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British Red Cross

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British Red Cross Reviews

3.6

66% would recommend to a friend

(648 total reviews)

Michael Adamson

70% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

British Red Cross has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 648 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The British Red Cross employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Non-profit and NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

648 reviews
1.0
2 Mar 2020

Brilliant cause, toxic work environment

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Vital work. The chance to work on truly important issues for a household name organisation, steeped in history. Working alongside some very committed people, who are incredibly dedicated to their work.

Cons

The culture of particular teams at Head Office is entirely toxic. Staff are overworked and undervalued - some amazing people hired but tend to leave the on a revolving door basis within 0.5-1.5 years without looking back. Severe bullying and mistreatment exhibited by staff in positions of power (one member of senior leadership in particular) is shockingly routine, and passed down management chain - staff must learn to accept it or eventually leave the organisation. Many of us are still coming to terms with encountering this sort of workplace behaviour at a charity that claims to spread the #PowerOfKindness

1.0
6 Sept 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some colleagues were lovely Range of training you can partake in, however none of it was helpful to the actual job role I was doing

Cons

They lie to you in the interview about what the job entails, I specifically asked in the interview about the amount of phone work I'd have to do and they said very little if any. It was all phone work to the point it was very similar to a call centre job! it's pretty much a call centre type job stuck on the phones all the time People in management roles are inadequate No sense of ownership especially when a customer issue arises. For example the sales teams don't care unless they can make money out of the caller, otherwise it's passed on to the customer care even though it's sales which created the issue in the first place. As a customer service administrator you are left to take all the negatives from customers such as cancelled training sessions and you are left to give them shoddy explanations. Also lots of non first aid training calls come through to your line some are from people who are in desperate need and you are left with no training on how to deal with this and are blamed that they came through to the wrong number. You literally have to 'pass them on' and are left feeling guilty that you couldn't help.

1.0
30 Jun 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• Still somewhat respected in the wider sector so quite easy to get another job elsewhere, especially if you're relatively senior. • Pay at senior level is quite good • As you can see from below there's a massive amount wrong, but it remains one of the biggest and most important charities in the country. If you're really confident and in a position to take a senior role it could be a real career making opportunity to fix some of these problems, but it would be a brutal slog for anyone who attempted it. • If you’re looking at their refugee support or international family tracing work they are pretty much the only organisation in the country that does precisely what they do.

Cons

A once really respected organisation, unfortunately it is going downhill fast. I was in a role that had me interact with lots of different parts of the organisation and while none of them are in a good place I’d say the cons vary a bit depending on where you are. In general Poor quality leadership/unfair advancement: especially at the higher echelons of the organisation leadership is shockingly mediocre, often promoted due to office politics or due to being mates with higher-ups. A couple of times I ran into people at senior level who had been transferred elsewhere in the organisation and knew less about the brief for their department than new starters. Most of the organisation (not all teams but majority) is generally more focused on appearing to be successful than actually doing well and there’s a big culture of overly inflating results to try and show you’re getting results, and ignoring actual problems. Quite a lot of middle managers spend a lot of time covering for their heads/directors. I think the chief executive himself is fairly competent but unfortunately he relies entirely on what he hears from his senior staff so is largely responding to a series of fictions. Burnout: people are worked really hard, with deadlines set with little understanding of the reality of the work involved (in part due to be aforementioned leadership issues). This leads to a lot of issues with burnout (line management training treated your staff signing off due to stress as unavoidable and a common event…), one of the most common points for people to leave is at six months in and few people last more than 18 months On boarding is atrocious: people routinely didn’t get the contract in time (a couple of weeks after they started was seen as normal), people often wouldn’t have phones or accounts properly set up and in some cases this got really problematic if people had to handle sensitive information. This is particularly exacerbated by issues with turnover (people are not there long so something that messes up their first couple of months is a big chunk of them) Bullying: not something I ran into a huge amount while I was there myself but I knew many people who had a really big problem with bullying/aggressive management style, particularly from the most senior parts of the organisation (the three worst offenders I was aware of, including the only one I ran into personally, are/were all directors). Diversity/tokenism: they desperately want to appear friendly to diversity but it’s all very tokenistic. Disabled people are so intimidated by HR they tend to hide their status, loads of micro aggressions towards BAME community; generally not a nice place to be if you don’t fit the mould. Very poor management staff relations: there’s been a lot of badly planned and botched restructurings in the last few years and some teams have been quite redundancy happy. This, coupled with all the above problems, have led to really bad staff management relations. The senior leadership is absolutely terrified of this leading to unionisation which they’re very hostile to (especially the chief executive) but they’ve not provided a workable alternative In many teams you don’t get make a difference: probably the worst thing you can say for a job in the charity sector, all of the above has a real impact on effective service delivery. I left after I realised I wasn’t able to use my time to best help people in crisis, which after all should be what everyone in the organisation is there to do. Specific team/functions The administrative functions and people and learning are badly underfunded, with people provided insufficient training and no real way to pull levers in the wider organisation to actually make things work better. Frontline staff are very poorly paid: it’s more of a mixed bag when you get to the support roles or middle management but people on the front line are paid very badly even for the sector. Poor communication between the centre and the periphery: people based in small local offices tend to be rather out on their own/lack support. This is a big problem if you’re based in UK office or one of the other big offices

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Glassdoor has 789 British Red Cross reviews submitted anonymously by British Red Cross employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if British Red Cross is right for you.