Do not work here. - Project Coordinator IACP Employee Review

2.0
12 Nov 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has a good reputation in the field, so it can be helpful having on your resume.

Cons

Everything else. Toxic work environment - not uncommon to hear of managers yelling and making their staff cry. Middle management is disorganized and ineffective; leadership says they care but make no actual effort to change things. Low pay, favoritism and lack of transparency regarding salary and promotions. Office policies that made sense 10 years ago but not in 2024. Very high turnover rate, especially at the junior staff level. Unless you are going in as a Program Manager or above, you will probably hate it.

Explore other reviews about IACP

5.0
17 July 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great environment and nice management.

Cons

Turn around time takes a while.

1.0
1 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Location, health insurance, dedicated staff who genuinely care about the mission of the organization.

Cons

IACP should be the premiere organization for police leaders, but unfortunately, behind the scenes, it is something completely different. Middle managers with little to no ability to lead effectively are allowed to run rampant, bullying, micromanaging, and gaslighting their staff, The expectation is perfection, despite the fact that many projects are grossly understaffed as a result of the continued mass exodus of staff members. There simply aren't enough people to do the work at the level they expect, and the staff spend too much time in meetings, managing up, and trying to stay afloat thanks to managers who create unnecessary bottlenecks and busy work. If you put in extra hours, you're told that you have poor time management skills. If you complain, you're told you're argumentative and that you're not permitted to complain to HR about management. This creates a culture of fear that nobody can be expected to flourish in. Leadership gaslights its employees by constantly reiterating the false facade that the IACP is a great place to work and supporting its poor managers. If there are any issues, lower ranking employees are often blamed. Everything is urgent and staff is expected to respond to/address a barrage of messages from management during meetings rather than paying attention to the meeting in question.

4
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