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Ambition Institute

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Ironic 'charity' promoting the primacy of leadership externally while having a black hole void of it internally - Associate Ambition Institute Employee Review

2.0
16 Aug 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart, talented and very amicable staff Smartly straddles taking in lucrative government contracts with development of independently funded and ran corporate programmes £££ Long-term organisational capacity deficits create opportunities to take additional 'development opportunities' outside of your contract and often in your spare time, whether you chose to take these or they are thrust upon you under the guise of 'organisational need'. If you do not have a life outside of work or looking to give one up, Ambition School Leadership may just be for you.

Cons

Appalling HR- I mean, truly appalling. Wage depression Work-life balance Palpable low morale What can I say? If you value even a degree of balance in your life do not work for Ambition School Leadership. Prior to the merger I was on the Future Leaders side where there was a worrying culture of overworking but with an appreciation to dedicated staff. Since the merger, the workload has again increased substantially and the obsession with performance management targets is truly suffocating and counterproductive. It is also worth noting that the pay of roles advertised is substantially lower than when I started at the end of 2015, whereas expectations and the workload has increased. Internal promotion opportunities have also dried up considerably. A classic case of layers of management who have done enough boot-licking up to middle and senior management only to subsequently knock the ladder down behind them and having no shame in throwing those below them under the bus. Morale across the organisation is palpably low. The internal propaganda machine which shovels disingenuous talk of 'values', 'mission' and 'moral purpose' down our throats has worn thin, especially as since the merger it is painstakingly and cringeworthilly conceited and inauthentic. Comparison with North Korea or the Soviet Union always comes to mind, however outrageously hyperbolic, but this is a five year plan that needs abolishing. The HR department are grossly incompetent to the point of countless breaches of employment law, Careless confidentiality breaches of sensitive employer information littered on it's shared drive and around the office printer. I do believe, especially on the Future Leaders side there used to be heart to what we were trying to achieve. It's probably no coincidence that problems have been mounting as the focus has shifted relentlessly to chasing money. I hope these are teething problems with establishing a new organisation but to ambitious, morally-driven graduates and those early on in their career, I'd advise staying well away if you can help it, for now at least. With hindsight I would never have worked here, let alone on currently advertised salaries. You can do better.

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Ambition Institute Response
8y
Thank you for taking the time to review Ambition School Leadership. We are new to Glassdoor so please excuse the delay in responding to your post. We were really sorry to read your reflections and would be keen to explore some of the issues you have raised. As a new organisation (only ten months old), we’re committed to creating a dynamic and engaging culture for our colleagues, but we know we haven’t gotten everything right in the past. We’re fully open to feedback on how we could do things better. Like lots of organisations going through change, we’re focused on improving on how we do things and how this impacts on our employees, whom we see as our biggest asset. We’ve set up a group that brings together people from across the organisation to discuss our culture and policies. This group is listening to feedback from employees past and present and working to monitor and develop work that makes Ambition a fantastic, fulfilling place to work. I’m sorry this wasn’t your experience, and I’d be keen to discuss this. If you’d like to meet me personally, I’d be delighted to meet you. Please send an email to HR@ambitionschoolleadership.org.uk and we’ll fix a time very soon. With best wishes, Temi Olowu, Associate Director for HR

Explore other reviews about Ambition Institute

1.0
17 Jan 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Associates are super friendly These are the glitter in the turd. Largely banded together by being under-employed and underpaid and wondering whether they read the job spec correctly when they applied. You'll recognise these guys because they're the only ones in the office who are smiling, but will wax lyrical about the issues above if asked in private. Flexible working hours and agile working Probably the best thing about the job Some managers are really nice It's luck of the draw, but some are brilliant Easy work and a good work life balance Being an associate isn't rocket science and if you work hard and smartly (and if you're lucky enough to be in a department where you have more autonomy), you can have a decent work-life balance.

Cons

You don't make a difference The teachers do. You'll spend your day ordering dominos pizza, printing name labels and having an existential crisis. Internal selections are a joke A competency framework which is designed to get the best person for the job is gospel. It means people with far more experience lose out to those who memorise the framework because they aren't jumping through hoops. Don't believe me? Look at the CVs of those in some AD positions and management positions and find enough experience to justify the taxpayer-paid salary. Oxbridge and lack of experience in the type of schools we work with Going to Oxford or Cambridge will guarantee you at least a management position. A huge proportion of senior staff went there. Going to Oxbridge shouldn't disqualify you from rising to the top of an organisation, but there is an air of elitism about the place. Very little internal social mobility. Lack of experience, particularly at management level Compare the job requirements here with similar positions Teach First. Where more senior positions are concerned, it's down to the competency framework meaning people who memorise it get promoted. Having so many people who haven't set foot in a classroom since they were a child working for an education charity is embarrassing. Some Area Directors have no experience in the fields which they are leading. Incompetent HR Procedures are broken left, right and centre. I've lost count of how many people have been put on the wrong tax code. We have a huge HR department for an organisation our size. Pay is trash for associates So you know this when you apply, but you're also told about how quickly you'll rise up internally. Recently a welcome pay rise was given, but the better paid you already were, the greater % increase you got. The average pay in the UK is £27,000 and there are people with masters degrees on £20,000 at Ambition with no internal progression. Management is oblivious Cake, [well meaning] wellbeing champions, discussion groups that produce nothing and working groups which have no impact are no match for low pay, lack of internal progression and no autonomy You cannot progress on the high quality of your work alone. No, I don't really want to be part of several working groups which will take hours out of my week where I (as a lowly associate) will be ignored just so I can secure a more position I'm qualified to get. I'm on £20,000 a year with low morale. One rule for management People are made ADs with no assessment centre and expenses (particularly train tickets) are frequently misspent. Ambition spends an obscene amount on travel, and some senior staff are reluctant to travel on off-peak times.

16
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Ambition Institute Response
8y
Thank you for taking the time to review Ambition School Leadership. Feedback is really important to us as we grow as an organisation. It is great to hear you feel you benefit from our flexible and agile working, friendly colleagues and maintain a good work life balance. We will work to ensure these continue to be beneficial to our staff. We want everybody that works at Ambition to understand the critical difference they make to our mission, so I would be keen to hear more about your comments, so we can support you in finding fulfilment in your work. We are committed to transparency in our selection processes and diversity in all aspects of working life here at Ambition. There is ongoing work in these areas, including forthcoming Recruitment Toolkit and brand new Equality, Diversity and Inclusion policy, which I’d be very happy to talk to you about further. If you would like to discuss your feedback further, please do get in touch with me directly on tom.ebbutt@ambitionschoolleadership.org.uk and I look forward to hearing from you. Tom Ebbutt (People & Ventures Executive Director)
2.0
6 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Friendly and supportive teams Manchester office culture

Cons

No progression Boom & bust recruitment Dull & repetitive work

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