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Bridgewater Associates

Engaged Employer

Bridgewater Associates reviews

3.7

58% would recommend to a friend

(593 total reviews)
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Nir Bar Dea

66% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

Bridgewater Associates has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 593 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Bridgewater Associates employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

593 reviews
3.0
Apr 19, 2015

Great core culture and people, terrible management and technology

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Many of the people here are very smart, very dedicated and generally the most interesting and likable people I've ever met. You get a ton of value out of the relationships you build here with the folks who embody the culture in a fundamental and common sense way. Lots of opportunities to discover who are you; both peers and managers invest a lot of time in helping you understand and improve from your mistakes. Culture was really great 5-7 years ago when Bridgewater was just full of smart, dedicated and intrinsically cultured employees.

Cons

Systematized management is not creating a good culture; it was way better 5-7 years ago before all these management tools and feedback quotas came along. Too bogged down with dealing with constant fires to have any notion of career development. Skills are regarded as irrelevant as long as you have the values and abilities. Tons of red tape to get anything done. Terrible governance and the most basic processes need to be constantly built from scratch.

2.0
Apr 7, 2015

mediocre

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

smart people, free food, prestige of employer

Cons

bureaucracy is there whether you admit it or not

2.0
Apr 1, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Smart people, good salary, good benefits, perks like lunch, gym and parties Opportunities to move within company can be good. You will find awesome people there. Principles are great in theory and give a good framework of thinking about problems and common management issues. Will push you to be at your best, testing your intellect and mental fortitude. Best opportunities for success and happiness are far away from the departments where the founder is involved

Cons

Parties and "team bonding" events get excessive- forced bonding with co-workers to "build community" takes even more time away from family and friends outside of work. Managers are expected to attend and it is viewed negatively if managers do not attend. Poor work life balance Parties get out of hand, and no-one really cares... kind of like "Mad Men" in how it operates. Men who are complained about are minimally disciplined, if at all, and excuses made for them. Forced bell curve on performance, requires constant culling of employees. Managers know this and need to plan for it, if you aren't in charge of who gets in the bottom 30% you are 75% more likely to be in there. It becomes a chess game of managers keeping their jobs and "sorting people." Highly successful people aren't good enough. You are labeled within 3 months of your arrival, and if the picture wasn't pretty to them, by whatever algorithm that they are using this week to assess you, it will never be pretty and you will never come out from under any label you get there... It will be on your "baseball card" and follow you to any role for the rest of your career there. Reckless assessment and testing practices, using personality and workplace assessments in ways that they were never intended to be interpreted by people with zero training resulting in hiring and firing decisions as well as opinions of people that are unfounded - rampant confirmation bias. Everyone is compared to the founder and his heir apparent, so if your results are different from them, you are in the red and scores are lower. No perceived value in diversity of thinking, approach, etc. Constant failure and revolving door of Senior Executive team and department heads is depressing... If you can't communicate in their language, good luck uttering a full sentence without being interrupted and negative feedback being recorded for you in their assessment system. No effort to understand one another. Most people just trying to survive by attacking rather than being attacked. Principles are great in theory, but can be manipulated to support whatever theory the better debater needs. And, if something happens that requires Ray to do something he doesn't want to, to stay in line with his own principles and values, he'll just write a new one to justify what he does. The worst part is that Management and the company pretend to be different from every other corporate environment and they fool lots of people who end up being blindsided. Real truth is that they are just as political, scheming, back stabbing and pushing of their own agendas as any other financial institution, but they are full of arrogance and hubris that they are somehow better and more elevated than people at those other companies. Its just all the harder to figure out who you can trust there. You are being watched -- 100% of the time--Through your badges, cameras, computer activity, blackberry, more cameras and all formal conversations are audio-taped. You are encouraged to report on other employees, preferably publicly, but anonymously is OK too and they'll give you lots of ways to do that.

Viewing 463 - 465 of 593 Reviews

Glassdoor has 679 Bridgewater Associates reviews submitted anonymously by Bridgewater Associates employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Bridgewater Associates is right for you.