Bloomberg Financial Sales & Analytics Program reviews

3.3

67% would recommend to a friend

(119 total reviews)
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Michael R. Bloomberg and Vlad Kliatchko

76% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

Financial Sales & Analytics Program employees have rated Bloomberg with 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 119 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Financial Sales & Analytics Program professionals have a good working experience there. Bloomberg is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Financial Sales & Analytics Program professionals compared to other employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

119 reviews
1.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Working hours are a standard 8-5, 7-4, or 9-6, depending on what you are scheduled. - Opportunities to meet great clients - Benefits

Cons

- Terrible analytics managers and TLs - The department is known for micro-management - Have seen discrimination across the analytics and sales departments multiple times

3.0
Feb 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Strong products. Smart individual contributors. Great client exposure if you’re willing to push through the noise. Compensation is competitive if you survive long enough.

Cons

The biggest issue is leadership credibility - or lack of it. Too many people in leadership roles appear to have little real understanding of financial markets, client workflows, or the technical depth of the products they are responsible for. Instead of strategic leadership, there is constant micromanagement, usually focused on visibility and proving internal “impact” rather than actually improving the business. There is a strong and very visible perception of favoritism. Promotions and opportunities often feel tied to relationships, internal politics, and optics rather than actual performance, market knowledge, or client impact. Once employees realize this, motivation drops fast. The culture often rewards people who are good at managing upward rather than people who are good at their jobs. If you are technically strong but not politically focused, your growth will likely be slower than it should be. There is also an uncomfortable undercurrent where “fit” sometimes seems to matter more than contribution. In a global company, employees should not feel like accent, personality, or background can influence how seriously they are taken — but many do. Metrics and performance measurement feel inconsistently applied. Rules, targets, and scrutiny often appear to be enforced selectively. Some employees are held to extremely rigid standards, while others are given flexibility, excuses, or protection. When accountability is uneven, performance management stops being credible and starts looking personal. There is a perception that once someone is labeled as “not liked” by the wrong person in management, they are evaluated under a completely different set of rules - more scrutiny, less margin for error, and fewer opportunities to recover from normal mistakes that others are allowed to make. Over time, this creates a culture where people spend more energy managing perception than actually improving performance or client outcomes. Many “leaders” operate more like task supervisors than actual leaders. There is a lot of control, but not a lot of direction, vision, or accountability when things go wrong. At times, the environment feels less like a high-performance financial organization and more like a place where people compete for internal approval rather than external results. If you are early career or very politically skilled, you may do well here. If you are highly performance-driven and expect meritocracy, be prepared for frustration.

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