Dealogic Reviews

3.0

43% would recommend to a friend

(361 total reviews)
avatar

Jody Drulard

21% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Dealogic has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 361 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Dealogic employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

361 reviews
1.0
8 Mar 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It is a job; in a tough economy, that's a good thing

Cons

Benefits: split 60/40 after three months employment; expect to pay over $100 per paycheck for single Average estimated salary by position: Research Associate: $37,000-$42,000 Relationship Associate: $50,000-$55,000 Sr. Relationship Associate: $55,000-$62,000 Relationship Manager: $72,000-$85,000, more if you’re coming from a bulge bracket firm Bonus: $1,000-$3,000 Environment: Pay is below market and turnover is exceptionally high; management has happily embraced this business model. Older professionals have been laid off from other jobs and just need a place to land, biding their time until something better comes along. The research team is staffed with new college grads who are deceived into thinking that this is a finance job. The company makes a habit of hiring H1B employees to lock them in to positions; that or they just transfer people from the London office to NY. No one goes the other way, so allay all romantic thoughts of working abroad….or of being hired by a client. Mood: Negative. Employees spend their free time conducting phone interviews in private rooms or studying for college entrance examinations looking for their first opportunity to leave. There are lots of empty seats and management has been groomed to distrust its employees because of the low pay and resultant high turnover. Managers conduct weekly meetings with associates to monitor how much they have been working during the week and do not offer any insight. If you need a job, you need a job, however politics is more important here than work ethic so just show up on time, smile and pretend that this is a great place to work. You’ll be comforted in knowing that everyone else thinks the same way.

1.0
26 Jun 2012

insanely inept management.....

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- opportunities to interact with influential investment bankers - opportunities to be involved with Wall Street Journal press releases - decent opportunities to gain an understanding of bank structures

Cons

1) ridiculous management 2) House of Yes meets Flowers in the Attic 3) promotions a la Office Space - flair and vapid intellects rule the lot of them 4) hopscotch is a rigged game Don't wait for a light to appear at the end of the tunnel, stride down there and light the bloody thing yourself - there is light and it is bright. the place will try to sink you, but with fortitude and perseverance better opportunities will present as a result of your time here

2.0
19 Aug 2013

Dealogic

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Now that I've moved on, I feel freer to express my thoughts on the company. Any review worth its salt begins and ends with Tom Fleming. His commitment to innovating how banks operate in the capital markets is as absolute as it is honest. He’s extremely intelligent. His vision and intensity deserve considerable credit for building Dealogic into what it is today.

Cons

Dealogic’s cultural and structural deficits flow directly from Tom's authoritarian micromanaging leadership style and volatility. The irony here is really first-class, in that these flaws make Tom himself the bottleneck constricting innovation. He runs Dealogic like a $10m company rather than the $100m+ company it is. He wastes an inordinate amount of time on small-fry decisions that any self-respecting VP would delegate downstream. His authoritarianism has bred a species of manager who are out-and-out sycophants, with a remarkable aptitude for claiming credit and avoiding responsibility. They’re more concerned with avoiding upsetting him than thinking critically about the business. Everyone’s loath to have that hard conversation with him, which often makes him the last to know. An excessively punitive and political culture results. It's what prevents the articulation and execution of big-picture initiatives, and even basic business planning on existing ones. That's the difference between a $100m company and a billion-dollar one.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 361 Reviews

Glassdoor has 364 Dealogic reviews submitted anonymously by Dealogic employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Dealogic is right for you.