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The Alan Turing Institute

Engaged employer

World-leading research. stone-age operations - Anonymous employee The Alan Turing Institute Employee Review

1.0
Mar 13, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Being associated with the name "Alan Turing". Smart people, interesting problems and nice office.

Cons

There is a painful gap between what the Turing preaches and how it actually functions day to day. Internal operations feel closer to 2005 than 2025: manual spreadsheets, siloed departments, and no clear ownership of basic processes. Its CEO admitted at a town hall that there is no operational map of the organisation. When something needs doing, no one can reliably say whose job it is. The ERP implementation has been a slow motion disaster. Three years, three project managers, and millions of pounds later, the system cannot produce a single usable report. The Finance leadership pushed the transition through, and the result has been near-total institutional blindness on the numbers side. Senior leaders appear disconnected from the day-to-day reality of the organisation they're running. Decisions are made without a clear understanding of operational dependencies, and when things go wrong, the response is more messaging than action. The admission that leadership couldn't identify basic organisational responsibilities wasn't treated as a crisis, it was delivered as though it were a curiosity. That tells you everything. Expect a lot of confident sounding language that doesn't translate into anything concrete. The "match fit" messaging from the Chair doesn't match the reality on the ground. There's a noticeable culture of fear, little genuine strategic vision, and a restructuring that saw experienced, innovative staff replaced by expensive yes men who reinforce the same blind spots already present at the top rather than challenge them. If you're joining for the research, you won't be disappointed. If you're hoping the organisation that advises the nation on AI can manage its own operations — or that its leaders have a firm grasp of what's actually happening inside the building — lower your expectations significantly. The irony of the UK's data science flagship being unable to run a basic report, led by people who don't seem to notice, is not lost on anyone who works here.

Explore other reviews about The Alan Turing Institute

5.0
May 25, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Top notch projects of national importance, great group of people.

Cons

Location should be changed. They should build their own campus.

1.0
May 24, 2026
Anonymous contractor
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Free low quality coffee, 30 days annual leave - if you can take them - but you'll need un

Cons

A duplicitous organisation that pretends to be woke whilst treating most staff like trash. The pay and perks are terrible for the majority of staff and the redundancy payouts the lowest in the UK. They also expect notice to be worked without discussion. Current staff best look for work ASAP or just leave to save your sanity. Anyone joining should really think twice. No one senior wants to make a decision or is even capable, and every internal process is painful and inefficent. The senior execs received pay rises and are mostly over paid compared to other staff, and yet its the productive lower paid staff who get the chop. Nice. Even their funder, UKRI was surprised by recent Exec pay rises. The research is mostly second tier with partners looking elsewhere, and who can blame them. The only question is, does the new CEO know how dysfunctional this place really is?

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