Pros
Supportive and insightful colleagues who were knowledgeable, experienced and often a valuable source of peer support within an otherwise challenging working environment. Many frontline staff demonstrated professionalism, compassion and a strong commitment to delivering quality care despite organisational pressures.
Cons
My experience working for Spectrum was ultimately disappointing and increasingly demoralising. Rather than feeling valued for experience and professional expertise, many employees appeared to be treated as an inconvenience rather than an asset. The organisation placed significant emphasis on penalising staff for failing to meet KPIs, yet there was little recognition or reward for consistently exceeding expectations. There were no meaningful annual appraisals, structured salary reviews or regular pay rises, leaving employees with little sense of progression or acknowledgement for loyalty, experience or high performance. While some staff were technically eligible for a bonus scheme, in practice it appeared extremely difficult to achieve, making it feel more symbolic than genuinely attainable. Opportunities for progression and professional development felt extremely limited and where progression opportunities did exist, they often did not appear to be accompanied by financial remuneration that adequately reflected the additional responsibility, workload or expectations involved. The removal of paid CPD time further conveyed a lack of genuine investment in ongoing professional growth and maintaining professional standards. While immediate line management was supportive where possible, there appeared to be limited influence from middle management to address wider organisational issues. Senior leadership felt distant and disengaged, contributing to a culture where employees often felt undervalued, unsupported and replaceable. Spectrum presents itself as an ambitious and expanding organisation and there is clearly a strong drive for growth and external success. However, my experience was that this ambition was not matched by sufficient investment in employee wellbeing, morale, retention or development. Sustainable growth depends on valuing and supporting the workforce delivering the service day to day and this was considerable lacking. Ultimately, I left because I no longer felt professionally valued, supported or able to progress within the organisation. For a company operating within wellbeing and therapeutic services, there appeared to be insufficient focus on the wellbeing and professional support of its own staff. I would strongly encourage anyone considering employment with this organisation to carefully consider what they want from a workplace, particularly in relation to professional development, staff wellbeing, recognition and long-term career progression. While others may have different experiences, mine was one where I consistently felt undervalued, unsupported and increasingly disengaged from the organisation.