a place to learn - Senior Associate Third Bridge Employee Review

4.0
May 12, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

people: young, smart, fun, interesting people, some have been real close friendships progress: the company is not perfect but since I joined, it has made continuous changes, improvements, essentially it keeps moving and it's a good sign, people might not appreciate this enough unless they have had experience before with stagnant companies, progress also proved by the "ideal case study" like revenue curve that the CEO and all (including me) are proud of opportunity: again, might not get enough appreciation, but this is a place where you gain lots of responsibility, maybe not from day 1, even though lots of experienced hire at the management level recently, still continue internal hiring/promotion to management level, also the fact that both industry and company are growing fast, corporate drama is quite minimum as people are busy chasing numbers

Cons

some poor managers: your experience at the company will depend so much on who your manager is, if you are unlucky, the journey can be a bumpy one, even worse soul crushing and burning out your spirit but remember, if you manage to survive this period and move around internally, the experience can be so rewarding especially in terms of learning about management, relationships and other EQ related skills that you need in life

Explore other reviews about Third Bridge

5.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Engaging, becoming your own industry expert, self paced.

Cons

Strict numbers and repetitive work.

2.0
Apr 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good entry-level opportunity with exposure to fast-paced, client-facing work. The company hires driven, sociable individuals and can be a strong starting point for building communication, prioritization, and execution skills in a high-performance environment.

Cons

High turnover and inconsistent management quality significantly impact the employee experience. Success is heavily dependent on your team lead and manager, with limited recourse if you’re placed under ineffective leadership. In my experience, poor communication, lack of emotional intelligence, and unclear expectations from management made it difficult to succeed and negatively affected day-to-day productivity. Internal processes around performance management and PTO lacked transparency. I was placed on a PIP and terminated shortly after (within a week) in a way that felt abrupt and not aligned with prior communication, which was initially framed as a discussion around pending PTO. There were also delays in PTO approvals, and I experienced issues with compensation adjustments following a promotion that required follow-up to resolve.

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