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World Vision International

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World Vision International reviews

4.0

81% would recommend to a friend

(1,028 total reviews)
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Andrew Morley

94% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

World Vision International has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 1,028 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The World Vision International 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

1K reviews
4.0
Sep 12, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Wonderful organization full of wonderful people doing God's work for the most impoverished people in the world. The world's top provider of clean water in sustainable programs that has yet to be matched. Everyone there is quite passionate about the work, and getting a paycheck for it is just an added blessing.

Cons

Brand centric terminology during chapel, which is a time set apart to press into God & humble ourselves before him. The pulpit is a sacred place for God's word, a place where we thank God for God, not spend our time thanking God for World Vision. Rather, we should be thanking God that he would even use World Vision in the first place. Chapel is sacred time, not a World Vision infomercial. Announcements & such can be distributed via company email. My team went through some "reorganization" this year. The team was retitled in its job titles as well as rolls redefined. In doing so, they announced that we would meet with a team lead & HR Rep to discuss these changes, and that all we had to do was to re-apply through the org's Intranet & submit a cover letter declaring intent for the new position. It was also disclosed at that time that out of "X" number of people currently on the team, that a lesser "X" number of people would be retained. It was also noted as a bit of a reassurance that those retained would be rewarded with a significant salary increase. This really hurt the moral of the team as the team was now put into the position of having to compete with one another in order to retain employment. This went on for close to 3 weeks until lay off notifications were disclosed to those to whom they applied to. Along with that pre-disclosure, severance information was provided to each team member, down to the prospective final day of employment, how long their severance compensation would be per pay period, and the date to which they would exhaust, as well as the date eligible for filing for World Vision's internal Unemployment program (since they are a Non-Profit and do not pay into state Unemployment) and when that date would exhaust. Most of the team agree'd that we would have rather maintained our current compensation rates & forgo the salary increases in order to retain our current team members. This is where the children that World Vision serves can in turn, become an idol. WV does everything in the name of hungry children. What about my co-worker's hungry children. What about the disruption of his/her family as they now have to consider relocating from the community that they've invested themselves in simply so they can acquire employment? I've seen this happen with dozens of people during my time at WV. Many of these people were there for 20+ years and found themselves laid off, only to have to relocate after a time of job searching because they had to relocate to where they could secure employment. Many of these people were/are over 50 years old (higher medical risk bracket/401-k's with built up balances to maintain, higher salaries due to tenure). Now the trend is to hire young people fresh out of college at entry level rates, but it leaves a vulnerable age bracket clamoring for survival. Again, what about my colleagues' hungry children? Food for thought.

1.0
Jan 28, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

+Relatively competitive compensation compared to other non-profit organizations +Despite the challenges, there are still several godly leaders who want to serve Christ +Inspiring chapel messages and worship +Time for team devotions +Annual day of prayer where the office gathers for worship and prayer +Pension and retirement matching provided to staff +Generous vacation and sick leave offered

Cons

World Vision is facing an identity crisis and is no longer perceived by churches/evangelicals as a trustworthy Christian organization, dedicated to spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ. Instead, the work is focused on meeting 'physical' needs. Evangelism is not a goal for this organization, which explains why so many Christians now support other evangelical Christian groups like Samaritan's Purse. The organization's finances are struggling badly and things do not seem to be getting better anytime soon, which means more layoffs and cost-cutting is likely to come. Despite hiring new senior leadership team members, the organization moves TOO SLOWLY and wastes millions of donor dollars through bureaucracy, politics, power plays, and inability to adjust to the expectations of the supposed core donor, evangelical Christians. Toxic leaders and work environments exist across the organization, especially in the IT department. Turnover is very high in many departments and though concerns are raised to HR and through exit interviews, NOTHING IS DONE. Since the organization has been struggling so badly, work life balance has taken a negative hit. Directors and managers often work more than 50 hour work weeks and expect their exempt staff to do the same. Staff are expected to be online working at home at night with their laptop and on the weekends. You will even see staff working on Sunday mornings when Christians would normally go to church to worship! It is a common joke that evenings and weekends are for 'email and work time' and that the workday is for meetings. The health insurance offered is terribly expensive and the maternity and paternity leave offered is a joke compared to other companies in Seattle/Bellevue. The location is really out of the way in Federal Way; most people these days want to work in Seattle. Training/tuition assistance opportunities are basically nonexistent now that money is so tight.

4.0
Mar 29, 2016

Bad behavior can get overlooked

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great ministry and some really great people to work with.

Cons

Some people employees get away with bad behavior because they are good at their jobs. I was told by one employee "They don't pay me to be nice." When disturbing matter was brought up to management, I was told that they put up with the employee's bad behavior because they were so good at their job. The employee's behavior goes totally against what World Vision is all about. That was just one employee. Most others were great to work with.

Viewing 10 - 12 of 1,028 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,455 World Vision International reviews submitted anonymously by World Vision International employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if World Vision International is right for you.