Good Company - Supervisor ICCU Employee Review

3.0
Oct 25, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people you work around are very kind. You get to work with people that want to do and be better. Benefits are good. People are generally happy in office.

Cons

Livable Wage - ICCU would rather tell you to reevaluate your spending than consider the cost of the market you live in. The people making adjustments to pay live in Pocatello and do not understand the cost of living in the Treasure Valley, North Idaho or Spokane area. Asking for a raise is frowned upon no matter what HR says. Spanish - ICCU does not pay you for speaking Spanish even though they make so much off of the Spanish speaking community, they don't want to pay for that skill set and they will ask Spanish speaking staff to invest time they do not have on projects to better the CUs Spanish rather than invest in a team that is dedicated to translating documents and community outreach. Opportunity for growth - ICCU is bent on keeping growth opportunities and diverse career opportunities in Chubbuck.

Explore other reviews about ICCU

5.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing Leadership, Coworkers, strategic goals, and Fun

Cons

Limited growth within Community Development

1.0
May 31, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are good people sprinkled throughout the organization, and working alongside capable, committed colleagues is one of the more consistent positives of the experience. The work itself can be genuinely rewarding, particularly in areas where leadership is strong and sets a clear direction. In those environments, teams tend to function more effectively and employees are better supported in doing meaningful work.

Cons

The culture has shifted toward a more bureaucratic, bank-style environment where internal priorities and egos often outweigh member and employee experience. While the company once had a more collaborative feel, it now comes across as increasingly political and hierarchical in many areas. Experiences do vary by team, but the overall direction has made trust and day-to-day working relationships noticeably weaker than in the past. The “Best Place to Work” survey results do not reflect the day-to-day employee experience, and internal encouragement to rate the organization highly undermines confidence in those results. At the same time, transparency around promotions and advancement remains a significant concern. Many employees perceive that visibility, internal relationships, religion, and networking can sometimes carry more weight than actual performance and results. Even where that perception is not universally accurate, the lack of clear criteria and communication around decisions creates frustration and distrust. Leadership communication and accountability continue to be weak points. Employee feedback often does not lead to visible change, and follow-through is inconsistent. Lack of consistent accountability has allowed negative leadership behaviors to have an outsized impact on morale and culture, further eroding confidence in leadership over time. Despite having many strong individual contributors and capable teams, these cultural issues have had a clear and ongoing impact on morale, engagement, and retention.

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