Great impact and people, but poor strategy and culture - Senior Manager Smile Train Employee Review

2.0
30 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great work and impact Good health benefits Many wonderful, brilliant people who are working very hard and believe in Smile Train

Cons

Poor work life balance with little done to actually address the issue beyond platitudes Reactionary, under-qualified CEO that has created a culture of stress and mistrust. High turnover due to poor leadership and a culture of shifting expectations, inconsistency, and favoritism. It’s difficult to deliver on projects and goals when the strategy pivots often and team structures change annually as the latest “silver bullet.” Unaddressed concerns from medical partners due to high turnover of valued staff in Latin America especially; the new regional lead is damaging relationships and the organization’s reputation.

Explore other reviews about Smile Train

5.0
30 Jan 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible, benefits, work/life balance, and mission

Cons

Would love to see the

1.0
7 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work directly supports a cause that most employees deeply believe in. Strong external reputation and donor-facing narrative. Exposure to global health and nonprofit work that can be meaningful early in a career.

Cons

Mission used as a shield to excuse: Chronic overwork. Below-market pay. Toxic leadership behavior. Emotional manipulation of staff who care deeply about patients. Culture of “you’re lucky to work here” instead of mutual respect. Severe toxicity at senior leadership levels, particularly within programs, comms and operations. Authoritarian, top-down management style with little room for dissent or dialogue. Feedback is discouraged; raising concerns often leads to subtle or overt retaliation. Externally compassionate, internally harsh — empathy and patience are extended outward, not inward. Public image does not match internal culture or employee experience. HR perceived as ineffective and aligned with leadership rather than employee wellbeing, as expected. High turnover of talented, committed staff; institutional knowledge lost repeatedly. Blame culture: mistakes flow downward, credit flows upward. Poor operational planning, constant fire drills, and unrealistic timelines. Lack of psychological safety — employees regularly feel they are walking on eggshells. Career growth and advancement are unclear, inconsistent, or dependent on favoritism, the mid year and year end review process is horrible! Burnout treated as an individual failure rather than a systemic problem.

3
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