Bloomberg reviews

4.0

78% would recommend to a friend

(8,247 total reviews)
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Michael R. Bloomberg and Vlad Kliatchko

84% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

Bloomberg has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 8,247 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
3.0
Jan 3, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits: good 401K plan (most of my plan recovered the market crash as of the end of 2010) with a good match. 4 weeks of vacation even for junior employees, unlimited sick days (theoretically, depends on your relationship with the manager and if he trusts you and how good you are with the "system" (bring doctor notes when in doubt ). Relatively good dental, vision and medical plans, but medical plan got worse over the years (larger copays, etc, but it's a country-wide issue).

Cons

Lots of incompetent people being promoted to managers--those who scream the loudest or just because they were good developers or got lucky (every other senior person left the team), but it doesn't mean they make good managers. It is as very easy to be demoted (as part of a reorganization, etc, I haven't seen it to happen as much in other companies). Unfortunately the incompetent managers always seem to stick around, it is the good managers which usually suffer. R&D (programming dept) uses a lot of "in-house" technologies, and public/mainstream technologies which it uses are technologically way behind other companies. There is still lots of C and Fortran code to deal with. New development is done in Javascript (not web based), and C++, but the company switched to C++ only about 5 years ago, and to Javascript about 3-4 years ago when everyone has done it decades ago. The more you stay in the the company , especially if you stay in one of R&D groups which doesn't deal with financial instruments directly, the less marketable you'll become shall you decide to leave the company. The pay is above average for Junior developers, but tapers off once you become a Senior Developer. After discussing this with my friends in the company over the years, it almost feels like you hit some kind of a glass ceiling after 8-10 years in the company, unless you are a superstar (which means you have no personal life), some kind of a a genius, become a manager, AND have enough marketing stills to market yourself to your manager before your annual review. Theoretically, the company has "work from home" policy now and some flexible work programs. But it practice, it has policy has been very limited and mostly used by middle-chain managers. Lots more pressure on developers once the company instituted the "Plan B" reorganization, sometimes it's way too much. That said, everything totally depends on the team you're on. Even within the same group in R&D,there are good teams where developers are happy and stay for years, while in other groups developers are buried with work and work 12 hours a day until they transfer to a different team or quit.

1.0
May 26, 2010

Dont do it.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ok Pay and benefits Pretty slack job

Cons

As an employer fairly fascits 1984 work environment. Global data is data input mixed with customer service - dont believe the rubbish they sell you at interview. Cannot accept that poeple could ever want to leave and dont give appropriate training that could be useful elsewhere.

1.0
Feb 20, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I'm a senior software engineer at bloomberg and this review is my own + what I have heard from my colleagues and friends in other teams within this company. * Good compensation (only if you work 8 hrs a day which won't be the case.. normal working hours are 12 to 14 here) * Smart and intelligent people * 4 week paid vacation + medical benefit + free food

Cons

* You will be at your desk almost all the time.. normally ppl come at 9 and don't leave before 7. This is normal working day.. on special occasions you may have to stay even more and need to work on weekends. * They track every minute you spend in office .. we have something called PN notes and other tools to track time. You can't bill more then a day on a ticket.. if you do.. your manager yells at you. * There are no separate cubical so everybody can see everybody else.. and environment is little noisy so becomes hard to concentrate. * Managers are rude, don't respect team members.. good work won't get appreciation ever.. (and this is a culture.. this is not about specific manager). * Top management have completely failed in managing software capital.. lot of code duplications.. software pieces are scattered here and there and there is no track of it.. often you will be writing a module from scratch even though its available somewhere else. * interview process is tiresome.. they take 5-6 interviews and keep you on contracting for 1 month and that 1 month is a complete torture and then after their might be additional interview before the offer is extended !!!! TOO MUCH !!!

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