique was too pushy. I learned everything about the products, advised customers about which product would be best when they approached and asked me for help,sold several products, was polite and greeted everyone.

    But, I didn’t get the job because i wasn’t ‘in your face enough.’ I understand how annoying it is when sales assistants keep pestering you when you’ve already told them ‘i’m fine thanks’ so I didn’t want to ask them again if they needed any help when they’d ALREADY been asked by 2 other shop assistants and said bluntly ‘i’m fine’ or ‘just browsing’.

    When customers say they want to be left alone, they really do. I could see several customers were getting annoyed by sales assistants who kept talking to them and some actually walked out because of it.

    And the shop manager was so un- sympathetic on announcing I ‘just wasn’t right for Lush.’ I even showed her how much work I’d done and she still didn’t care. It’s sad that a company that claims to have so much respect for the environment and treats it with such care doesn’t behave in the same way for the customers.

    Sorry this has been a rant! Just had to get it off my chest xxx

  • Do they smell artificial? Because ESSENTIAL OILS are about as real as it gets. ALSO the people who founded lush used to partner with THE BODY SHOP because the body shop couldn’t come up with such clever inventions as LUSH.

    Their creative style may intimidate some people who are either too shallow or insecure to appreciate someone else’s success, but that doesn’t change the fact that at my mall local mall the body shop went out of business and LUSH STILL STANDS.

    Also to those rejected or sacked, when you ask people ACTUAL QUESTIONS instead of “Do you need any help?” They won’t be annoyed. The sales person has a wealth of knowledge and savvy that (9 times out of 10) the customer does not. When someone is standing by a wall of soaps, obviously looking for one they’d like, they appreciate help navigating. SALES IS AN ART. Some people come off as pushy, others as helpful.

    You can’t work there if you don’t have a passion for the product. Essential oils, fresh fruit and veg, hand made. All of that is beautiful. If you don’t love it, you don’t want to share it with the world, then you sink to the bottom. There are people who would kill to have that job. It is insanely fun and consistently stimulating.

    You guys are idiots. If you don’t like it, don’t buy it. End of story.

  • I myself am a former employee of Lush, I recently left for a much better paying job. One thing you all should know before applying to work at a Lush is that most of them pay nothing…. you could make more money at a McDonald’s than selling their smelly soaps! But even though they pay almost nothing they have HUGE expectations and expect you to follow around and stalk every person who walks through the door and never except no or just looking as an answer. They also are now making you give in store facials, foot treatments, and applying henna hair color to customers….. if I wanted to do all that as a sale associate I would go get certified and get paid more than minimum wage to do it!

    I also have to agree with others that have posted about the companies ethics…it’s really sad that Lush seems to care more about sharks than it’s own employees! The turnover rate is very high with Lush and it’s no wonder why! I just think if Lush’s loyal customers had any idea of how the company actually runs they would be stunned! I think that is why most stores won’t hire you if they suspect you are already a huge “Lushie”….they don’t want to let out their nasty little secret.

  • I think these comments practically borderline on conspiracy theories. I work for Lush and we do sometimes have employees that don’t cut it. Not because they are too big a lushie or don’t stalk customers enough or anything ridiculous as that. I literally watched a girl stand in front of the shop and stare at the floor about 5 feet in front of her for her entire shift. Some of you people who claim that Lush is awful really need a reality check. Maybe it’s not Lush that’s so awful but maybe you make a shit employee. They don’t pay minimum wage btw, with their monthly bonuses and etc the minimum wage in my state is $7.50 and I’m getting an average of $14 an hour. So here is your high horse: {{}}} Now get off it.

  • I work for lush and most of what these post-Lush Workers say is completely ridiculous! If someone tells me they are just looking and want to be left alone I’ll do it. But it is pretty hard to find the right product if you have no idea what you are looking at. I’m sure the people who wrong this blog don’t know the difference between a bubble bar, massage bar or a piece of soap. hence one of the reasons we “stalk” people to let them know what exactly we have to offer. We aren’t a clothing store or a department store. We are a Fresh handmade Cosmetics store and all our products have an array of specific essential oils and products that are made for specific skin types and needs. If you don’t know all the ingredients and what they are good for then you obviously wont know which product to get. thus why we are here to help you. I never force people to buy anything or tell my casuals to our objective is to make sure you have had the best experience in our shop and we rely on that to get the word out about our products as we don’t do any paid advertisement. I dare the people who wrote this to go into a lush store and actually let one of the staff members show you things and then rant about how crap and artificial we are. because I swear we are probably the most passionate about our products than any other staff in any other store is.

