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British Council

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British Council reviews

3.7

65% would recommend to a friend

(2,307 total reviews)
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Ciarán Devane

63% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

British Council has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 2,307 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The British Council employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the ONG y Organizaciones sin fines de lucro industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Apr 6, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My time at the British Council has been bittersweet. As many other reviewers will mention, it's the people that keep you coming back. You truly feel part of a wider family and there is always a welcome for you wherever you are in the world. While the mission is somewhat confusing from an external perspective (Government body? Cultural institute? Language School?) you do feel like you are genuinely contributing to something worthwhile, whether you are frontline or support. Pros: * The people - genuinely friendly and welcoming * The mission * The international element - horizon broadening travel if you are lucky enough to get it * In theory, work-life balance, but this depends entirely on who your manager and department is

Cons

There are serious health warnings that come with this organisation. There is a genuine need for change in many areas. Over the years, many highly paid experts and external consultants have been brought in to fix things, only to find that the organisation is not ready or willing to accept many of their proposals. Said highly paid people move on, only for a fresh push to get things fixed a few years later. Change fatigue syndrome kicks in, making staff that have been around for a while very cynical to any fresh attempts to make things better. Couple this with a chronic inability to make a decision and stick to it and you'll find that staff will either hang on and put up with it, hoping for something or someone to magically come along and make things better, or get out as quickly as they realise what's up. Internal politics also play a major role in wearing people down. Nepotism is rife, and it becomes a game of who, rather than what you know. Speak out of turn and you will be shot down, often in public. Dare to break out of your silo and you will be exiled from any form of decision making influence. There will be exceptions to these behaviours, where Heads have worked out a way of shielding their staff from the constant negativity, but good luck in finding whether your manager-to-be is one of the good guys before you start. Cons: * Internal politics, nepotism and a lack of decision making ability * Horrendous IT and systems - just mention the desk booking system to UK staff and see their faces drop * Relationship with UK government adds an extra layer of bureaucracy to an already complex picture * Outside of the UK, huge differences in salary and package between UK and locally-appointed staff leads to resentment and a lingering stench of colonialism

2.0
Sep 16, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work life balance and leave policy. Good brand to work. Good team members and colleagues. Will have options to move to other teams internally based on the skills.

Cons

Bad managers and very partial with employees. Don't have clear policy or work process and expect to work as per the individual manager expectations as per their moods. No position growth and Salary hike. No professional treatment of employees and sometimes they harass you mentally and physically but they claim they have equal employment opportunities.

2.0
Jun 26, 2015

Lack of direction

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary ok, international environment, no much pressure at work in comparison with other companies, good reputation of the brand, opportunities to travel for some workers.

Cons

Work in silos, senior management, often UK-appointed staff, benefit of better conditions and tend to be self-focused and hypocritical with local appointed staff. Wannabe profit-making company by selling expensive courses and exams with a charity dress and a quasi-governmental soul (that is being slow and formal). More job opportunities in low-cost countries and job-cuts in others. Chaotic job structure that varies country by country, inefficiencies on one hand opposite to budget cuts on the other. There is a general sense of lack of direction, lack of a competitive product portfolio, mission too vague, its legal status does not allow to embrace innovation quickly.

Viewing 70 - 72 of 2,307 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,221 British Council reviews submitted anonymously by British Council employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if British Council is right for you.