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The Hunger Project

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Passionate Organization - Great Mission - Anonymous employee The Hunger Project Employee Review

5.0
Apr 10, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Love working with passionate people around the world. The in-country teams are really exceptional. Remote work is encouraged for most roles in the global office

Cons

There is a lot to be done and teams are small

Explore other reviews about The Hunger Project

5.0
Dec 18, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

In this organization, the country staff, who are from the countries where they work, have the wisdom and authority to do great work in partnership with communities. A lean global staff supports their work. Strong leadership is strategic.

Cons

Fundraising is an ongoing challenge. There's so much to be done.

2.0
May 19, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The mission is genuinely meaningful, and most staff care deeply about the work and the communities they support. There are a lot of smart, passionate people across the organization who are trying their best with limited resources. You also get a good amount of autonomy in many roles, and there are opportunities to wear multiple hats and build experience quickly. Flexibility is the key benefit.

Cons

The internal culture often feels very disconnected from the values the organization promotes externally. There’s a lot of talk about collaboration, transparency, and people-centered leadership, but in practice communication can be inconsistent, decisions feel top-down and concerns raised by staff don’t seem to lead to meaningful change. There’s also an overemphasis on optics and organizational messaging around “culture” without enough attention paid to the actual employee experience. People & Culture initiatives felt more performative than supportive, especially during difficult staffing or management situations. Employees are encouraged to speak openly, but many people learn pretty quickly to be careful about how direct they are if they want to avoid being labeled as 'difficult' or 'negative'. Burnout and turnover feel more normalized than they should be, and a lot of operational problems end up falling on already overstretched staff to solve.

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