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Hammer Residences

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A mixed experience - Human Resources Generalist Hammer Residences Employee Review

3.0
Nov 18, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent career opportunities, lots of upward movement available if you're motivated and interested. Flexible and caring environment. Supportive of professional goals as long as they align with business needs.

Cons

Hammer is flush with legacy leaders - the majority of the senior leadership team has decades of experience at the organization, and often their only professional experience has been at Hammer. While there are certainly strengths here in terms of institutional knowledge, it also means there is tons of resistance to change and an actual lack of professional experience. Many of the leaders started out in direct care services and moved into administrative functions, so you have people who learned on the job and likely do not have the educational background or outside experience necessary to ensure their function is up to industry standards or modern practices. Hammer has inconsistent pay practices - talking about wages or asking for increases is taboo, and sometimes even met with laughter, however you hear of other employees asking for increases and receiving them (such as male employees with male bosses having their requests granted). The budgeting process seems skewed - endless resources available for the people served, which I don't mean to suggest is a bad thing, but the staffing situation and associated wages is so dire that it makes you wonder what the priorities are or if they need to be reevaluted.

Explore other reviews about Hammer Residences

2.0
Jun 10, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The mission of the organization is valuable.

Cons

The organization feels like it is operating in a constant state of crisis, with little transparency or clear direction. Communication between departments is extremely poor, resulting in confusion, duplicated work, and frequent misunderstandings. Many employees are left feeling like no one truly knows what is happening across the organization. Professionalism is lacking at all levels. Communication is often inappropriate, disrespectful, or ineffective, and accountability is inconsistent/non-existent. Some employees face severe consequences for mistakes while others receive little to no discipline for similar behavior, creating a culture of favoritism and mistrust. Leadership appears disconnected from the realities faced by direct support professionals (DSPs) and frontline staff. While executives receive substantial compensation, there is ongoing discussion about reducing costs for the employees providing direct care. During periods of financial strain, employees experienced layoffs and the elimination of benefits such as the 401(k) match, while executive six-figure salaries remained untouched. Many employees perceived these decisions as placing the burden of cost-cutting on frontline staff rather than leadership. When the organization laid off staff in 2026, others got raises. Human Resources is disorganized and often viewed as ineffective. Concerns raised by employees are not always handled consistently, and there is a widespread perception that favoritism influences decisions. Trust in HR leadership is low across many departments. My personal experience includes excessive sexual harassment and a lack of confidence that complaints would be handled appropriately. Combined with the broader issues of poor communication, inconsistent accountability, weak organizational leadership, and declining employee morale, this made for a difficult and frustrating work environment.

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