employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Beat Eating Disorders

Is this your company?

Out of touch Directors - Anonymous employee Beat Eating Disorders Employee Review

1.0
8 Nov 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-4 day week -teams very committed to the cause and doing all they can to support people who need us and make sure we're working to make things better for anyone affected by eating disorders

Cons

Directors are out of touch with the rest of the organisation. They make decisions without any consultation or discussion about whether it is the right thing and can work in practice. It is very top down, and when it goes wrong, there is a blame culture and they don't take responsibility. People are afraid to speak up as there are negative repercussions.

Explore other reviews about Beat Eating Disorders

5.0
19 June 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Takes staff well being very seriously, brilliant approach to flexible working arrangements, remote working and mandatory 4 day working week with flexibility to change up if required. Promotes independence and respect and really tries to minimise micromanaging which is such a breath of fresh air from other places I’ve worked. One of the only places I feel really portray the values they state to have. Absolutely love this company and all they stand for

Cons

Due to being in the charity sector, pay is lower than national average for various roles. This is out of their hands as they rely on contracts and funding and have recently awarded pay rises to try and match national pay increases.

2.0
20 Dec 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

4 day full-time working week. Flexible hours, Beat are good at accommodating other commitments like studies or family. Flexibility of working from home. The people on frontline delivering services are very supportive to each other, genuinely care about Beat's cause and want to help beneficiaries.

Cons

Overworked and understaffed - poor work/life balance and unrealistic expectations set on staff. The execs have little involvement or understanding of what the people delivering services do. Managers in general don't take accountability for their actions or hold others accountable. Very poor communication between services/departments and massive organisational issues. Poorly thought out decisions by the execs, very little forward thinking. When things go wrong they balme others. Training and development opportunities and well-being support has dropped over the last two years. Many fixed term contracts and a feeling of being indispensable and not valued. Execs and senior managers don't take on board feedback. Very little consistency, constantly changing processes (links to above).

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All