Bloomberg reviews

4.0

79% would recommend to a friend

(8,214 total reviews)
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Michael R. Bloomberg and Vlad Kliatchko

85% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

Bloomberg has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 8,214 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Bloomberg employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
1.0
Nov 2, 2020

Miserable

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free cookies, okay healthcare, all the sugary soda you can drink.

Cons

If Disneyworld is the happiest place earth, then Bloomberg LP must be the most miserable. Imagine employee turnover like a poorly run fast food restaurant. Picture management that is virtually unemployable elsewhere, but oozes of unrequited arrogance. This is the hell that is Bloomberg LP. If you read the positive reviews most of them are from people who have worked there less than three years and the big pros include free snacks. Yes, the biggest pro of your job is free Oreos? I can empathize with these people though, as the pay is so low for many positions, the employees cannot afford their own Oreos. Bloomberg does love the Bloomberg lifer. While the people with brains, talent and ambition all walk out the door within 2-5 years, there is a group that has reached their peak with their first job after college. Bloomberg is a very flat culture, meaning that no one is viewed as particularly skilled and the employees are interchangeable and replaceable. I sat in countless meetings hearing managers drone on about how they did not know anything about what they were doing and proceed to waste untold dollars while driving the product or project into the ditch. When you are lifer and the member of the chosen group you are not held to competence. There is a long-standing rumor that there is a list of 100 employees who are targeted as having a future at the company. The rest? Good luck. Heaven forbid you are over 50, you will either be shown the door or tortured until you leave. Most all of the management is pulled from the group of lifers, so with the talented people leaving the company, this leaves those who can’t leave ,If you work there currently, look at the managers, and team leaders, particularly in sales. While there are a few exceptions, most of them are emotionally disturbed, sycophantic or openly displaying neurotic behavior. It looks like the Island of Misfit Toys. Most of the team leaders and sales managers could be replaced by a spreadsheet and a quality CRM system. Many of the managers cannot operate the internal CRM, so you may have to spend 20 minutes documenting a 10-minute call. It can take weeks for the managers to actually determine what “sale” is actually, and if it is convenient for them, they well deem it a “low quality” sale, so it won’t count towards one of their many quotas. With this comes the arrogance. There are team leaders and managers who seem to view themselves as equals to traders or bankers or whatever. Most of them are too cowardly to buy anything beyond a target date mutual fund in their 401k. One of the few benefits of this place is that you do make great contacts across many industries, so if you can’t extricate yourself from this place, it should be very clear about how little ability you really possess. There is a paranoia from the top down that customers and employees are some how stealing from the company. I, Me and Mine are the pronouns of management and some of them believe the own every hour of your life. This goes along with the Bloomberg myth/lie that it is an “entrepreneurial” environment. Nothing could further from the truth, the post office is likely more entrepreneurial. What the management calls ‘entrepreneurial’ is actually stealing sales, ideas or whatever for their own, and not rewarding the people who actually did the work. If they spent as much time actually doing work of some value as opposed to trying to take credit or discredit people they don’t like, you might actually have an operation that lives up to its braggadocio. There is no real leadership at Bloomberg anymore, what is left are politically motivated, neurotic misfits plodding though to make sure their fiefdoms survive or more likely looking to leapfrog to the next fiefdom before it is found out that their current fiefdom has been run into the ground. The constant turnover of people who have been there less than five years makes the covering up easier and makes it look like they do not have a problem…figures don’t lie, but liars sure can figure. Bloomberg survives because of the communication tools , this how debt gets traded and the lack of a uniform alternative has kept the ship afloat, as most everything else has been less than successful. If this is ever disrupted, the sycophantic management, long since lost of any new ideas, will be caught flat footed. The actual Bloomberg office in New York is a bit of a mess. The office has that “we are so cool in 1999” feel, however rife with shortcomings. Including a lack of restrooms (it is not uncommon to wait 20 minutes in que to use a restroom) crowded choke points, a lack of meeting space, no privacy whatsoever. It gives the experience of being in Penn station at rush hour. Pre-covid, being in the office was not much better than being at Penn station. If a “co-worker” is not known to you, expect to be treated like you were walking through that esteemed train station. I once saw one employee knock another employee (an older female) down on the escalator and not even stop or apologize. They hand out soup at lunch time in carts around the pantry, but the employee became so unruly that they had to deploy a queuing system. I did see an employee take a swing at another employee to get to the soup faster. A swing at co-wroker for a cup of lousy tasting soup that might be worth 50 cents. That really says what employees think of their jobs and their co-workers. Expect to hear an unending stream of shopworn business buzzwords, use of the word “leverage” in every sentence “I leveraged my car to go the Jersey Shore this weekend” for example. This is what passes for intelligence. You will quickly learn to ignore everything that is said for fear of becoming inoculated with the Kool-Aid. If you work there now, you know this is the cold, real, truth. If you do not see this, then the Kool-Aid has taken hold, and you are part of the cult. If you have been offered a job there, yes, it is better than homelessness. Keep in mind you are not going to work for a nimble, fire in the belly tech firm. You are not going to work for a top end media company that will do world changing reporting. You are not going to work for an investment bank that will do commerce that moves the world. Have an exit plan ready at all times. You are going to work for company that will ignore its customers any time it can, change the rules to serve its management’s needs, and lie to anyone and at any time to serve its perceived needs. You are going to work for company that exists only to serve its founder’s unending ego. You are going to work for a place that expects you to give your life to the dear leader, and in return, will pay you as little as they can get away with. You will never be a shareholder or experience anything here to build real personal wealth. You will soon realize the operation is built around a transient work force, and that you are meant to be disposable. You will soon realize that you are working in the modern version of something that is more befitting Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, than a true tech giant like Apple, Microsoft, Google or LinkedIn.

