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The Nature Conservancy

Engaged Employer

Great place to work - Anonymous employee The Nature Conservancy Employee Review

4.0
Aug 13, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits and a good mission

Cons

Management communication is not clear, they don't spend much time educating their employees about their work and strategy

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The Nature Conservancy Response
7y
Thank you for taking the time to write a review! We appreciate your work towards our mission. As an organization we value transparency and collaboration as this is crucial to our success. We will continue to improve communication and would appreciate any further feedback you may have. Thank you for your input and please reach out to us at recruiting@tnc.org

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Pros

Rewarding work, amazing people, beautiful sights, lots of free food

Cons

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Pros

Excellent benefits and access to programs, resources, and employee support that are often more comprehensive than what is available at smaller nonprofits.

Cons

There is a culture of sweeping problems under the rug to manage perceptions and avoid accountability. Many employees recognize that raising concerns about structural issues is unlikely to lead to meaningful change, which discourages people from speaking up. Managers and directors have incentives to protect their own interests rather than escalate serious problems, particularly when those issues reflect on their own leadership. In turn, senior leaders may be reluctant to address those management failures because they were responsible for hiring or promoting those managers in the first place. This creates a cycle where accountability is consistently avoided, allowing organizational dysfunction to persist. Recent restructuring decisions are a good example of these broader issues. During the North American marketing reorganization, some less qualified directors and managers were placed directly into their roles, while others were required to interview for essentially equivalent positions. Criteria such as geographic constraints were applied inconsistently across comparable roles, leaving employees with the impression that the process was neither transparent nor equitable. The resulting uncertainty and perceived unfairness have contributed to low morale, resentment, and reduced trust in leadership. Because they specialize in communications, marketing team members are especially skilled at framing or explaining away problems in ways that minimize their visibility to senior leadership, including the CMO. As a result, underlying issues often remain unaddressed until they become much larger problems.

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