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Center for Court Innovation

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Center for Court Innovation Reviews

3.3

66% would recommend to a friend

(123 total reviews)

54% positive business outlook

Center for Court Innovation has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 123 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Center for Court Innovation employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Non-profit and NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

123 reviews
2.0
14 Dec 2016

Doing great things but have deep cultural and race issues

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The benefits are fantastic and the work that the Center for Court Innovation does is great. 401k, paid sick time, holidays and vacation time are great.

Cons

Typical Day at Work: A Typical day was predictable and lacked a challenging and fun work environment. The Center for Court Innovation really needs to focus on some of the internal problems within different departments. There seems to be a major imbalance of cultural issues between teams mainly aimed against minority employees. There is no room for advancement and their approach to adopting new and innovative technologies is sub par. The leadership has no real sense of some of the deeper issues affecting their fellow employees on a day to day basis. I found it to be somewhat of a hostile work environment if you are not working on the right team with positive and supportive team members. Co-workers: There are some brilliant folks at the center for court innovation, sadly a lot of the star talent do not stay around very long. Management: Management does a very poor job at addressing underlying issues between team members. A very hands-off approach, some of the managers are not qualified or lack the knowledge to effectively run a tightly knit ship.Not to mention a running list of inappropriate behavior on many occasions. The hardest part of the job was dealing with many of the inflated egos at the Center for Court Innovation. If you are familiar with working at non-profit organizations you'll see there does seem to be a divide between grant holders and the employees written into certain grants. You end up having multiple bosses you have to answer to and control issues. I loved that the Center for Court Innovation was doing great things to help people in need. But internally there are some very ugly truths about what happens at the center amongst the staff.

1.0
10 Apr 2019

Miserable

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Location Benefits Occasional free food Schedule

Cons

No one talks to each other - you walk around and it’s dead silence. Awful work environment Most people are not given any guidance; they do not set you up for success Lots of passive aggressive co-workers No culture whatsoever - they have no idea who they are. They have a mission for the work they do but it’s non existent in the workplace. It’s embarrassing and quite frankly hypocritical to be a non profit that does such amazing work for those who need it but completely fail their employees. Its so difficult to grow here and no one cares about you - you are just a number in their roster. Most of the trainings are a joke too - complete waste of time Their technology game is weak! They try to be “cool” by bringing on a ton of apps and tools but only a handful of employees end up using it Maternity leave is a joke - 1 month! Are you kidding me?

3.0
9 Aug 2021

Not great but not bad.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits 401k + match Pto (20 days + 12 federal holidays) Relaxed work environment No micromanaging Good work / life balance

Cons

Absolutely no room for advancement. Even if you're performing at a higher level than your role, you will not be promoted. They will keep you at your current position and find someone external for the position above yours. I covered for a senior budget analyst (2 position above mine) for almost an entire year after she was let go, as well as the assistant manager (3 positions above mine) on medical leave for around 3-4 months while doing my own job as well. When they finally had an opening for 1 position above mine, I was told they would be hiring externally. If you're comfortable with staying at your level for a very very long time, this is actually a great place to work. However, if you're not comfortable with that, get your experience and leave.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 123 Reviews

Glassdoor has 141 Center for Court Innovation reviews submitted anonymously by Center for Court Innovation employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Center for Court Innovation is right for you.