Avantages
- Talented national staff - Good annual leave (36 days) - Decent benefits and pay if you are a young professional that is international staff (salary, housing allowance in some contexts, per diem, flights 2x per year, good health insurance)
Inconvénients
- HQ support functions are nonsense. HR in particular is totally useless. Regularly don't respond to you for weeks at a time about serious contractual matters, are rude, cannot assist staff with basic things that they are meant to. - Many staff are working remotely from countries (for example, you may be based in Jordan working for the Yemen mission) but you are actively not allowed to work from your actual home country due to a no work from home policy, which makes little sense) - Many international staff are working in countries without proper documentation or paperwork which is very problematic. - Mostly young, white and much less experienced international staff are hired in senior management positions. Highly capable and intelligent national staff are rarely promoted and are paid significantly much less. This leads to high staff turnover and a lot of dissatisfaction. - Country directors are often inexperienced, are not people managers, are often very immature. This influences the overall view people have of Impact in the sector. Overall the organisation has a poor image in the sector exactly for this reason.