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EF (Education First)

Engaged Employer

EF (Education First) reviews

3.4

61% would recommend to a friend

(4,606 total reviews)
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Edward Hult, Ph.D

61% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

EF (Education First) has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 4,606 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EF (Education First) employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
1.0
May 25, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice offices, some interesting projects

Cons

I've worked for EF for a number years. It has been great, but I haven't been comfortable with several aspects of their business, which I find to be morally indefensible. There is a culture in EF of not highlighting the bad bits of the company, because the founding family, the Hults, have built almost a cult of personality around themselves. If you ever get a chance to go to one of their offices, check it out, it's like being in North Korea with pictures of the Hults everywhere! EF has made many staff redundant during the coronavirus crisis, but even though we get regular emails from the Hults offering support during this difficult time, they will never acknowledge the work of the people they let go. They leave the dirty work to the managers lower down the food chain. The cult of personality in my opinion, masks deeply amoral leadership. To take one example, EF pay barely any tax, despite making billions for the Hult family. They are structured across lots of small local subsidiary companies, which don't touch any money, and won't appear on invoices and contracts. These are all done through the Swiss holding company. Even though the company makes millions around the world, they pay a fraction of the tax they should. That's all perfectly legal, but during coronavirus crisis I read in the FT that EF have been using taxpayer bailouts to lower the cost of making their staff redundant! The same company that pays almost nothing in tax in the countries where it operates comes begging to the government when things turn rough! This is just the latest in a pattern of behaviour. The founder, Bertil Hult, has appeared in the Panama Papers and is the owner of a number of private jets, and Philip, his son, lives in a multimillion pound mansion in London. I've even heard rumours that IT had a project to build a system to allocate pilots to the private jets more efficiently. In my opinion, the family have looted the company and the taxpayer and now display some nerve going to the state for help. At staff parties (of which there are many, always loads of fun) I always make a point to shake Philip's hand. I'm always struck by how soft it is, as if he hasn't done a day of work in his entire life. If you ever get a job at EF, I recommend you try shake at least one Hult's hand. You'll never feel softer skin. And I should also add one thing that I find morally repugnant. The company has absolutely no position on climate change because their main driver of revenue is to fly people around the world on their expensive package tours. The offices have posters everywhere asking you to recycle and save the planet but nobody is allowed to question the bigger problem that we work for a company that makes millions destroying the planet. Thankfully, coronavirus has destroyed this aspect of the business and I would be very happy to see it gone forever.

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EF (Education First) Response
6y
We are sorry to hear this feedback. The Hult family has publicly expressed that this has been the most difficult time of their careers, and they have shared their gratitude for the incredible work of former and current team members. To clarify your comments about the U.K., the government scheme was an option for impacted employees who had requested access to that additional benefit; our original termination package remained available at all times. Finally, we take our business’ impact very seriously, and agree with you that climate change is an important topic. EF is constantly discussing this and many other important causes at the highest levels of our organization. We’d welcome the opportunity to discuss this with you further; I encourage you to speak with your senior managers or a member of our Recruitment & Employee Development team, as any of them would be happy to answer questions and clarify misunderstandings.
1.0
Feb 11, 2021

Toxic working culture

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- International atmosphere - Travel encouraged

Cons

-I really wish I could give them zero stars; please read before you apply to get an honest picture of what to expect - No work/life balance since you need to be available 24/7 (travel means you get up at 3 am and get to bed well after midnight) - Absolute toxic work culture with every Swedish employee being promoted to become a manager with absolute 0 experience; when talking to senior management about this they fully admitted it but since it's a Swedish company they want to promote their kin - often complained to HR about this (so please don't say contact HR, and we will investigate because you had YEARS to do it and didn't bother) - people keep getting fired in the most unkind ways (one colleague was severely ill with corona and got fired one day later via email; not even in person) - during corona absolutely no measurements taken to keep the employees safe because ultimately only profit matters (made them come in by downplaying the pandemic since Sweden stayed open and it "went so well" they encouraged people to come to the office too; they only recommended staying home once the government enforced it) - salary well below market average (except of course if you are Swedish), especially people from countries known for offering lower salaries (like Southern Europe or Eastern Europe) will be offered very, very low wages

1.0
Aug 4, 2020

Lots of cons

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- You can choose your own hours - Some students are really nice

Cons

- Inconsistent hours of working. You may be available for 6 hours a day but only get given 3 hours, all with annoying gaps of 45/60 minutes in between. - Lots of students fail to turn up to private lessons and teachers only get paid a fraction of the full hour if this happens. Students who consistently do this aren't punished and the company offers little support to teachers who experience students doing this - The pay is really low and they expect you to answer emails and spend time writing reports for each student after the lesson which is time consuming and further reduces the rate. - When you enter a group lesson you have no idea what level or topic you're teaching until you enter the classroom at the same time as the students. This means you feel pressurised and often have no idea what is coming up in the lesson. - The lesson content is also really difficult to follow when you have limited time to prepare for what you're going to teach. The target language for the lesson can only be found on one or two particular pages and there's no way that teachers can look ahead or check the teacher notes on other slides during the lesson. - They operate a bonus system based entirely on student ratings for the lessons you teach. These ratings are completely subjective and if a student doesn't like you for whatever reason, they can affect your monthly average rating with a low score which affects your chances of receiving a bonus.

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