Simply a Stepping Stone - Anonymous employee PitchBook Employee Review

3.0
22 Feb 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- The product sells itself. Clients are cash-rich and have the means to continue pushing the tool onto their own employees to generate business. Retaining customers is easy unless you totally screw your job up. - The office is gorgeous and the company spends a ton of money on meaningless crap like slides in the office, beer taps, and golf simulators that nobody cares to have. If you're a bro who went to Middlebury, Hamilton, Villanova or are just from Southern California, welcome home. - You get exposed to a sophisticated clientele that broadens your horizons in the finance space.

Cons

- The bro-focused culture is nauseating. If you're a person of color, LGBTQ+ person, or other minority, you'll feel completely like a fish out of water. Everyone drinks excessively, does hard drugs in the office, and parties with clients. But hey, free lunch!?!?! - Favoritism was born at PitchBook. If you're not dating your boss, you have to spend your nights and weekends with your colleagues to get ahead. If you prefer to do your job well and then go home, you're frowned upon and will have opportunities withheld from you. - WORK FROM HOME. The company refuses to allow any employee more than 2 days/week on a regular cadence from home. Most get 1 day or nothing if you're entry-level. This was after an enormous push from employees and a mass exodus of senior talent. This will continue, as the office is now open with ZERO precautions in place to prevent COVID transmission and a flimsy vaccine "mandate" that people are lying about to avoid mask mandates. The fraternity is surely back together! They do not care what employees think, a senior leader told people to literally leave the company if they don't like it in a firmwide meeting. A lower-level department lead had to course-correct in the days following that incident. - DE&I is an absolute joke. The company hired consultants to "guide" them on diversifying the employee base, but no meaningful changes have occurred. They're all talk on this just to look good amidst changing social pressures. - Referrals are the only way to get in here. If you didn't go to college with someone or date their best friend, you won't get hired.

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PitchBook Response
4y
I’m disappointed to hear this feedback. You raise some serious allegations about your coworkers that require investigation and intervention. I encourage you to reach out to me personally, another member of the executive leadership team or call our ethics hotline so that we can have a direct conversation and resolve any allegations that violate our policies. With respect to your other feedback, the programs and polices you mention have been misrepresented here. We work hard to support our employees with policies, programs and workplace culture that are informed by employee feedback. What you have described is certainly not the culture or experience we foster at PitchBook. Again, I encourage you to reach out to me or any member of the executive team to discuss your feedback.

Explore other reviews about PitchBook

5.0
4 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

chill team, not too much work, really nice people

Cons

cliquey and announced a 5 day in person rule after hiring 50% of its company on a hybrid promise

1
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PitchBook Response
2w
Thank you for sharing your experience. We’re glad you had a positive experience with your team and colleagues. We recognize that changes to workplace expectations can be challenging, and we continue to focus on communicating clearly as decisions evolve.
2.0
13 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Solid product, talented peers, and meaningful exposure to the private markets. You can build useful skills in account management and other customer-facing roles. Many individual contributors are smart, capable, and supportive of one another.

Cons

The biggest risk here is not the product or the day-to-day work - it is leadership. In some offices and teams, senior leaders create an environment where trust is low, expectations are inconsistent, and favoritism or perception can matter more than performance. Instead of clear direction and constructive support, employees are often left dealing with shifting standards, mixed messages, and a culture where appearances matter too much. Basic respect is not always there, and some leaders rely on intimidation rather than good management. Speaking up, asking questions, or challenging something professionally does not always help and can sometimes work against you. This is especially hard on strong performers. Taking on more usually leads to more pressure, not more support or recognition. Once leadership forms a negative view of someone, it can be difficult to change, even when that person is delivering results. Over time, the environment can feel political, discouraging, and draining. The result is predictable: burnout, disengagement, and avoidable turnover. A number of talented people have left not because they were incapable, but because the leadership culture made the job unsustainable.

9
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PitchBook Response
2mo
Thank you for the candid feedback. We’re glad you value the product and your peers. We take concerns about leadership consistency and trust very seriously. Creating clear expectations, fair management, and respectful leadership is an ongoing focus for us. I encourage you to reach out to your executive team leader or HR leadership so we can discuss your concerns directly.
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