Resources for Understanding What Company Values Really Mean
After being burned by companies that talked a good game, I started building a collection of resources that reveal what's actually happening behind the values posters.
Communities Where People Tell the Truth
The Work After 50 Facebook group has thousands of members sharing real experiences. People discuss specific companies and whether their values match reality. No PR spin, just frustrated or satisfied workers.
Reddit's r/RedditForGrownups has ongoing discussions about workplace values. The anonymity helps people be more candid than they'd be on LinkedIn.
Publications Worth Your Time
Next Avenue runs regular features on age-friendly employers with actual data, not just company claims. They follow up years later to see if things held up.
The Conference Board publishes research on corporate governance and ethics. Dense reading, but they include the failures alongside the successes.
Data Sources I Check
The Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks age demographics by company size and industry. If a company has almost no workers over 55, their "we value experience" rings hollow.
Fortune's 100 Best Companies list includes age diversity metrics now. Compare their data to what the company claims about valuing all generations.
My Bottom Line
Company values become real when you can verify them through multiple independent sources. One press release means nothing. Patterns across employee reviews, legal records, and demographic data? That tells you something.