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Revealing Reality

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Please read before considering a job here - Researcher Revealing Reality Employee Review

1.0
Oct 3, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They work on some interesting projects.

Cons

Much has already been said in other reviews, all of which I agree with. I’m adding specifics here to record my own experience and contribute to the archive of feedback that RR continues to ignore. Employers have a duty of care to protect the health, safety, and welfare of their staff. Under Health and Safety Executive (HSE) regulations, companies must assess the risk of work-related stress and take steps to mitigate it. RR regularly fails to meet this basic standard. Young, mostly female employees are often sent to people’s homes without proper risk assessments, despite RR’s claims to clients that these are carried out. Researchers may return from fieldwork late at night, only to be required in the office the next morning, with no time off in lieu. Weekend work is common. Young graduates are routinely placed in contact with vulnerable people without any trauma-informed training or safeguarding preparation. The prevailing attitude at RR is that “wokeness” is naïve or laughable. In group analysis sessions, respondents’ pictures are pinned up and mocked, with derogatory remarks about their class, weight, ethnicity, or appearance. This gossiping culture is encouraged as a form of social bonding, but it normalises deeply unprofessional and discriminatory behaviour. Despite working on highly sensitive topics like violence against women and asylum programmes, the company’s research is often shaped by the management's personal views, which are openly shared in office chats. This tone, set at the top, filters down through every level of the organisation and defines what story the research will tell. While RR claims to have a “flat” structure, the reality is one of hierarchy, bullying, and favouritism. Employees are overworked, underpaid, and publicly belittled for mistakes. Snitching on colleagues is encouraged, and promotions are based not on merit but on personal relationships and a willingness to conform to groupthink. Those who resist or question the culture are isolated and treated as outsiders. The company runs in an environment of juvenile energy, poor management, and low research standards. It is deeply concerning that such an organisation is trusted with any money, let alone public money for 'research'.

Explore other reviews about Revealing Reality

1.0
Mar 31, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Amazing projects Great client base Innovative methodologies and capabilities

Cons

Severely exploitative management team Chronic bullying Aggressive communication Unethical research and management practices Disciplinary 'classroom-like' management style Constant workplace tension leading to many staff nervous breakdowns

14
1.0
Apr 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are some genuinely nice people, especially among newer hires. High turnover means you quickly see you’re not alone in your experience.

Cons

My experience at the company was defined by a highly toxic and controlling working environment. There is a strong culture of micromanagement and a clear lack of trust in employees, their individuality, and their work. The Managing Director often credits himself as the reason clients choose the company, while devaluing the quality of work produced by the “current generation”. This is then used to justify absurd levels of micromanagement and limited autonomy across teams. Employees, for example, are required to log their work in 15-minute increments and, despite being given unrealistic time expectations, are frequently criticised for taking too long from the outset. Training is minimal and largely ineffective. New starters are told they will “learn quickly,” but in practice are expected to take on full responsibilities within a couple of weeks, with little practical guidance. Initial training consists mostly of generic slide presentations with limited relevance to the actual work. From that point on, employees are expected to figure things out themselves, often while being shamed for not knowing how to do things or doing them fact enough. This culture of distrust and shaming is reinforced at all levels, with junior staff often imitating it as a perceived rite of passage to progress within the company. Equally concerning are the underlying values shaping the culture. There were repeated comments and narratives reflecting dismissive or stereotypical views around diversity, equity, and inclusion. Conversations about immigrants, working culture, and poverty often relied on sweeping generalisations, while EDI-related topics were frequently dismissed or labelled negatively. This creates an environment where diverse perspectives do not feel welcomed or respected. The research itself often feels surface-level and presentation-driven, prioritising polished outputs over depth or critical insight. It is closer to market research than rigorous social research and is frequently positioned in ways that support proposed policy directions rather than independently interrogating them. Given that this is research that is mostly funded through government and public sector budgets, it raises uncomfortable questions about public funding priorities in the UK and the role of such agencies as providers of independent evidence, particularly in a context where academic institutions are facing ongoing cuts.

3
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