While the mission of this organization is undeniably commendable, the chaos and unreliability of its recruitment process — and the HR team driving it — should give any applicant serious pause.
My experience began when I received an unexpected call from the HR Manager at nearly 6 p.m., over a year after I originally applied. She asked whether I had reviewed her email, which she ultimately had not even sent yet. What followed was a confusing back-and-forth with yet another recruiter, despite already having spoken with an HR manager.
The interview process itself consisted of four levels, culminating in an in-person panel. The format was a rigid round-robin of scripted questions, leaving interviewers with little ability to ask follow-up questions or meaningfully respond to legitimate questions about the role or the organization. After the final interview, I was told I would hear back the following week; it has now been four weeks with no communication.
Another pattern that stood out was the cultural dynamic within the HR function. There is a noticeable vibe that hiring decisions — including for prior HR leadership roles — prioritize “fitting in” socially rather than bringing in people with strong HR competence or experience. This reinforces the sense of unclear direction and inconsistent expectations across the department.
Additionally, despite having HR Generalists at each center and several layers of HR leadership, the organization recently created a separate Employee Relations role. During my panel, it was mentioned that responsibilities might be shifted away from the HR Manager into this new role. This raises questions about internal stability, workload distribution, and the volume of ongoing employee issues. Rather than addressing root causes, the organization appears to be adding roles to manage symptoms.
Overall, the experience left me with serious concerns about organizational alignment, HR leadership cohesion, and the clarity of this department’s future direction. Applicants should carefully consider these red flags before committing time to the process.