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Alliance Defending Freedom

Engaged employer

Odd Company, look elsewhere - Anonymous employee Alliance Defending Freedom Employee Review

2.0
31 Jan 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has good benefits and I enjoy the beautiful building close to the freeway for my commute.

Cons

The company has becoming increasingly controlling. If you don't agree with ever aspect then you will not advance with the company. For example, we were asked under supervision to sign a contract that included not having sex out of marriage and not to drink on our personal time. Those that didn't sign would be reprimanded (fired). There is quite a bit of hypocrisy since management and/or their families don't always follow these guidelines. There seems to be way too many family members of management working here who tend to get special assignments not available to others. Everything is ran on donations by donors who are told, with fear tactics, that unless they give money the world is doomed. I don't like the fact the poor and elderly are scared into giving money. There seems to be A LOT of donor money wasted on trips to exotic locations and meetings at the Ritz Carlton. I'm looking for another job.

Explore other reviews about Alliance Defending Freedom

5.0
12 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The development team is incredible. They pray for you, lift you up, and care deeply about your personal and professional wins. I believe Development has taken employee feedback seriously over the last couple years, and is changing for the better in a number of areas, including compensation. Mildly disappointing that WFH was revoked because we lost some great team members as a result, but I don’t think it’s the worst thing ever. This job is great if you are fueled by interacting with people, passionate about sharing the mission of ADF, and encouraging and praying for ministry friends. I feel heard, loved, and cared for by this team. I’m never comfortable with the idea of co-workers being “family” but it’s powerful having a community of believers who really care about you, are committed to keeping the doors open for the gospel, and improving individual areas to do better as a team. At this level, I don’t feel burned out or rushed by my job or employers. It’s obvious that they care about you more than the numbers, but the drive and healthy competition on the team leads to the numbers anyway. And that’s how it should be.

Cons

No WFH options at this time. If I have small children at some point, I would like that option so I can continue working for ADF while being more family focused. :) I think with a company as pro-family as ADF is, that would be a great move to keep dedicated, family focused team members who have the reason for their work in front of them day after day—the free future of the next generation.

1
1.0
14 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fewer and Fewer, all the time

Cons

ADF really thinks of its employees as ants to be micromanaged from the top. They don't trust individual teams and individuals to do their jobs without instituting an RTO and having a Primary Place of Work policy from the executive team for absolutely no real reason. And more than that, it's a four day office mandate. Which is essentially a five day mandate. We could just have had a two day mandate and gotten the same practical effect, but (again) the executive team cannot fathom that there are people who work different than them and thrive in different environments. There's only room for one type of person here. We used to do Working Genius and champion the differences in our team, no more. You're just a number.

3
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