  • OMG! Get over it you lot. You lush haters can’t really comment on the products when you haven’t been in there long enough to even look at them or give them a chance. Weeeellll if you think about it, the reason why the shop smells really overpowering is because everything is un packeged therefore the smells are all avaliable together!! It’s not PERFUME!! It’s natural sent from essential oils!! AND trust me if you stay longer in the shop than 15 mintues you forget aboout the smell, your brain naturally gives up trying to take in smells!! The staff are just trying to help you get to the product quicker and help you find what your looking for!!!! FREAKING GET OVER IT!!

  • You Lush girls are crazy! Pull your head of of the “bomb pots” and stop sniffing bath bomb dust. I will tell you as a FACT that most Lush stores pay Sales Associates right at or even less than $9 an hr. I didn’t just work for this company for a little while…I was there for more than a year and working as a manager and know what all the people in my shop and other shops in my city were making. The bonus structure is a mess and sets you up to fail…. they expect a growth of 20-25 percent every yr over your last yrs numbers in order to bonus…. that may happen one year, but then the next when they expect you to grown an additional 20% you are doomed to fail! The company is run by a cocky man that listens to no one and takes no suggestions from anyone who knows anything. They are a Human Relations NIGHTMARE and have NO HR dept whatsoever….which is prob why they have so many lawsuits filed and have lost several of them…this is also FACT….you can look them up online! And there is NO doubt that Lush sales associates stalk customers and are trained and expected to do so!!!! If you get a “just looking” that is never an acceptable answer and you must continue to bug them till they buy something or get so annoyed they leave the store!

  • Lush inventors Mark Constantine originally worked with the Body Shop but they’re contract discontinued some years ago. But you can still some of their original inventions there.

    get your facts right…

  • Lush almost killed me(not actually im being over dramatic but i felt like i was)…..i used two of their products, skin drink and fresh farmacy and ended up in the emergency clinic because i had a violent allergic reaction, my face blew up to twice its normal size, my eyes watered and gooked up and swelled so much i couldn;t see and my body was completely covered in hives for almost a week…all this from some face moisturizer. I still don’t know what im allergic to, as i haven’t been able to get a test until this month. The stupid thing is, i think it may be almonds, which i have eaten for years, enjoying my lovely nut friends until Lush came along and ruined my skin….it’s never been the same since and now i have to carry an epipen around just in case i almost die…..thanks Lush

  • what a miserable and bitter article! such a shame that you have so much time to write such negative comments about such a fun and harmless brand that is trying to do a bit of good in a pretty dark world! FYI a lot of there products are AMAZING, such as the dream cream which has helped thousands of ezcema sufferers that prescribed drugs did nothing for! The staff give amazing customer service and they campaign on some serious ecological and conservation issues. You have made some very ignorant and narrow minded comments, shame!

  • As an employee I feel obliged to set a few things straight.

    There is no better way to put it than someone said above which is sales is “an art”. The extent to which the associates go to provide the absolute best customer service is amazing. There is NO comission that comes with the job, and it really is a labor of love. Get to know the company and the history and the stance that Lush takes in the cosmetic world and I promise you will change your mind about it.
    Associates that have “pestered” or “stalked” you in the past were not doing their jobs accordinlgy because that is not what they are trained to do. Try to think of them as educators; they are really there with YOUR best interest in mind. If this were not true there would be NO sales and the company would not last. If you enter Lush you have entered territory that has PERMISSION TO SELL. Kindly let someone know you would prefer to shop alone and I promise you will be granted.
    Although I can promise your experience and understanding of Lush will be enhanced with a trained and passionate associate.

    Try to be more open minded people.
    and if you don’t like frangrance, fun, and a few bubbles here and there don’t bother. Leave the negativity else where.

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