Voting Rights Lab has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 15 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there.
WFH, state law and policy, legislative advocacy and partnerships. Full of very high performing and hard working colleagues.
Cons
I've had to get used to using Slack a lot. I love the flexibility of working from home, but I'm starting to wish for more face-to-face time with colleagues. VRL is working on creating more opportunities to get together.
Great benefits - the health insurance was fantastic and the remote work resources given were great. Many of the employees are highly skilled, brilliant, and wonderful co-workers.
Cons
The leadership was inconsistently engaged and there was definitely cronyism involved in both hiring and strategic decision making. The organization lacked values and vision and did not understand who or what it wanted to be in the democracy space, leading to changing goals and inconsistent positioning. Leadership talks a great game on diversity but colleagues of color found it a challenging and often undermining work environment. Critical teams are siloed and policy/subject matter experts were dismissed in a way that I have not seen at other advocacy nonprofits.
Voting Rights Lab is a powerful source of research and resources for the national voting rights movement. It has great connections to grassroots groups (i.e. actual voters) in a number of states, and that's important in this line of work. As a work environment, I believe that those in leadership positions care about their employees and want to see them succeed, although some are definitely better about that than others. Pay and benefits are generally strong, and everyone I know is able to maintain a good work/life balance. In some of the areas with the biggest concerns (operations and HR), strong hires have been made to try and address them, and I definitely see progress being made.
Cons
Organizational stability has been hard to come by at times. A lack of organizational direction has led to some missed opportunities and cross-department confusion, and the desire to "do more" has sometimes conflicted with staff capacity and Voting Rights Lab's actual strengths. Otherwise, turnover has been an issue.
According to anonymously submitted Glassdoor reviews, Voting Rights Lab employees rate their compensation and benefits as 4.3 out of 5. Find out more about salaries and benefits at Voting Rights Lab. This rating has been stable over the past 12 months.
58% of Voting Rights Lab employees would recommend working there to a friend based on Glassdoor reviews. Employees also rated Voting Rights Lab 3.7 out of 5 for work life balance, 3.3 for culture and values and 3.5 for career opportunities.