Pros
Strong mission-driven organization with staff who are deeply passionate about serving communities impacted by HIV, STIs, and health disparities.
* Opportunities to build meaningful community partnerships and create visible impact across multiple states and regions.
* Exposure to national conferences, public health initiatives, and collaboration with healthcare, nonprofit, and community stakeholders.
* Many employees are committed, hardworking, and genuinely care about patients and outreach efforts.
* Ability to grow skills in community engagement, education, outreach strategy, and partnership development.
Cons
* Leadership structure and expectations can feel inconsistent across departments and regions.
* Communication between executive leadership, operations, marketing, and field teams is often siloed, which can create confusion and duplicated work.
* Employees in community-facing roles may experience heavy workloads, unclear priorities, and limited operational support despite high expectations.
* Rapid organizational growth appears to have outpaced internal infrastructure and processes in some areas.
* Performance expectations and evaluation processes can sometimes feel subjective or reactive rather than transparent and measurable.
* Work-life balance can be challenging during conference seasons, large initiatives, or periods of organizational transition.