Bloomberg reviews

4.0

79% would recommend to a friend

(8,231 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 8,231 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 Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
2.0
Nov 3, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great benefits. The health insurance premiums are 100% covered. Low out-of-pocket doctor visitation fees. Six months maternity leave. 50% 401K match. - Competitive entry-level salary. Everyone in your starting class starts with the same wage regardless of going to an Ivy League or a state college. Catered lunches and dinners (depending on the office location). - WFH stipend to cover equipment expenses. - Daily COVID commuter allowance to travel to and from the office via Taxi, Rail, or Subway or cover parking fees. - Pre-COVID, when they hosted their annual company picnic, it was a great experience. Calling it a "picnic" is an understatement. It's more of a festival/carnival experience. - Great internship and externship program. - The company has improved D&I by hiring more diverse full-time employees and interns compared to previous years. Bloomberg tries to recruit from a variety of colleges across the country. Some schools I've never heard of. - The company makes Philanthropy a top priority and has partnerships with an array of non-profit organizations

Cons

Wow, where do I start. Diversity: The company struggles to retain diverse talent, particularly among Black employees. Bloomberg promotes young white employees to Team Leaders who lack the emotional intelligence to lead a diverse team. Many Black and Brown employees get passed over for promotions that have the job's leadership skills, work ethic, knowledge, and emotional intelligence. Equity: Black and Brown's employees are underpaid. As an entry-level candidate, while you may start with the same salary as your peers after your first end-of-year review, that's when the pay gap starts. Bloomberg does not disclose their data on employees' wages, b. Still, some colleagues are transparent with one another, so it's easy to find out who's making more, and most of the high earners are white men and white women in second place. Inclusion: They do a poor job of informing employees of all the leadership opportunities within Analytics. On some occasions, you'll walk into work the next day and find out a co-worker was selected to lead a campaign or selected as a point of contact for a specific product or promoted to Deputy Team Leader (assistant Team Lea. There wasn't an interview or application process present to give everyone a chance to apply. It was handed to them (favoritism and white privilege)! Limited Career Progression: Bloomberg's management hierarchy is flat. Meaning leadership positions are limited to Deputy Team Leader, Team Leader, Department Manager, Regional Manager, Global Head, and then there is the Management Committee where Michael Bloomberg sits on. The management committee comprises white men and women (mostly men) who are old and conservative, and they wonder why they struggle with retaining Black and Brown talent. The same managers hold leadership positions year after year. The same managers are promoted unless one of them quits, gets fired, or transfers to another department. They rotate them from one role to the next. Lack of Technical Transferable Skills: Bloomberg wants to be the Google or Microsoft of Financial Data Software. Meaning 98% of the tools you'll use in Analytics are specific to Bloomberg. You're a Product Specialist. There is nothing wrong with that, but that's not how the role is presented. A lot more companies use Google and Microsoft compared to Bloomberg's software known as the "Terminal." Unless you plan to work at Bloomberg until you retire and stay in one department, it's more advantageous and attractive to employers if you know how to use other software such as Salesforce, Tableau, or SaaS and programming languages such as SQL or Python. Strict Work Schedule: Analytics is a queue-based role. You must be in queue precisely at your start time, and your lunch break is assigned to you. If you're assisting a client and it's time to go to lunch, you must finish helping the client before you can go to lunch so sometimes, you'll only get a 30-minute break. Work-Life Balance: Even though Analytics is a shift-based role, you'll constantly find yourself working long hours to catch up on client requests or studying to pass an exam. Some of the exams are stupid and the information is useless outside of Bloomberg. You're also required to work some weekends and holidays. The company is open all year round. Performance metrics: It's a numbers game. It's either you hit your target or didn't. They don't care why you didn't hit your target regardless of if the issue is with their workflow. If you're white and a butt kisser, they'll look past it. You're also ranked against your peers, which isn't always fair because they will evaluate an employee who's been in the role for only six months against an employee who's been in the same position for two years. The knowledge and experience are not on the same level. Resistance to Adopt WFH Culture: Bloomberg thrived during the pandemic. The company's revenue increased. Their employees kept the company running while dealing with a deadly virus, parents had to juggle work and virtual school and civil unrest across the country, and how did they repay them? By giving all employees a four-week notice to return to the office three days a week. If you moved out of state and couldn't comply, you were let go or had to resign. Depending on your Team Leader or manager, some will give you a hard time if you can’t make it in three days a week regardless of if you can get the work done from home just the same. The company eventually plans to resume employees coming in five days a week.

1.0
Aug 17, 2021

Disappointing

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice office, smart people, many snacks. Exciting on paper, before you get a job here.

Cons

Micromanagement, old style structure, slowness in adapting to market changes. Everyone is treated as a high school student - politics, no true meritocracy. Some people play with the metrics as this is a metric based company - you can learn the rules and play the game accordingly. Most of the managers are BBG born and raised people, no experience in the market or whatsoever so forget about speaking to people who know how the markets work outside from BBG 3 billion building. Everyone sees what you do daily. Analytics is a simply call centre, you are stuck on tickets for hours and hours every day, you cannot even go to the bathroom or get a break. This company is cool on LinkedIn only basically, in the nice posts talking about a reality of employees’ empowerment which internally DOES NOT exist. Ah, experienced hired, please avoid this place, once you go through the reality check you will realise how much your previous company was healthy.

2.0
Jul 4, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Bloomberg is a legit and well respected company. The CEO is amazing and some awesome colleagues. Plenty of young colleagues (if you're younger and starting out). Volunteering activities are great. Company is serious about philanthropy.

Cons

Global Data is a joke and a revolving door for college grads. They make you go through a fairly lengthy interview process, but the full-time role is a joke. Trust me when I say that you're not doing anything finance related. You're in a back-office role doing manual data entry which can be automated at any time. In fact, Bloomberg is pushing for automation so I wouldn't be surprised to see Global Data dissolved. Also it really matters which team you land on. No matter what, STAY AWAY from fixed income. Specifically the mortgages team and to some extent bonds. You'll be going through all the same issues as everyone else in Global Data but with A LOT more work than your non-fixed income colleagues. Besides Global Data being a joke, be prepared to face A LOT of politics. There's politics all over the place. Since there's so many fresh college grads, it feels like college with college drama. "Senior leaders" are outdated. Some have been with the company for several decades simply because of their connections. In fact, since there's so many people for so few TL spots, the only way to move up is to be friends with management. You get "unlimited sick days" but no one takes them because there's a stigma. If you do end up taking one, if it's Friday or Monday, be ready to face judgement when you're back. Work from home is also so so hard to get. It's pretty basic these for companies to offer this, but the company doesn't want to set a standard of working from home daily. Thus, managers are encouraged to not let their teams work from home. As for career prospects after, there's very little. Poor at best. Think about it, you're not doing finance so no banks want you. Since you're doing data entry all day, you're not developing technical or finance skills. Also you're working with Bloomberg systems which isn't applicable to other companies. If you were working with SAP, Qlik, Tableau then that would actually be useful but you're not. Lastly, the location sucks. You're not in Princeton, you're in freaking- Skillman, New Jersey. Never heard of it? Exactly.

Viewing 52 - 54 of 8,231 Reviews

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