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International Rescue Committee

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Good values, strong benefits, fantastic employees, and good work - Avis employé Employé (anonyme) International Rescue Committee

4,0
15 avr. 2014
Employé (anonyme)
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

The employees that work here are great coworkers The organization is innovative for a large NGO People are open and there are lots of opportunities to learn about others roles They have really strong benefits for an NGO. Lots of vacation days, 403b match, pretty good healthcare

Inconvénients

It is difficult to move up within the organization. There is so much competition that you often have to leave and come back in order to make yourself qualified for a more senior position.

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5,0
24 mai 2026
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

Very valuable insights in conducting work. Provides valuable input.

Inconvénients

None that I can think of.

2,0
22 avr. 2026
Employé (anonyme)
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

You will meet some amazing and passionate people here who are truly there for the mission. Many came to this country as refugees and immigrants themselves and continue to devote their lives to helping others going through similar experiences. If you end up on the right team, it's an extremely rewarding job.

Inconvénients

Unfortunately, the HQ upper management makes it a toxic place to work. VPs regularly undercut each other publicly (including at all-team meetings and gossiping negatively with staff), especially when potential job cuts were on the horizon. C-Suite didn't listen to staff concerns about upper management and didn't investigate major departures by dedicated staff who left due to poor management despite their dedication to the mission. Leaders picked favorites, ignoring work performance (excusing mediocre performance in some, having high standards for others), and preferred yes-men over staff who wanted to think more critically about the work. Projects were pushed too quickly, despite concerns that it could be detrimental to clients. Positions given to unqualified internal staff who wouldn't be interviewed for the role as external candidates. Senior leaders (director and above) are more focused on keeping their jobs than the mission and will use lower staff work for their own career growth/safety. DEI didn't seem to apply for senior leader roles, where there was little, if any, diversity.

4
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