2.0
Sep 18, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Very good compensation with end of year cash bonus -Good vacation policy and medical benefits -Great snacks and coffee situation, free soup for lunch -Global organization with recognizable brand name and stranglehold on some workflows within the financial industry -Energetic common areas of the main NY office, generally interesting and smart workforce -Very well respected CEO (ex mayor Mike Bloomberg) with a good and charitable moral compass -Fun summer picnic

Cons

General CONS: -From a long term business perspective Bloomberg has zero chance of growth; the market is saturated and begging for innovation, and customers usually do NOT like dealing or working with Bloomberg - most of the time they simply have no other option -Employees are no longer valued assets, they are soldiers and rarely get recognition or praise from management. You are expected to do your job, not take risks, be quiet and make sure the "Bloomberg cruise ship doesn't sink" -The Bloomberg culture from the top down is hurting. Not a company for people excited to grow a career, most employees who enjoy the salary and stability will fall in line and try to "not get fired". -What you'll find here is the definition of people leaving or being unhappy because of the manager, not necessarily the company. All of the pros listed above can prove worthless if you have a sub-par manager and within a negative environment. -The HR group within the company are robots and care little about employees below senior management. There are DOZENS of stories about employees who have been wronged, treated unfairly and with disrespect - but HR's job is to make sure complaints are squashed and it doesn't make it up to Mike B. Usually employee complaints are washed through the HR spin machine until the employee loses hope and either gives up, leaves or is shown the door. -The working environment is very negative, but upper management is shielded from this or just doesn't want to know. As of a month ago most employees either understand this and are accepting of it, or are extremely unhappy in their day to day. -Bloomberg's first attempt at collaboration and enterprise technology has been a challenge, for both sales, product and engineering. They don't get it. -The sales organization overall does not understand enterprise sales, most managers would fail in a modern technology company. -It is a very flat company, there is no determined career path and most employees are all but convinced to be silent contributors. You are all but told to not rock the boat. -The culture is of extreme micro-management; all office entry/exit time-stamps are exposed internally, most managers expect you to take lunch less than 30 minutes and you usually have to be in at 8 and leave after 6. -Don't expect company sponsored events other than the summer picnic, most happy hours and events are looked down upon by managers. CONS for Product Management and Engineering: -Upper Management actually dissuades innovation, they think Bloomberg is fine the way it is, don't take risks -If you care about customer (end user) experience, creative flexibility, and technology/tools developed after 2012 then Bloomberg is NOT for you. -Most Product Managers are experts in the workflow of the user, not product or technology subject matter experts -Engineering talent is respected and of high quality, but over the last few years the top talent are all being lost to more innovative tech companies: Google, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Spotify, etc - Several gaps and bugs pop up daily, and deploying or rolling out new features and functionality sometimes take weeks or months - not a great culture for innovative engineers - you'll want to go to one of the other big tech companies for that. -If you want to actually build interesting products, adapt to customer needs and create great user experiences, then look elsewhere -There are more good product managers and engineers leaving rather than joining, a sign that the company and product is past it's prime -Bloomberg as a whole does not understand compliance technology, especially for non-Bloomberg data sets. Customers are learning to look elsewhere. My overall message is to simply understand what you are getting yourself into by joining the company. You'll make a good salary and meet some fun people, but if you care about advancing your career and being part of an innovative technology organization, then look elsewhere. Some people are totally fine with the status quo and collecting paychecks. But for those who care about careers and crave passion, if you look into their eyes you'll see souls dying. **Make sure you talk to current employees in the group you are joining before accepting**

