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Australian Broadcasting

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Enjoyed it but there are problems - Anonymous employee Australian Broadcasting Employee Review

2.0
Jan 8, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

I spent over a year working on a technology project at the ABC and it was fantastic to be inside such an important part of Australian life. They're doing important stuff and I strongly believe in the ABC's role in the life of the country. The Ultimo office has a really nice library and they have gym discounts at nearby fitness centres. It's right by Central so great public transport links. The interview process is light and it can be easy to snag a job with a good title and get some great experience. It's a good stepping stone company - the pay is mediocre so competition is lower but the name looks great on your CV and 12 months down the line you can move somewhere for a decent payrise.

Cons

I do have A LOT of cons but keep in mind that I am glad I spent time there! Obvious problems at the ABC : - for me personally, I spent the majority of my contract twiddling my thumbs trying to find work to do. Some people might like that. I was bored out of my mind. I feel I delivered great stuff but I could have completed everything working two days per week. I'm back in the private sector now and it's fantastic to have something to get stuck into and be busy all the time. This was just my personal experience though, I could clearly see that others (in roles I couldn't help with) were too busy! - internal politics and silos - very hard to get stuff done and it's going to be very hard to fix this. It's obvious that projects will take three times as long and cost four times more than they should mainly due to this. Very poor decision making processes. The divisions need to work together not pursue their own agendas. Have the debate before the decision is made, make the decision and then stick to what is agreed (even if you disagree with it). Instead they make a decision and then spend years fighting over it and playing politics undermining the success of any complex project. Someone will have to make some tough calls to fix that - but you'll see failure after failure until it's fixed. - bullying - only time in my career I've ever actually seen bullying at work. Was shocked to see behaviour that would just not be tolerated in the private sector. A manager openly berating and swearing at staff members on multiple occasions was just terrible to see. I didn't raise it with HR but I was only on a temp contract and you're scared to rock the boat. - hiring process dominated by fixed term contracts - so almost all new hires seem to be on 6,12,18 months contracts whereas existing staff are permanent and unsackable. It means there is dead wood (people who obviously just aren't doing anything and haven't learnt a new skill in the past decade) who can't be sacked, whereas the fresh blood is hired on a mediocre salary on a temp contract. So new people come, gain good experience at the ABC, then 12 or 18 months down the line leave for a 50% pay rise and a permanent job elsewhere while the dead wood who have been there 20+ years and delivering little stay year after year. The ABC cuts which caused such an outrage barely made a scratch. It's ridiculous that this was headline news. Private industry regularly make redundancies. It's part of being a healthy enterprise. Just to be clear, the vast majority of ABC staff and especially those who have been around a long time are hard working and extremely valuable. When I refer to dead wood it is a small minority - but it's very, very obvious and there are millions in efficiency savings right there. - some of the management just aren't skilled enough. It was embarrassing at times. IT project managers (in charge of major projects worth millions) who could barely work a computer, manage a meeting or give a presentation, completely out of date skills sets caused so many problems. It was baffling.

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4.0
Jun 8, 2020
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Pros

People really care about their work, ego doesn't usually get in the way, they're passionate and committed to quality. When you spend time in another country that doesn't have a publicly-funded broadcaster you realise that the work the ABC does is essential and Australia is very lucky to have it. Most of the time the content is high quality and fairly non-biased (at least compared to commercial media). No ads or commercial pressures are an absolute godsend, and the talent there is truly world class, particularly in radio and audio.

Cons

Usual gripes of a public broadcaster - very bureaucratic, everything takes too long, it's too white, there's favouritism, I came across many instances of women being paid less than men for the same work, but people put up with a lot of crap because as far as media goes, there aren't a lot of options other than in commercial media and that is such an emotional drain (I used to work in both). I do feel the ABC has been under a lot of pressure in recent years and has definitely been affected by the relentless attacks from Murdoch media and the conservative government, and debilitating budget cuts, but not all of the issues at the ABC have to do with that.

1
3.0
Sep 17, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Colleagues had a really great team

Cons

The employment is contract based

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