A Disappointing and Distrustful Experience - Anonymous employee One More Child Employee Review

1.0
26 May 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The first month on the job was relatively easy, with a light workload and a few genuinely friendly coworkers. The pay is also solid for a nonprofit.

Cons

The hiring process was painfully long—3.5 months total from application to start date, with a particularly drawn-out and frustrating two-month period between receiving the offer and actually beginning the role. That alone communicated a high level of internal disorganization. Once in the role, expectations were vague and inconsistent, changing without notice and often used reactively rather than proactively. I experienced a concerning lack of trust, with micromanagement disguised as “accountability,” including inappropriate late-night messages, critiques about my break-time activities, and being asked to report daily on my top three tasks—even when leadership admitted they didn’t have more work to assign me. Despite always completing my responsibilities ahead of schedule, I was treated with suspicion instead of appreciation. The office culture prioritized appearances over actual productivity. Leadership seemed far more interested in whether you looked busy than in whether you were actually doing good work. If you didn’t look, talk, or think like the internal "family," you were quietly alienated and constantly scrutinized. The entire environment felt dated, reactive, and silently judgmental.

Explore other reviews about One More Child

5.0
6 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Christ-centered, cares about employees, fulfilling work.

Cons

Need more expansion, move to other locations/states.

3.0
12 Feb 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Faith-based environment. People really do love Jesus and believe in the mission there.

Cons

Leadership seems to be blind to the impact decisions have on employees. My department had multiple positions open for months and months. My boss kept getting told that there just wasn’t budget to hire more people. Yet we had more and more responsibilities and demands placed on our time. You needed to be 2-3 positions, not one. I saw multiple leaders get ill or try to take PTO to be with their families, only to work continuously while they were out, because there was no one to cover for them. Burnout was everywhere. Leadership claimed they wanted to have open conversations, yet when staff tried, it was taken as proof that staff was wrong, rather than that there could be program. So many people with long tenure have left, or the rumors are they are trying to leave. It’s sad.

3
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