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Avaaz Foundation

Is this your company?

Overall left with the sense that its an organisation who's mission is stroking the ED's enormous but fragile ego - Employee Avaaz Foundation Employee Review

1.0
23 Sept 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Remote working - Interesting & caring colleagues - Good working conditions by some standards (e.g. U.S.), (but poor by others e.g. Germany) - At it's best it feels like your part of a people powered organisation doing great work in the world

Cons

- CEO appears very off center at times - hearing a CEO use profanities about very senior ex staff (or anyone else) on a organisation wide call was a recent low-light of my professional experiences. - practices such as retreats where circles are formed, and then people are excluded from the circle if they're not 'clean' with Avaaz, it's CEO etc are at best not for everybody, at worst unsafe for people's mental health. - can be difficult to get managerial engagement in anything other than your emotional or mental state - feedback is up down and sideways, but feedback up the way is regularly taken to be sign of an emotional issue with yourself. Get's a bit wearing over time. - The staff as a whole are often treated more like a campaign target to be influenced than anything else. E.g. staff questionnaires are used to inform how to influence the staff as if it were a political campaign rather than an opportunity to hear feedback. - CEO is an explicit proponent of 'a strong, almost cult like culture' in the workplace as a path towards highly functioning teams. In practice what this means can vary from the mundane (feedback is important, decisions made by the leads should be executed on excellently, be respectful to colleagues etc) to the unusual such as: - organisation meetings being temporarily replaced with 'wisdom circles' where staff are only permitted to participate if CEO perceives you to be 'following your nudge/flowing from your center and not coming from a head space' - Encouraged to make ritualized affirmations and commitments in highly pressurized situations in front of whole organisation , e.g. 'I am clean with [CEO] as my leader' and 'I am clean with Connection Culture' with the implication that this team is not for you and you should find new work if you don't feel comfortable doing so - Dancing meditations at retreat were a bit weird for me personally. Some people loved them so perhaps down to personal taste - Strong predisposition to take constructive feedback as a sign of victimhood from the person giving feedback - CEO leading realtime, organisation wide discussions of whether or not leavers are 'clean' or 'unclean' when they leave - At times there's been an intense focus on an 'almost spiritual' direction for the organisation and its work - lack of board or shareholder style oversight for the CEO - At times more interest in 'cultural alignment' than proficiency or productivity - poorly communicated unilateral changes to employment conditions - double speak common 'if you have been with Avaaz long enough you will know what we mean by X..... ' - strong insider/outsider dynamics, that have at times become evident internally as well as externally (e.g. when the the team was sent to different retreats based on their self-rating of their 'cleanness') - work life balance is highly dependent on role and location and personal circumstances - be sure to get an explicit representation of expectations before starting as some timezone's lead to antisocial meeting times on a daily basis. - Trumpian gaslighting in evidence when major management mistakes are made, it has at times felt like its easier to spend weeks of organisational time denying what's happened than a few moments to admit a mistake - at it's worst it can feel like an organisation built by a CEO who's used members money to form their own echo chamber to nurse an enormous but fragile ego

Explore other reviews about Avaaz Foundation

5.0
30 Nov 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong team culture vibe interesting

Cons

some campaigns can be rushed

1
1.0
30 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people you work alongside at Avaaz are genuinely some of the most talented, passionate, and creative individuals you'll find in the advocacy and campaigning space. The collective intelligence and commitment in the room is remarkable. You will learn a great deal. You'll be pushed creatively, exposed to global issues at a serious level, and surrounded by people who genuinely care about impact. If there is one thing Avaaz gives you, it's resilience: you develop it out of necessity, and the colleagues who go through it with you become a real source of strength. The mission, at its core, is still worth believing in.

Cons

The organisational culture is deeply dysfunctional, and the gap between Avaaz's public values and its internal reality is wide. Leadership is dominated by men who concentrate informal decision-making power amongst themselves, and this filters down into everyday dynamics in ways that are hard to ignore. Women's voices, regardless of seniority, are routinely talked over or dismissed on calls; ideas that come from female staff are frequently credited to male counterparts, and the leadership circle remains stubbornly male-minded despite the organisation's progressive external positioning. Senior leadership operates with a strong sense of exceptionalism - the unspoken belief that the importance of the mission excuses how people are treated internally. There is a well-established hierarchy of "judgement" that discourages dissent and creates a culture of fear around speaking up. Strategic direction shifts chaotically, priorities change without explanation, and accountability for poor behaviour amongst senior staff is virtually nonexistent. Multiple people have raised concerns over the last few years with little to no consequence for those involved. For women and people from underrepresented groups, this environment is particularly taxing. The cognitive dissonance of fighting for equity in the world whilst experiencing the opposite inside the organisation is exhausting and, over time, genuinely demoralising.

3
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