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DAYA Foundation

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DAYA Foundation Reviews

3.2

43% would recommend to a friend

(16 total reviews)

38% positive business outlook

DAYA Foundation has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 16 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there.

Reviews by job title

16 reviews
1.0
14 Jun 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of the best reasons to work for DAYA Foundation include yoga classes at work, awesome clients/students, and Elephants Deli across the street. And the mission of the DAYA Foundation studio was to teach the most authentic, accessible yoga in town.

Cons

I'd like to share a few cons with the caveat that you, the reader, understand I am incredibly thankful for my experience at DAYA Foundation. In a nutshell, I am a better person for the experiences of working at DAYA Foundation. Sarahjoy Marsh, the interim Executive Director, hired me to help DAYA Foundation. I was told that 2016 was a poor year because of employee choices that were poor and expensive and poor PR on the previous manager’s part. I moved across the country to work at the studio. I was as excited to turn an entire organization around as I was about the mission of the studio itself. Had I read Glassdoor's 6 Red Flags to Look Out for When Interviewing article from May 18, 2017, before accepting the job (an impossibility, I know), I would not have been so excited to accept the job. Almost all the red flags were there: high employee turnover, a lengthy hiring process, unclear job description, an unclear definition of success, and trash talking. HIGH TURNOVER / TRASH TALKING There is high turnover in the office and the interim Executive Director (ED) is quick to trash talk all the employees who have failed the nonprofit. There were times the interim ED said “XYZ is why the past studio manager didn’t do a good job” and it was a successful education, of sorts, for things I should not do. I should not request meetings, I should not ask for too much of her time, I should not, etc. The amount of trash talking was enough to shock me, a “nice” Midwesterner. The interim ED gossiped about past employees, of course, but also spoke poorly about the teachers, the production of my subordinate, and some of the students. I learned quickly to watch my step and guard myself, though I knew that wouldn’t keep me from being the recipient of trash talking. STONEWALLING The office is a 10x10 space with up to five people working in close proximity. Yet, instead of responding to me directly in the office, the interim ED sent me emails in reply to questions or FYI emails. The interim ED would ignore me (my coworkers noticed) while being available to the other employees. I heard the same stories of the “terrible” things past employees did over and over again. After about 2-3 months, I was treated as though I was the culprit. It was painful and demeaning, to say the least. After three months, I asked for my 90-day review and was denied. I was denied a review for nearly seven months because the interim ED was "uncomfortable" with these kinds of conversations. UNCLEAR JOB DESCRIPTION / UNCLEAR DEFINITION OF SUCCESS I was given a job description that had been edited, but not finalized. On day two of the job, I made a simple request of someone who, according to my job description, was my subordinate. She replied back in a hostile email that she would not do what I requested, that she was under the impression that she didn’t have any other boss except for the interim ED. The interim ED replied back with vague, passive language that eased the other woman and left me feeling as though I was “wrong.” This is one example of a pattern of communication that would repeat over and over and over. I was hired as a yoga studio manager, yet I didn’t have the authority to hand-select the team of people working with me. The actions that I took in marketing campaigns and marketing improvements around the studio were reversed. When I came home from one vacation, a marketing implement had been removed from the wall. My subordinate/number two/right-hand woman and coworkers expressed their discomfort in the aftermath. I tried to bring new, creative ideas but each idea was met with resistance, negation, and hostility. I tried to establish goals for the teachers and myself, and my choice of language was challenged. (I used the phrase “score card” in conjunction to class sizes.) The people I met and my experiences at DAYA Foundation fostered my growth and learning as a human. I have to admit that my standards for workplace integrity, collaboration and communication are much higher that they were pre-DAYA. Now I know to watch for high employee turnover, a lengthy hiring process, unclear job description, an unclear definition of success, and trash talking. And for that education, I am thankful to the DAYA Foundation.

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DAYA Foundation Response
8y
We want to extend gratitude to your willingness to share your experience as a former Studio Manager and understand that your expectations were not met. We appreciate your recognition of the mission that the DAYA Foundation is committed to, including offering accessible yoga. We are also committed to educating the larger community about the need for trauma-informed care and social justice perspectives. We want you to know that we acknowledge your suggestions for reviews, how feedback on projects and daily work is delivered, and on the content of job descriptions. We’d like readers to know that we provide staff with a direct supervisor, our Lead Consultant, whose primary purpose is to manage employee on-boarding, provide support in developing key strategic processes, provide performance reviews, support team members to move projects forward in a timely manner, and to write our job descriptions. We also want readers to know that we provide our staff with anonymous engagement and work experience surveys (and have been offering those since 2015). During your tenure, this offering occurred at the 6-month mark. We understand this structure and resources did not meet your expectations. The DAYA Foundation’s outreach programs support marginalized, vulnerable, and underprivileged people and communities, we have strived to be thoughtful about our language culture, even within our studio community and amongst ourselves. We understand the difficulty you communicated about your experience around receiving feedback and appreciate all of the ideas you offered. For your benefit and for the benefit of readers, the reason the language of “score card” was not implemented was because we prefer to use language that does not create unnecessary hierarchy, nor assign a value or rank to our teachers. The request communicated to you, from our founder, to change the language from “score card” to something less competitive and evaluative was intended to support you in not alienating teachers as the newest member of the DAYA team and remain in line with the organization’s objectives, specifically our focus on trauma-informed care and the necessary language culture involved. The experience you described in your posting has been reviewed by the stakeholders at the DAYA Foundation and will be thoughtfully considered as future decisions are made.
1.0
22 May 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The only reason I stayed as long as I did was because of the students at the studio (they are mostly oblivious to the behind the scenes chaos that the studio owner leaves in her wake) and my fellow co-workers (we supported each other through Sarahjoy's crazy-making).