1.0
Mar 4, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are great, company holiday party is awesome

Cons

First of all, let me say that Bloomberg Intelligence management got my first review deleted, so that should tell you something. They are trying to silence people and hide the truth, which is exactly what they did on a day-to-day basis while I was there. Below is the review: ---- Bloomberg Intelligence management is clueless, offensive, and could careless about morale. The second in command at the department was inappropriate on many occasions. Absolutely terrible, unless you stroked his ego. Pay was terrible. Loads of mind games. Management lied about raises (e.g. "you're getting a 5% raise", but what really happened is they took the guaranteed bonus away and added half of it to your base, which actually decreased the total comp.). Some management asked straight up prohibited questions about medical histories, medications, etc. One friend of mine (who also quit) was a foreigner and was more or less held hostage by Bloomberg's sponsoring of his/her employment visa. He/she was paid nearly 30,000 less than the associates that worked beneath him/her. At one point, an email was sent around saying that we would have to work outside our normal 8-6 hours to get work done if we wanted to be considered "satisfactory". One higher up employee tried to fight against it, but was silenced. Very very poor room for growth. As Bloomberg is news, research, sales, and software, the best shot at a higher paying position within the company is to transfer outside of your skill area. All the recruiters I spoke to said the same thing. Further, the BI product is getting taken into a very bad place. Every potential employer I appealed to when trying to make my exit told me that Bloomberg was the reason I wasn't hired. Expect to be criticized: your shoes, your pants, the type of shirt you wear, your hair style, and FORGET ABOUT IT if you're a woman. Management's treatment of women in the department was disgusting. When I was there, only 15% of the entire NY department were women. Management will decide they don't like you, and make up reasons for why your performance is poor to push you out. My manager was a nearly 20 year veteran of the company, that had already previously been demoted. If you voice a concern, he would tell me why I'm wrong, rather than actually trying to listen. Voicing a concern or a workplace problem actually would subject you to discipline. Think thought police. In the short time I worked at Bloomberg Intelligence, no fewer than 25 people quit in the New York office, and there were only 75 to begin with. Management told me this was "normal". Management tried to control associates from hanging out together and from talking to one another. I was used to asking coworkers "hey, how was your weekend" on Monday mornings, but was told this was inappropriate. I actually got spoken to by senior management who told me that discussing our personal lives was prohibited. Meanwhile, managers sent around birth announcements weekly. Me and several former coworkers would literally cry to one another about the abuse and plain lack of care or concern for us that took place. If you like low self-esteem, getting paid half of what your worth, and working over time just to quality as "satisfactory", then by all means take this job. I was plainly told that management doesn't care if you're happy at the job. It's not their problem.

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