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American Red Cross

Is this your company?

Best of intentions, limited resources and poor leadership - Anonymous employee American Red Cross Employee Review

2.0
12 Dec 2012
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

As a department of one I gained extensive experience within my role, wearing multiple "hats" on a day-to-day basis which helped me learn quickly. It felt good to work for such a vital organization that helped the community during times of need and every day through training.

Cons

The national organization recently restructured -- which was necessary to keep costs down -- but also placed a great burden on individual regions and chapters. Employees had limited resources, and due to the 'emergency' nature of the field it created a VERY poor work/life balance as you are always expected to respond on a moment's notice. The job quickly became very draining and turnover was/is extremely high. If you are considering working for a local Red Cross chapter/region, know that a great number of responsibilities will be placed on you. If you are truly invested in the cause you will probably not mind the high demand as much as someone just looking for a career.

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5.0
14 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Friendly people and good work

Cons

No cons for this company

2.0
15 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You feel connected to a larger mission, and go to bed knowing you did good work. Most of the volunteers are amazing people. The job is a good stepping stone to other disaster management jobs elsewhere. PTO policy is generous and Healthcare is decent.

Cons

You are INCREDIBLY overworked and GROSSLY underpaid. You get zero work-life balance. Even when you're not on call, you'll still get tons of calls from volunteers with questions and concerns. If a volunteer is unavailable to respond to a fire call or tend to any other responsibility day or night, you're on deck. You're salaried, so there's no overtime pay. Your pay barely covers the basic cost of living in today's economy ($40k-$50k). Diversity is bottom heavy, meaning there are lots of employees of color in entry level or lower management roles, but beyond that there's a steep drop off. Most of the volunteers are great, but the Red Cross is so desperate to keep them, that poor behavior and language (racist/sexist/phobic) is not properly disciplined or responded to, if at all. Employee retention is poor, especially in the Disaster Specialist role, because they burn you out so quickly without decent pay.

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