Summer Internship - Anonymous employee Equitable Advisors Employee Review

1.0
Mar 23, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fellow Interns were cool but that is pretty much it.

Cons

Too many to list them all. For starts the District VP that i was assigned to was oblivious on what to assign to interns. Most days the interns would just sit there and do nothing or sit on the internet and play games because nothing was assigned to them.

Explore other reviews about Equitable Advisors

5.0
Nov 24, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The education, resources, and support provided provided by leadership at the branch level (regional: OH and IN) and district level (local: Carmel Office) are excellent. If you want the best shot at succeeding in this career you'll be hard-pressed to find a better firm and a better team to do it with.

Cons

The statistics tell a story: As many as 9 in 10 people who become financial advisors are have left the career within their first three years. Its a challenging career path, period. But there are companies with better than average development and retention rates and Equitable is one of them for good reason.

1.0
Jun 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Complete freedom to build your book of business anmd schedule.

Cons

Horrendous place to start. Managers run their own practice and have little to no time to actually help you outside of your joint meetings so you're on your own. They only give you 2 options to get clients, cold calling or their retirement benefits group through schools. Basically the whole advising piece is to just to sell life insurance and annuities. The support staff is thin so you're kind of on your own with paperwork and compliance docs. They just genuinely offer you nothing. No help with covering costs (you pay for all your licensing and marketing materials), they even charge you for using the company laptop and fees for programs you will never use. They will mislead you about the commission payouts and you only really get something if you get them to buy an annuity or life insurance. If you also have a remaining balance of any fees when you leave, they will literally sending you threatening letters demanding the money and threaten you with claims court if you don't pay it back.

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