Cons

There is high turnover in her office and for good reason -- working for or closely with Sarahjoy is toxic. At first, you might think she is a brilliant teacher and working for her is a dream. Yes, she has carefully crafted an elegant approach to the way that she teaches. However, if you get to know what lies beyond that facade, it will be deeply disappointing. After some time working with her more closely, you will slowly start to recognize that she is not the persona she portrays to her students -- she is manipulative, disrespectful, controlling, completely unwilling to receive feedback, and talks poorly about people (students, teachers, and employees) behind their backs. She displays strong narcissistic characteristics. For anyone thinking about working for or with her in any capacity, my advice is do so with extreme caution. When she likes you, she likes you. In fact, she chooses favorites (and cycles through them). But then something will happen (and believe me, it likely will) where she becomes suspicious of your intentions (and you might not have even a clear idea of what you did "wrong"), it will not be a pleasant experience. Take my word for it, or the word of over 25 people in the past decade that have worked closely with her that have had similar experiences.

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DAYA Foundation Response
8y
We value all constructive feedback from previous and current employees and appreciate the time you devoted to describing your personal experience. The mission of the DAYA Foundation includes upholding the principles and ethics of the yoga tradition, including that self-study and self-inquiry are integral to freeing ourselves from the human conditioning that leads to, or perpetuates, the challenges we all face. The DAYA Foundation and its staff have always supported a large vision and relied heavily on personal and organizational resourcefulness. We have aimed, and will continue to aim, to not forget the inherent goodwill in each team member, our founder, our teachers, our students, and our program recipients. This includes the vital contributions you made while you were employed at DAYA. Our gratitude for you and your efforts goes on. That being said, we are disappointed by your usage of Glassdoor to attempt to label Sarahjoy Marsh with defamatory descriptions and feel that some of the language used in your post is against Glassdoor’s Terms of Use. In holding to the mission of our non-profit organization, we will continue to value and appreciate the humanity in us all, including the humanity of our students, past and current employees and volunteers. We are committed to our own paths of self-study and self-inquiry and will continue to align ourselves with others who practice toward the same integrity.
1.0
1 Dec 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You can have a flexible schedule.

Cons

Do not apply for or work at the DAYA Foundation. The organization is unlikely to sustain itself due to the founder Sarahjoy Marsh. She is not able to effectively manage a business or run a non profit because she does not understand how to lead a team. She avoids directly communicating with any staff. She will often set up meetings, begin projects, make announcements to the public without informing her staff. This causes confusion and chaos in her organization and students are constantly frustrated by the revolving door of changes (staff and policy). Her projects fail because she does not take the necessary steps to insure that her entire team has an understanding of her vision. Her idea of leadership looks like ordering her staff to comply with whatever request she feels is pressing to her in that moment. She called me by the wrong name and multiple times referred to me as her assistant which was not my position. My job description varied from the day I started and it was extremely apparent that the organization was a complete mess and could not be respected from a business perspective. I received no training and was told by the individual that I replaced that I should not work at DAYA. Apart from her inability to properly run her organization on an administrative level, she takes NO RESPONSIBILITY for any of the chaos, project failures, student confusion that is so prevalent at DAYA. She blames nearly everything on her staff or deflects responsibility by saying it is out of her wheelhouse. Simultaneously she micromanages her entire staff often diverting them from their ability to create any administrative stability.

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DAYA Foundation Response
8y
We understand and appreciate the incredibly important value of employee feedback, and we would like to thank you for your willingness to share your opinion with us here today. We are sorry to hear that your experience working at the DAYA Foundation did not meet your expectations. Please know that we are committed to creating a comfortable, transparent, and collaborative work environment for all of our employees. Communication amongst our team (including staff, consultants, Board, and founder) is one of our highest priorities. We recognize that the DAYA Foundation would be unable to conduct the sheer amount of outreach programs it is responsible for, without the cohesive contributions of each member of our team. We strive to operate on the founding principle that all members of our community have something to teach us about life, human suffering, and human potential. We thank you again for your thoughtful feedback. It is through the yogic principles of self-study and self-inquiry that we continue to reflect and adapt so that all members of our administrative team feel genuinely valued and appreciated for the immense contributions that we recognize they provide.
Viewing 1 - 3 of 16 Reviews

Glassdoor has 32 DAYA Foundation reviews submitted anonymously by DAYA Foundation employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if DAYA Foundation is right for you.