Bloomberg Reviews

4.0

79% would recommend to a friend

(8,226 total reviews)
avatar

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 8,226 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
5 Jun 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I'm doing you a favour by writing this. I should have listened to the bad reviews, but instead ignored them and ended up leaving the company within less than a year because I didn't want to be pigeon holed in this company and found another job elsewhere. Here's my honest review: - Nice and friendly colleagues. - You end work on time every day. - Pantry (especially breakfast). - No stress environment. - Highly paid for the hours and work you do here. - A lot of events (with more free food) and paid-for sports outside of the office. - Work-life balance. Conclusion: if you want a work life balance and a high starting salary without any career aspirations, come!

Cons

The other side to my HONEST and COMPREHENSIVE opinion that you need to read! I separated it into 3 parts for your liking: Job Scope: - it is not finance-related, yet the team leaders there have somehow brainwashed themselves (or are good at acting) that it is. It's not. - people are right - you copy data from the news and paste it to the terminal. I was so sad that the this was the actual job and that people here were right. - think about it... Our clients analyze the data. If we were to analyze the data for them, we would be taking their jobs. What position does that leave us to do... Except copy and paste it and make sure that it's correct (by checking online or somewhere). Even the "equity research roles" can't give their opinions because it will be taking their clients jobs (sell side research analysts who use the terminal). - there is also no data analytics involved - forget about using R or Python to visualize and analyze the data. Read the point above - What is there left to analyze? - everything is a "project". Writing a manual on how the work flow to my daily work is a "project". The lack of... Intensity and analytical work makes everything a project. Management: - my team leader (TL) was a... pain. The TL I had somehow lied to herself into believing that this job was awesome (FYI everyone on the floor hates this job but most don't leave due to the security and pay it offers - yes, moral is low and management knows this). - they can't be trusted. It's funny how every TL sounds similar in their answers to their team. Make sure you ask questions - a lot of people would say they came from wealth management firms and that working in Bloomberg is better. Ask more --> most of them worked in the back end office of these companies. No wonder bloomberg is better - it's moreso the same job with better pay. - they pride in having a university atmosphere. First hearing this I was happy and excited. If you think about it... It's not really. A bunch of adults acting like kids and the TLs being the frat that everyone needs to suck up to in order to become one of them in the future. - sounds nice, doesn't it, to tell people that you make your career your own in Bloomberg? Think again. Management uses that as a reason and excuse to cover their own mistakes. "Boss what should I do?" -> "Idk. This is your career to make here in Bloomberg". Think about what a great excuse that is and how they could use it against anything... And they do! - a personal rant - I told my TL I was leaving and didn't like this position and felt like I was lied to about the job scope. TL replied by saying "you said you like finance in the interview? You said you managing data?" Seriously?! if you think this is finance and managing data means copy and pasting numbers, then sorry i must be wrong about liking either! (Im in finance still btw lol). Exit Opportunities: - this is the biggest point for me. I'd take hell if there were decent exit ops. There aren't. For those who think it only sucks in the first year - people who have stayed 5 years tell me it doesn't get better and you are stuck copy and pasting data. - look on LinkedIn and check the career paths of these people. No one stayed long if they eventually entered a somewhat prestigious finance or consulting role - all left within a year. The reasons to why were already listed. - managers would say "person x left to Mckinsey or Credit Suisse." Ask again - they stayed for 6-8 months in my office before leaving, knowing they deserved better. - my colleague made a good point (been there for several years and regrets not leaving earlier). Said "people in the finance industry knows what we do... And they know that it isn't finance. We go to them to train them and sell our products and they go to our offices for training and meetings. They know very well that we just copy and paste data. It's sad." So lying your job scope into the finance industry is not an option. - the longer you stay, the worst it is. You will get pigeon holed as a data analyst. Forget trying to get a front end job. Many people left to prestigious financial firms - if you look closer, they are in the back end team. Also, if you want to do backend, I'm not against it - but at least do engineering work and not copy and paste data... - in my office, no one internally transferred to another team from the global data department because no one wanted to take us in... Sad. Conclusion: if you're driven or want a career thats not boring, dont come here. I felt bad for one of my colleagues. This was the persons first job and i asked if the person liked the job. Said "idk. Are all jobs like this? (in a sad and lost tone) i answered the person by saying "no. You can do better". And thats my advice to you all. If you worked hard for a good career, you deserve better than what they offer.

1.0
21 Feb 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Health Benefits. Open and transparent office.

Cons

Singapore is run by a band of people who collude and dispose of people they do not like. HR does not exist at Bloomberg. There is no career opportunities. Morale is rock bottom due non existent leadership.

2.0
7 Jun 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

* Fixed, stable pay, no commission - emotional baggage, high inertia to leave * Good medical benefits (annual health checkup - one of the better packages), maternity benefits (6 months off for mums) * topping up of SRS = matching by company (fully vested after 3 years) * transport allowance since covid, usd 75 daily, ending 30 June * meals at work, breakfast, lunch

Cons

* stack ranking to evaluate employees, need to spend time to “build” story/profile of yourself amongst management to be liked. At the end of the day, it’s not only about the revenues you bring in * pretence of being compassionate, putting up a facade during covid, regular sending of items to home to “motivate” you to work - including food, diy plant, cookies, mooncakes, teabags, high tea set, cap * very powerful CRM to track your productivity, esp during covid, mgmt have to find ways to make sure you are not skiving. Need to write all the client engagements in categories of spoke, visit, demo of your client engagements. Came out with a ridiculous number of 160 during covid to track you. Procured all sorts of video conferencing tools, we have zoom, teams, Webex, Google meet, measure the duration of your client engagements * endless number of global townhalls during pandemic. Mgmt kept telling you how great of a job the whole firm is doing * middle mgmt who is not compassionate and just messenger, untactful way of mgmt. curt mgmt style by middle mgmt * boast mobility across offices. During covid, for the Singapore office, relocated at least 5 Indian Nationals and above to take up managerial positions which can otherwise be taken up by locals. Started with apac sales mgr (Indian National) who relocated from Hk to Singapore, and started to see a trend of sales mgr bringing in his own people to spread across various depts * big boss who kept changing his mind whether to run presidency, and ran in the end, spent loads of money on campaign (well his own money right - and where does his money come from you wonder?). Dropped out in the end, and supported Biden in endless campaign advertorials, while mgmt within the company kept pushing own guys to keep bringing in revenue, burnt so much money during presidency campaign * rigid way of running the business, small deals are peanuts in mgmt’s eyes (don’t ever believe them when they say a save of removal terminal is as good as a sale)

Viewing 1 - 3 of 8,226 Reviews

Glassdoor has 10,069 Bloomberg reviews submitted anonymously by Bloomberg employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Bloomberg is right for you.