Great Benefits Outweighed by Culture of Fear, Inflexibity - Editorial Manager Bloomberg Employee Review

2.0
Apr 7, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are outstanding, from medical to 401(k) match to vacation and some very nice colleagues, but the bloom falls off the rose after a few months at a firm whose original editorial chief built a culture of fear, an intense 10+ hour workday and a style that condones uniformity. Editorial folks' comp is good vs. what else is out there, and why many never want to leave.

Cons

But there's a rule for everything at Bloomberg that's paralyzing and has highly competent, intelligent professionals constantly feeling the need to seek affirmation of a half dozen leaders/authorities before acting. In my role, for instance, I've got 4-5 people to manage but 5-6 bosses. It's a much different vibe than anywhere I've been. Also say "adios" to your personal time. If you commute, expect a 12-14 hour day. Bloomberg has finally evolved with the times a bit by allowing people to telecommute here and there, but each day is drudgery. Instead of fixing a simply typo of a company name, for instance, the offender deals with a belabored, almost embarrassing process of having to re-run a story with the correction, deleting the old one off the system, then writing a letter to several managers to detail exactly what went wrong; so God forbid you spell it Proctor & Gamble instead of Procter & Gamble -- total rabbit hole that eats up tons of time and distracts. This is where Bloomberg takes its mantra of being candid to unproductive extremes and creates a sense of arrogance among the higher-ups that what Bloomberg does is above the level of its rivals. It's utter nonsense, as is the sense that employees can be rated based on cockeyed data points focused on production levels rather than quality of the work.

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5.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company, in this role you have the chance to learn about the financial markets, the terminal, and also you get client exposure.

Cons

Not really cons, culture is great.

5.0
May 31, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Only a five-hour-per-week time commitment, which is very manageable with my class schedule. Bloomberg provides ideas for challenges and activities to host at my school, so I would not have to come up with everything from scratch. There is flexibility to choose when I table and to tailor the role around my schedule.

Cons

The budget for the program is tight, which is frustrating because advertising to law students is exactly how Bloomberg Law builds a dedicated user base. In my opinion, whoever makes the budget is not seeing the bigger vision. A lot of attorneys may not like Bloomberg Law, use it regularly, or ask their firms to purchase a subscription simply because they were never meaningfully exposed to it in law school. This is exactly why Lexis has taken over in such a big way: its presence and budget are felt at law schools across the country. If Bloomberg wants future attorneys to become loyal users, it needs to invest more seriously in reaching students while they are still learning which legal research platforms they prefer.

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