Terrible culture and declining impact on the ground
Avantages
- Opportunity to serve a mission that is critical to tackle the most important health challenges - Flexibility to adapt your working hours and accommodate around over 10h of work per day - Relatively young middle to senior management giving lots of exposure and opportunities to younger staff members
Inconvénients
- Terrible work culture: no standard performance management leaving ample room for favoritism and inner politics impacting promotions and pay; free riders everywhere, some people holding two jobs at once without ever being noticed or others rarely showing up on calls/at work but still being paid; senior leaders stay put and rarely change despite making major mistakes in leading strategy/fundraising efforts or managing teams and despite being flagged repetitively to HR or VPs. - Focus is on reputation vs. good performance which leads CHAI to pay out poor performers to leave the organization while giving a hard time to those who decide to leave on their own - Impact is diminishing and donor reporting falsely amplified. Very poor practice of collecting and sharing best practices leading to the work being reinvented all of the time. CHAI isn't a nice player with other in country partners in some countries which limits our ability to collectively meet our goals - Innovation is barely existing at CHAI in some health areas: there aren't any discussions about what innovation means, what the future holds and how CHAI should adapt or pre-empt that evolution - Topics like sexism and racism within CHAI are not discussed openly