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American Heart Association

Engaged Employer

Anonymous - Anonymous employee American Heart Association Employee Review

2.0
Mar 2, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Office closes for Christmas. Meeting people in the community. Learning CPR.

Cons

RUN RUN RUN! If you are considering another offer please do yourself a huge favor and take your career elsewhere. I've never seen an organization fun so dysfunctionally. You are over worked, severely underpaid, and they promote "work life balance" which is utter hog wash! Senior leadership really has no clue and the organization as a whole is completely out of touch. The longer I'm here the more I see it's nothing more than a glorified sales company. As soon as I can find another opportunity I wiill be running so fast, smoke will be coming from my feet!

Explore other reviews about American Heart Association

5.0
Jul 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The American Heart Association is a great place to work. Throughout my tenure, I’ve had the opportunity to grow professionally while supporting a mission that truly makes a difference. I especially appreciate the organization’s commitment to work-life balance and its supportive culture. I’m proud to be part of the AHA family.

Cons

I do not have any cons

5.0
Jul 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This organization makes internal mobility a priority by focusing on career conversations with staff, their learning and development platform, recognition of great work, mentoring programs, and opportunities for employees to connect outside of their roles. It's a mission-driven organization where staff feel that their opinions are valued and that the work that they do is important, no matter their role. Incredible leads in the C-suite and regions that use feedback to drive change and results. When they say competitive pay from other non-profits, they mean it.

Cons

Department structure can be kind of confusing at times. Several training and development teams for systems, so it's hard to know who to go to first. Limited clarity on the structure of the Technology support teams. Always introducing new systems into the organization for efficiency, except certain aspects of existing software are not being maximized to their full potential. Multiple systems cause overwhelm for new hires as they start since there is no central location ("one-stop-shop") for them to find their resources.

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