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Columbia University

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It's fine for stop-gap position - Director Columbia University Employee Review

2.0
Sep 7, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you are an office of the University, your children get free tuition. If you are unmotivated or don't want to work hard, CU employees can slip through the cracks for years without anyone knowing or doing something about it. Without pressure to drive revenue, the mission is is loftier. The benefits are good: officers receive about 20 vacation days plus 3 personal days. In addition, the CU not only matches employee contributions to its non-profit version of a 401k, it also gives 5% of your salary even if you contribute nothing, and that money vests immediately. In terms of work and life balance, it probably varies from department to department, but for the most part my sense is that it's an incredibly flexible place.

Cons

The pay is low relative to similar functional roles at for-profit companies. The only people who make average (or even way above average) salaries are those in senior management. For the 401K, the university has a good matching plan but make sure to try to enter as an office at grade 14 or above - the University won't match employee contributions for two years for officers at grade 13 or below. Also, this is not the right environment for a motivated, ambitious person. It's filled with cronyism and incompetence at many levels throughout the organization. And this can lead to very low morale among the rank and file.

Explore other reviews about Columbia University

5.0
May 21, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The labs and team were great

Cons

Occasionally hard to get support from admin

1.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people in the trenches The students The passionate faculty

Cons

Leadership, their inefficiencies and poor decisions Very dysfunctional environment HR does whatever leadership tells them to do, including covering issues by "friends of the boss", This favoritism approach also includes approvals for who gets to work from out of state even when the position can be easily filled by local workers and the creation of new jobs for those that are chosen. Very poor financial decisions. Big big pay on top, Low pay on bottom. Very little room for growth unless someone likes you and you are the right color.

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