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Pew Research Center

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Smart people, great benefits - Assoc Director Pew Research Center Employee Review

3.0
28 Apr 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart people, mostly academics and journalists, working together. Nice office. Great benefits, including Incredible 401k: I'm now putting in 6% while Pew matches that and adds another 7%. The pay is great for a nonprofit. They try to keep pace with top universities and media outlets.

Cons

Some -- not all -- of the seven projects are beyond meticulous to the point of being anal. Internal memos don't need 10 drafts.

Explore other reviews about Pew Research Center

5.0
17 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great atmosphere and strong emphasis on teamwork

Cons

Upward mobility can be difficult

1.0
20 Jul 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The Center conducts good and rigorous work. Excellent research in a time when polling is under fire from different directions and angles.

Cons

Don’t feel that leadership cares about its employees. Generally don’t seem want to engage employee concerns— and just do what they want to do anyway when they do engage employees. For example, they used to do a yearly all staff survey of satisfaction. Last year, they nixed the Center wide meeting to discuss the results. This year they just skipped the survey altogether— at a time where I’d personally guess employee dissatisfaction to be at a 5+ year high.Think this is particularly bad now that the center shares a space with the Trust, leading to both institutional creep. There’s also been an ongoing rollback of remote/hybrid work— keep getting told there’s “no slippery slope” but keep moving to more time in the office for reasons that are inconsistent — despite the fact that, at this point in time, anyone hired in the past 5 years was hired with the expectation of only 2 days in-office and has never known anything more (and that is the culture they’re familiar with at this point). There’s also a career hierarchy in theory but less so in practice, meaning few opportunities for internal upward growth.

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