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Gates Foundation

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Gates Foundation reviews

3.7

67% would recommend to a friend

(559 total reviews)
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Mark Suzman

79% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

Gates Foundation has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 559 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Gates Foundation employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Nonprofit & NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

559 reviews
1.0
Sep 12, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They do alot of work around the world, but at the same time it's hard to know whether there is actually real positive impact. Everyone was very nice throughout the interview process.

Cons

Very white place with no diversity....look on LinkedIn and you will see that most of the profiles are of white people. There are alot of women but again mostly white women that all look the same. When I interviewed I didn't see any black people at all. It makes you wonder what they mean by diversity because if you can't source any black people to work there then that's a major problem. There also seemed to be alot of former consultants so that should tell you something about their priorities.

4.0
Dec 15, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

At BMGF I worked with some of the most remarkable colleagues - not just intelligent and accomplished, but truly kind and caring folks with unique backgrounds and life experiences to contribute. Benefits are outstanding. Wonderful, consistent learning opportunities and depending on your team, chances to stretch and gain new skills with exciting projects.

Cons

Nothing dominates an organizational culture more than how it defines success. At BMGF, success is working as diligently as possible, as often as possible, and being the smartest person in the room (or at least in your subject area). Its borderline obsessed with how "complicated" and "difficult" its work is, and it sometimes seems like you earn more points for taking apart a problem analytically, than actually figuring out how to have tangible impact The result is a very curious, learning-oriented, but ultimately inward-facing organization that's more afraid to fail than its willing to admit. If you're already working in development, this won't be news to you. But any person should know what you're getting into, and how you want to navigate it - work/life balance will be 100% up to you.

2.0
Feb 1, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility, good work/life balance (besides the travel, but that comes with the industry), generous benefits, and the chance to work with some fantastic grantees and partners.

Cons

Disfunction comes from the very top, and creates a lot of fear, toxicity, inefficiencies, and wasted resources. Although large in staff size and endowment, Gates is a family foundation with active benefactors and has never (successfully) reckoned with the fact that family values, perspectives, and ways of engaging with staff might be fundamentally at odds with the "data-driven, impact-oriented, feminist (ha!)" institution that BMGF spins itself as. The generosity of the Gates Family is (obviously) worthy of celebration and respect, but they often treat their staff with disrespect and create a culture where fear of being wrong (or, gasp, just acknowledging we don't have all the answers) gets in the way of any genuine learning, sharing, and progress. There is also a culture of constant complaining and negativity that gets old immediately. The lack of humility (and, to be frank, connection to reality) is truly astounding; it's an institution and culture that celebrates and seems to incentivize grandstanding amongst all levels of staff. I had a decent boss, autonomy with my work, and loved making grants, but the culture and leadership was uninspiring on the best days and painful the rest of the time. I've worked at a variety of academic, public, and private institutions over the past several decades and have never had a workplace where people crying (yes, crying) was a regular occurrence. Leaving felt incredibly freeing, and I have been much, much happier at another global health institution.

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Gates Foundation Response
8y
Thanks for sharing your experience. The internal surveys that you mention - with anywhere from 90% to 95% employee participation - all show the foundation is seriously moving in the right direction in the types of areas you mention. If you're up for sharing more about your personal experience, however, I'm all ears - chris.ernst@gatesfoundation.org
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