Associate - Anonymous employee Hightower Advisors Employee Review

1.0
Mar 7, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some advisors are very intelligent and fun to work with. Learned plenty from those who have built solid books. Work-life balance is what you make of it; plenty of people mess around the entire day while others who focus on doing real work leave on time.

Cons

Extremely political, way too much power given to those who have no business managing people. Management turns a blind eye to employee turnover. Plenty of fancy titles to go around in corporate but no work of practical value to show for it.

Explore other reviews about Hightower Advisors

5.0
Feb 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The culture here is incredible

Cons

There are a lot of changes constantly

1.0
Jan 30, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A handful of genuinely good people who try to do the right thing and support their teammates. The work can be interesting at times, and you can learn a lot if you’re proactive.

Cons

The culture here used to be one of the best parts of the job, but over the last two years it’s pretty much disappeared. Leadership keeps pushing more in-office time, and the reasoning given in all-hands meetings feels disconnected from reality. It comes off as out of touch, and things like “bagels in the office” are honestly more insulting than motivating. The team dynamic has also changed for the worse. It doesn’t feel like people are working together anymore. A lot of folks are just trying to protect themselves and avoid blame rather than collaborate, which creates a stressful and political environment. Larry in particular is seen by many as elitist and overly intense. The expectation seems to be that people should just grind until they burn out or leave. There’s very little concern for sustainability or long-term morale, and turnover feels accepted rather than addressed. On top of that, the private equity ownership creates constant anxiety. It feels like they’re more interested in being the first to sell than in being the best company. If an exit opportunity comes up, it’s hard to believe the company wouldn’t be gutted. Layoffs feel likely at some point, especially given how often management relationships with firms like Goldman Sachs are brought up.

3
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