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Feeding America

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Down Hill - Anonymous employee Feeding America Employee Review

1.0
Mar 12, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The mission is important and good.

Cons

Everything else is bad. One recent post said they take DEI seriously. Well apparently DEI is now 'illegal' according to the organization. Toxic people with multiple complaints and ongoing investigations with HR are kept on. People of color are the first to be let go? This place is a fundraising machine and nothing else, and is a bad one at that.

Explore other reviews about Feeding America

5.0
Jan 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to work, people are nice, everyone believes in the mission, balanced workload

Cons

Very large organization so things move kind of slowly

1.0
Mar 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay and great mission.

Cons

Feeding America has a powerful external reputation. Internally, it is one of the most dysfunctional and demoralizing workplaces I’ve encountered, and people considering roles here should take that seriously. The culture is deeply clique-driven and often mirrors a “mean girl” dynamic where influence is based on relationships, favoritism, and narrative control rather than expertise or results. Entire teams operate more like gatekeepers than functional owners, inserting themselves to control messaging while avoiding accountability for execution. If you are not aligned with the right internal players, your work will be ignored, undermined, or repackaged without credit. More concerning is that incompetence is not just tolerated, it is often protected. At the same time, competence is frequently punished. People who are effective, direct, and solutions-oriented are seen as threats to the status quo. Instead of being empowered, they are burdened with additional work, excluded from key decisions, or sidelined for not engaging in internal politics. Over time, this creates a system where the path of least resistance is to do the minimum, defer responsibility, and manage perceptions rather than deliver results. This is not a place that develops talent. It is a place where careers stall. High performers either burn out from carrying dysfunctional systems or leave after realizing that growth and recognition are not tied to impact. Those who stay long-term are often the ones who have adapted to or benefit from the internal dynamics. Operationally, the organization is highly reactive and lacks discipline. Roles and decision rights are unclear, leading to constant duplication, confusion, and last-minute fire drills. Teams regularly offload core responsibilities onto others, then reappear late in the process to critique or control outputs. Cross-functional work is slow, politicized, and rarely leads to strong outcomes. Leadership messaging about alignment, strategy, and impact does not match reality. Decisions are frequently driven by optics and external positioning rather than feasibility or input from those responsible for execution. Staff are brought in too late to influence direction, and priorities shift without warning, making effective planning nearly impossible. Communication is inconsistent and often selective. Important context is withheld, expectations change midstream, and teams are left to navigate ambiguity that could easily be addressed with basic transparency. This reinforces silos and mistrust across the organization.

4
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