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American Red Cross

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American Red Cross reviews

3.3

49% would recommend to a friend

(4,609 total reviews)
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Gail McGovern

69% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

American Red Cross has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 4,609 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The American Red Cross employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the ONG y Organizaciones sin fines de lucro industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
2.0
Oct 30, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The ideals of the organization still resonate

Cons

Since Gail McGovern has become CEO, the Red Cross has adopted the AT&T model of management. Decisions are no longer locally based, but decided by a select few who manage to screw things up. We have seen this in response to disaster services (i.e. Hurricane Sandy), Health and Safety, and Blood Services. Now, the employees left are being set up for failure.

1.0
Sep 28, 2014

Top Heavy Organization

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent benefits and paid time off for employees who have five or more years with the company. Good place to get skills for other companies. Plenty of hours if you want them.

Cons

Lots of managers and too little actual workers. You still have departments dwindled down to one or two actual workers then three or four layered managers. Much of the work put in by current employees goes towards paying lavish retirement pensions for past workers. Lots of red tape for simple task.

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American Red Cross Response
11y
Thank you for your review. We are pleased to hear your satisfaction with our benefits package and PTO. Over the years we have made efforts to streamline our processes and cut down on some of the red tape to which you referred. We recognize that there are always additional improvements that can be made, and will pass your feedback along to our leadership team.
2.0
Jun 26, 2014

Losing Sight of Services

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Most of the volunteers are dedicated beyond belief. They truly are the heart of the Red Cross. Getting to serve members of the military, veterans, and their loved ones is an honor. Never a dull moment. As a regional employee you're always traveling around your counties and meeting different people which keeps the job from becoming boring Kind and committed direct supervisor made the experience much better than it would've been without her. Some flexibility to create programs that best benefit families in your area Great opportunity to network with other organizations...which made it much easier to get a new job Providing veterans with much needed resources and knowing you really made a difference in someone's day. Working for a long established organization opens many doors when referring military families to others for direct assistance.

Cons

The lack of consistency in pay and job titles. Staff in other regions with less responsibilities than me were paid $5,000+ more than myself and had fancy titles such as "Director", "Manager", "Senior Director", while they did not have any paid staff reporting to them nor were they employed with the Red Cross longer than I. Lack of appreciation for hard work. 40 hour work week was unheard of. Expected to staff the building even if it meant having to skip meetings with local military leadership, just so there was a body in the building. Worked most weekends throughout the year as many military events happen on weekends and most volunteers did not want to give up their free time on the weekends. "Comp time" is not part of the organizations policy although some staff members are occasionally awarded it. Lack of focus on SAF program. While the Red Cross started because of Clara Barton's commitment to the troops, the organization seems to have long forgotten that. While that line of service is going through "restructuring" it seems they have just added additional staff to report up into, NHQ has completely overlooked the fact that more support is needed in the field on the Regional level to deliver direct services. On a NHQ level- the organization is far more focused on the services that produce funds (such a biomedical which the Talent Acquisition reps on here keep commenting about). While most regions were informed there was no more room for additional staffing to be added for international services, SAF, or disaster, many have found a way to add staff to their Development Departments, which is an extremely overpaid department to begin with. While I understand that the organization needs funding to deliver services, if we don't have the staff to deliver the services people won't donate. We've seen it time and time again. Not to mention, most people don't even know that the Red Cross has a military/veterans program. Communications/marketing for our services with SAF is AWFUL at best and misleading at worst when they actually do put out articles/commercials. Also, if you do into the Red Cross hoping to be a "lifer", don't go into International Services or Service to the Armed Forces. There is ZERO room for growth unless you plan on moving to DC for a NHQ job, but most of the people there haven't spent time in the field so they're completely out of touch. As someone who once donated to this org, after working here I now put my money towards USO and Blue Star Families after seeing how inappropriately money is spent. We had a donor give a sizeable donation to our local SAF program a few years back and our COO put it towards getting pins to give out to everyone she came across. It makes me sick to think how those funds could've assisted in providing direct services rather than being used on giveaways. Actions like this made me lose faith in where I was working. With the announcement of the 2017 plan this past spring before I left, it's clear that the CEO's plan is to further cut staffing and *hope* that volunteers will suddenly want to commit 20+ hours a week to cover the responsibilities of the staff members that will let go. Since I started, our region alone has turnover of 86% of the staff...that's a lot in 3 &1/2 years. Morale among employees is at an all time low and I honestly don't know how the Red Cross plans to turn things around. I will say that they do give employees a chance to voice their dissatisfaction through a survey, there is a very high level of fear of that information somehow getting back to leadership and leading to termination. This may be unrealistic but most Red Cross employees across the country that I know are all walking on eggshells right now if they haven't already jumped ship this year.

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American Red Cross Response
11y
We thank you for taking the time to leave a review and are glad to hear about the positive aspects of your job, in making a difference to our armed forces. We also appreciate your feedback concerning your experience on the job and with current changes our organization is undergoing. It is true that we have been in a transitional period, sparked by the need to respond to changes in the biomedical industry and rising budgetary challenges. As our leadership team has noted, these challenges must be addressed in order to remain viable as an organization and continue our life-saving mission. While much of the re-engineering has occurred on the biomedical side, we do recognize that it has posed pain points to other service divisions as well. We have confidence, however, that we will ultimately move through this transition as a stronger organization. We appreciate your perspective and will pass this info, as well as your suggestions, along to our leadership team.
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