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The National Trust

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7 reviews
3.0
6 Mar 2019
Recommend
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Pros

Nice enough place to work if you don't mind being severely underpaid. Most colleagues were pretty great. 20% off in shops and restaurants and quite generous holiday (but not enough staff to actually take it) Living wage so a bonus if you're under 25 I guess.

Cons

National trust rationalises underpaying staff using it's "charity" status but the whole operation is ran like a money-grabbing corporation. Puts far too much on the volunteers and lower level staff. You're expected to go continuously above and beyond your pay grade but god forbid you actually ask for acknowledgement in pay or job title. Development is nonexistent. Removed all "assistant managers" so they could pay the same people a lower "supervisor" wage for the same jobs. Managers completely out of touch with their workers, the pay gap between them and everyone else is laughable. They work out pay rises before minimum wage increases so if you're only being paid a little above minimum, year on year the distance gets smaller and smaller. Unfair grading systems throughout, visitor services staff at the same level as catering and retail are a grade above them, supposedly because they sell membership yet there's no difference in the work and they could sell no memberships all year and still be on a higher base wage. The staff in retail regularly did ten times the work of reception staff (and worked longer hours) yet still got paid less, Grade 10 is general staff on reception but also supervisors in retail and catering, with supervisors often being paid less. No work-life balance at all, not enough staff to take holidays or time off in lieu and too much reliance on volunteers, when they inevitably cancel (because they are VOLUNTEERS) staff are left without any cover. They constantly ask department workers to get involved with more of the organisation (inviting us to event planning meetings etc) but it's just for show as they schedule all meetings during opening hours preventing customer-facing staff (the people who actually know what's going on and what customers want) from attending and having any say. No accountability for management. You try and bring up a problem and they skirt around the issue, I once tried to bring up a concern about the wider retail practices and my manager just gave me the name of someone in head office instead of following up a concern I'd passed on. Escalating to your line manager should be enough.

3.0
16 Feb 2018
Recommend
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Business outlook

Pros

Some inspiring and very talented people. Interesting & challenging projects to work on. Reasonable pay and pension benefits. Open to flexible working.

Cons

Organisational culture is rather homogeneous - mostly white middle class people at head office. Too much power in the hands of line managers, 'face fits' attitudes to challenging poor management behaviour. Lack of team cohesion, due to old-fashioned hierarchical management structures. Lack of effective project & resource management. Some salary offers below market rates, worth negotiating. Most full-time roles are fixed-term contracts.

2.0
16 Jun 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Locations are generally beautiful I worked with a great on-site team Free admission to nationwide properties and car parks

Cons

The charity doesn't seem to realise it's a charity, so little or no fundraising goes on yet properties are struggling to stay afloat. It's also unsure whether it's there to show and teach people about history and heritage or as a fun family day out, and the two can clash with horrendous consequences. Head office has no idea what's going on at property level and doesn't seem to care whether their 'big picture' strategies are actually going to work on a practical, local level. Properties are losing their individual identities because they're having to follow head office strategies ie. homogeneous shops and cafes and generic events. Properties are generally understaffed, underpaid and stretched but head office just keeps on recruiting more and more high-salaried consultants. You are expected to go way beyond your job description which would be fine if salaries were a little better.

2.0
12 Apr 2019

Too big?

Recommend
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Business outlook

Pros

If coming from a for profit equivalent industry at first the lack of pressure is nice.

Cons

All systems create more work than they remove, this often results in the employment of another person to deal with the extra workload, which in turn requires extra revenue. Incredibly slow at moving forwards. Very little chance of progress for base level staff. Spends large amounts of money on big projects and training's that are unsuccessfully implemented or quickly forgotten about. Moving far too slowly in it's environmentally friendly practices for what is supposedly a conservation charity. Staff moral very low and getting worse. Financial control seems to be chaotic with head office having to correct a property's accounts at the end of the year leaving departments having no clue to how well or not they have done and unbelievably demotivated.

3.0
16 Feb 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A great purpose which brings mainly like-minded people together for a fairly collaborative environment. Great head office space. Amazing diversity and inclusion, especially for those with disabilities.

Cons

Lots of internal politics and red tape. Pay low for sector. Not enough opportunities for progression or development. Not afraid to dish out severance packages to remove anyone who dares go against the status quo and trusts that people won't go to tribunal. Detachment from the regions.

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