Tides Reviews

3.5

67% would recommend to a friend

(76 total reviews)
avatar

Janiece Evans-Page

60% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Tides has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 76 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tides employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Non-profit and NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

76 reviews
5.0
10 Jan 2023

A great organisation to work for!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Friendly, helpful staff, well organised, opportunities for development

Cons

As with many large non profits, can be a little impersonal

1.0
17 Jan 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Awesome colleagues. Tides clients are changing the world for the better.

Cons

I was motivated to post this after reading the latest all staff email from the CEO. This workplace is culturally dysfunctional, as many places are. At Tides, unfortunately, the staff are in the process of trying to unionize the place. They are demanding fair pay, racial equity, diversity, and workload balance among other thing. Staff feel the need to protect themselves against the leaders and management because they simply are not listening to employee needs and haven't been for years. A few years back, the staff asked the leadership to take a look in the mirror – the leaders are all white and supposedly value equity and shared prosperity. Apparently they don't want to share the economic prosperity of executive pay with non-whites. The Executive team has continued to get away with neglecting the employees and the culture to the point of staff wanting a union - so much so that as of late, a board member has come down from on high to interview staff to find out what's really been going on! Who knows what will be the result of this effort – hopefully some real change and accountability for those responsible for Tides environment. About 4 or 5 levels down on the org chart is a Diversity Manager. What’s the point? HR people are no help and have no power or control over anything. They are just cogs in a wheel under the dictators. The Netsuite implementation makes work streams less efficient for many people across different teams. No leader has been held responsible for this. One of the Directors and her staff work into the dead of night almost every night and on the weekends because NetSuite is a complete calamity. Two COO types have come and gone. The business development team keep selling services without real structure to support the clients. Handoffs to service lack process and structure and then the client just winds up leaving. The clients are not nice – they yell at you and complain if they don’t get the service they were promised – I don’t blame them. The clients believe the entry level staff have the power to change it or make it better, but decision making authority is mostly hoarded at the highest levels. Adequate staffing has been held at bay, necessary staff have been removed, inadequate infrastructure has existed for too long, and no real work is done to care for the staff. Incompetence and lack of experience on the leaders team and in management prevails. Pay and promotions are reserved for a select few, especially if you are Caucasian. If you are looking to progress your career – go elsewhere. Professional development is almost non-existent. The managers received some coaching a while back. A few months back, staff were invited to “giving and receiving feedback" training. Even this latest training must not be working because staff want their union protection. The bottom line is, hypocritical behaviors and outcomes persist with Tides mission and values as a cover.

1.0
8 Jun 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great mission, complex work, always something new to learn, and many wonderful people

Cons

For an organization that puts out their values of justice, equity, diversity and inclusion at the forefront of everything, they can only check off only one of these boxes. Just because leadership includes people of color does not mean they fully respect their employees as human beings. Wolf in sheep's clothing situation. There is generally a lack of focus on culture since we've burned through several DEI managers because there's no real support for this work, no real support for ERG's; it's all performative. They talk a lot about accountability, yet they can't seem to hold themselves accountable to their own failures. So many uncompleted projects from the leadership team, so many promises that aren't followed through on. Many of the recent HR policies have been rolled out simply because there's a union otherwise it wouldn't have happened. Promises of many new systems (HRIS, Knowledge management, etc.) and they all fall through for one reason or another. They love talking about the work that can be done, but no one rolls up their sleeves to actually get it done; instead they try to pawn it off to consultants and lower level employees. When they fail, they look outward to external people who can come and save the day, but ultimately there are internal cultural issues that don't allow for real progress and change. They extract as much as they can from you without clear rewards, and then look elsewhere when you've reached your limit.

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Glassdoor has 82 Tides reviews submitted anonymously by Tides employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tides is right for you.