Bloomberg Sales and Analytics reviews

3.6

73% would recommend to a friend

(70 total reviews)
avatar

Michael R. Bloomberg and Vlad Kliatchko

83% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Analytics/Sales employees have rated Bloomberg with 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 70 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Analytics/Sales professionals have a good working experience there. Bloomberg is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Analytics/Sales professionals compared to other employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

70 reviews
1.0
Mar 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good people surrounding you, unless they start to enter managment, at that time only the worst survives.

Cons

The Analytics & Sales (A&S) graduate program is a high-volume, high-stress call center environment that is toxic by design. From day one, the discrepancy between the "financial analyst" job description and the reality of technical support is jarring. You are expected to juggle 3 simultaneous "Live Chats" with clients who are often incredibly rude. Instead of support, you are met with an impossible level of micromanagement. The surveillance of your physical movement is dehumanizing. While there is a technical allowance of 8 minutes per hour for "away time" (including toilet breaks), the reality is much stricter. If you are away for more than 5 minutes, management or team leads will actively monitor your status and question your whereabouts upon your return. This "timer culture" creates a constant state of anxiety that is reflected in the department’s health statistics; there is an incredibly high percentage of genuine sick leave because the environment literally makes people ill. The leadership culture is the most disturbing element. The "tone from the top" is set by senior department heads who have openly bragged that their "happiest day" was a day they fired a large group of people. This pride in termination trickle down to the Team Leads, some of whom display evident racist biases and favoritism. Because the environment is designed to set people up for failure, there is no psychological safety to report these issues; when you raise concerns about stress, workload, or unfair treatment, the standard managerial response is to "just live with it" or "deal with it." The numbers speak for themselves: this is a revolving door. Between 10–20% of new hires leave within 6 months and 30–50% of any given cohort is gone within the first year. You aren't being trained for a career in finance; you are being used as a replaceable component in a ticket-processing machine until you inevitably burn out.

1.0
Oct 30, 2025

Honest review

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- you work a strict 8 to 6, dont bring home any work - better than average starting pay, >6k, within 2 years can achieve 8-10k, worth doing it for the money - free breakfast, lots of pantry snacks - can request for herman miller chair - 20 days leave

Cons

- your work schedule is decided for you. Lunch time is decided by manager, capped at 1 hour. Cannot use toilet for too long without affecting KPI - managers like to force people to come up with projects on top of BAU work, or else you have "poor performance" - main bulk of job is being on the helpdesk, just answering questions. Occasional sales element when you get to tag along the actual sales team - not much exit opportunities, knowledge is very bloomberg centric (can go to competitor company like S&P, LSEG)

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