Highly competitive internal culture:
In the office assessed, team members often operated independently and competitively, even across distinct divisions (Office, Accounting, Technology, Marketing). Some individuals pursued roles outside their division without transparency, leading to internal friction.
Leadership communication silos:
Several leaders had longstanding relationships with one another, forming an inner circle. Information was shared more freely within that group than with other divisions, resulting in limited cross-team collaboration even when shared client needs would have benefited from broader involvement.
Seniority receiving disproportionate leniency:
Long-tenured employees frequently received preferential treatment. Management was more likely to overlook issues or boundary oversteps from senior staff, creating perceptions of uneven accountability.
Organizational favoritism:
Favoritism was a recurring theme. Certain employees received advantages — such as remote-work flexibility — that were not consistently available to others with similar performance or tenure.
Subjective and inconsistent internal mobility decisions:
There were instances where internal transfer decisions were based on unclear criteria. For example, an employee with over six years of tenure was denied a transfer due to being deemed “not a culture fit,” raising concerns about vague standards and potential bias.
Operating model differs significantly from industry norms:
Compared to most staffing agencies, Robert Half’s internal structure and cultural dynamics — including competition between divisions, communication barriers, and favoritism-driven decision-making — deviated from standard industry practices. This created an environment that felt more political and less collaborative than typical agency models.