Don’t Accept An Offer Here - Toxic Work Environment and Managers across all programs (Career, Law and Scholars) - Anonymous employee SEO Employee Review

1.0
18 Oct 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working with youth/young professionals at a critical stage in their academic/career development. The soul and mission of the organization started off as a good thing, but has been currupted into an organization I no longer recognize.

Cons

Where should I start? The first thing I would say is seriously evaluate accepting an offer from this place. If you have any other options, take something else. You will be overworked, and be expected to do the workload of 3+ people. Given the noble mission of the organization, I was initially willing to take on the heavy workload, but it became impossible to do so in such a toxic work environment. You will be micromanaged and your work will be picked apart and your every suggestion or pushback will be questioned and scrutinized. Management is always right and employees are expected to be robots executing orders without questioning or pushback. Employee moral is very low, and employee turnover is very high. Senior management has no concern for the physical, mental and emotional well-being of employees. Employees are pushed out/demoted or let go for political reasons, and the remaining employees all know they cannot go to HR to report the terrible/toxic working conditions. Employees are constantly living in fear of being fired. Managers threaten employees about going to HR or make claims about how it won’t “help.” Employees do not report misconduct and everything that happens here because they are afraid of retaliation. Employees are encouraged to overlook harassment, discriminating comments, actions and jokes. The strong performers who have other options for employment don’t stick around this place. In the years that I worked there (not many) I saw entire teams (strong performers) leave the organization, and then the new hires also leave because of how terrible management and working conditions are. You will be expected to create and revamp programs under unrealistic timelines and without the propoper support or resources. Do yourself a favor, don’t accept a job offer here. ZERO opportunities for professional development. You will be guilted into not taking vacation, or made to feel like a slacker if you do take vacation or don’t work crazy long hours.

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5.0
7 Apr 2026
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Pros

meaningful work, thoughtful teams, clear systems

Cons

not a lot of long term scheduling predictability

3.0
19 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

My direct colleagues and students were what kept me at SEO for as long as I did - people were genuinely invested in helping students access higher education. I genuinely value the relationships I got to build with my direct manager (who served as a mentor to me) and my fellow program staff/advisors (who all clearly poured their hearts into our students). I will also acknowledge that there were a handful of valuable professional development opportunities, which did push me to grow and take on larger responsibilities during my time with the organization.

Cons

The biggest drawback of working at SEO (and the reason I ultimately left) is the disconnect between national leadership's decisions and the realities of our staff and students. When I joined the organization, there was a directive to expand our program to serve many more students per grade level (five times as many, to be exact). Although this would clearly have an impact on advisor-student ratios, there was no guidance on how to restructure roles so workloads would be sustainable. Additionally, despite the expanding scope of many roles within the organization, my colleagues often struggled to find opportunities for progression: one of my colleagues mentioned that they were advised to apply elsewhere if they were looking for a change in title or salary. In my last year with the organization, I was informed there would be a freeze on expanding full-time advisor roles: as a result, my caseload doubled overnight. In the fall, I often had to work until 10pm or 11pm. Despite my best efforts to set boundaries and work as efficiently as possible, the work of handling student emergencies and helping students meet time-sensitive deadlines still felt like it fell entirely on my shoulders. Aside from my colleagues and direct manager, who did what they could to support me, nobody in executive leadership ever reached out to check-in with me or offer me support, despite knowing the impact this hiring decision had on me and my teammate. I began having panic attacks and breakdowns privately at work due to the pressure I was under. When I finally disclosed this to a member of the executive leadership team, after months of struggling quietly, their response was to suggest that my struggles were not due to my workload but due to my failure to set boundaries: effectively, it was my fault for caring too much. Although I'd been willing to accept challenging workloads and work conditions for years, this response cemented that despite how much I cared about the mission and our students, SEO was no longer a place I could in good conscience work for.

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