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Associated Press

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Strange Place to work - APTN Camden, London - Finance Associated Press Employee Review

2.0
Jun 4, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good company to have on your CV & good if you like be worked hard & pushed to your limits just for the experience. That is it!

Cons

Really work you like a slave, hardly any progression, management is all a bit scrambled, most senior managers are all stuck up! Treat employees like crap, a lot of people have been their for decades. Hardly anyone talks to each other, Finance is full of miserable sobs! All the decent people escape in good time. You have the place full of secret spy's, people who are clerical & who have been in those jobs for ages think they run the place, do as I say & not as I do mentality! Stingy budgets for a company who is meant to be a big player, use technology so old that you would almost think it is from a dinosaur age! Not much more to say, but you get the point, crap place to work. Full of rude people.

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Pros

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Cons

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1.0
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Pros

You get to work with lovely people, some of which are brilliant.

Cons

This is an organization where relationships often matter more than results. Advancement tends to favor visibility and proximity over impact, which can make the path forward feel less about contribution and more about navigation. HR and People functions appear heavily resourced on paper, yet those teams are frequently stretched thin, creating the impression of care without the corresponding capacity to deliver it meaningfully. Each year brings another cycle of organizational reshuffling that can feel at odds with the stated focus on employee experience and development. Learning and development exists, but its purpose is sometimes unclear, as day-to-day work life has grown more complicated rather than more supported compared to prior years. There is a noticeable gap between the language used around innovation and data driven decision making and the organization’s appetite for actual change. The culture often speaks in aspirational terms while operating in familiar patterns. For employees who value transparency, consistency, and progress over rhetoric, this can be frustrating. The result is a workplace that talks about transformation but remains largely committed to the status quo.

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