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American Red Cross

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Sinking ship - Collections Team Supervisor American Red Cross Employee Review

2.0
Jul 27, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Saving lives and working with donors, I love those 2 things about my job.

Cons

I have worked here for a many years. this company has gone from an amazing place to work to a sinking ship. From the very top the management is terrible. I am in collections as a team supervisor. They put so much pressure on us to collect more and more and we are always short staffed. We can't keep employees because this organization does not value employees. They have changed pay practices to benefit them and not employees. They are not giving people full time hours and running blood drives short staffed. It does not seem to me that they value the donors, they value their numbers and meeting quarterly goals. Our benefits over time are being stripped. They have changed insurance, sick time benefits, withheld annual raises on some years, discontinued the pension and they are slow to promote anyone. It is a cultural of negativity and scarcity. It's never enough, you give your all and it's never enough. No recognition at all, no employee parties or any sort of employee appreciation events. Maybe it is different I'm other parts of the country but this has been my experience. I have seen them sneakily rearrange positions for certain people and then laying off people who have worked here for 20 years. They take that persons work and dump it on someone else with no pay increase. I thought I would work here forever but now I have officially decided to leave and am looking for other employment.

Explore other reviews about American Red Cross

5.0
Apr 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My experience working with the Red Cross has been great. The work is fulfilling and the people are passionate. Benefits are good - Kaiser is $6 a month!

Cons

There is work life balance, but there is an expectation to work nights and weekends.

3.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Meaningful, mission-driven work that makes a real impact in people's lives during times of crisis. -Flexible remote work when not actively responding to disasters. -Volunteers are the heart of the organization. Many are passionate, dedicated, and genuinely enjoyable to work with. -Building strong relationships with volunteers creates an incredible support system. Many go above and beyond to help staff because they recognize the workload and truly care about the mission. -Unique opportunities to gain experience in disaster response, emergency management, crisis management, leadership, and volunteer management. -Deployment opportunities that provide exceptional professional and personal growth. -Every day is different, offering a wide variety of experiences and continuous learning. -Strong sense of teamwork and camaraderie during disaster operations.

Cons

-Inconsistent accountability for poor leadership and management behaviors. -Toxic relationship dynamics that overlook behaviors. -High burnout and chronic turnover; many employees do not remain beyond two years. -Unsustainable workload paired with unrealistic expectations. -Leadership often prioritizes metrics over employee well-being and long-term program sustainability. -Staff are frequently expected to fill operational gaps caused by declining volunteer capacity instead of receiving additional staffing support. -On-call responsibilities can feel like being available 24/7. Even when not officially on call, staff often receive calls from volunteers needing guidance, assistance finding disaster responders, or language support. -Employees who speak a second language are frequently relied upon across multiple territories for translation assistance without corresponding workload adjustments. Although translation services exist, using them is often discouraged, placing additional burden on bilingual staff. -PTO can be difficult to fully utilize because work continues to accumulate and responsibilities often remain waiting upon return. -Compensation does not reflect the workload, level of responsibility, or work-life sacrifices expected. Salaried employees often work well beyond 40 hours without additional compensation. - Recognition and incentives appear to be uneven across departments, while frontline disaster relief staff often carry significant operational demands with limited comparable rewards. -Diversity is more visible in entry-level and lower management roles than in senior leadership.

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