Thurn Partners Reviews

3.0

37% would recommend to a friend

(26 total reviews)

45% positive business outlook

Thurn Partners has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 26 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Thurn Partners employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Human resources and staffing industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

26 reviews
1.0
21 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The graduate cohort were friendly, collaborative and made the experience much more valuable.

Cons

I would like to expand on, and clarify, some points made in recent reviews by former Thurn Partners employees, as well as introduce some of my own. Firstly, it is vital to acknowledge that Thurn Partners is NOT an executive search firm, as was stated in the interview process and in responses by the company here. Executive search focuses on headhunting high-level executives for senior and leadership roles – Thurn Partners is largely a contingent recruitment firm where consultants are given junior and even entry-level mandates to fill, for which the business is not retained by their clients. This is an important distinction to make when considering business expectations, and speaks to the high-pressure nature of Thurn Partners. Many of my points have been noted extensively in previous reviews: lack of adequate training; long hours with no flexibility or payoff; high turnover (a ‘hire to fire’ mentality which should be left in the past – no successful business should be doubling headcount with grads who have zero recruitment experience). Thurn Partners has attempted to address these points in their responses, so I will not discuss these further, though I feel they deserve to be mentioned. Now, regarding associate expectations: all new hires are acutely aware of the metrics required of them (largely due to the KPI ‘leaderboard’ used as a motivation tactic, though in reality this encourages unnecessary competition between consultants – yet another blow to Thurn’s company culture, or lack thereof). Where Thurn Partners falls short is setting realistic expectations and fostering an environment in which these can be achieved. It has been said many times that adequate training is not given, regular feedback is lacking, and expectations are unrealistic and rigid from a very early stage. I don’t agree that Thurn’s current L&D is a ‘real strength’, as has been stated, given the hour-by-hour micromanagement and aggressive methods which make consultants uncomfortable making mistakes. Remuneration. While starting salary is below the London living wage, this does increase to just above this figure upon passing probation. The primary issue, however, is with the commission scheme. Given the nature of the roles, it can take up to two years to receive commission for a placement. Despite comments from Thurn Partners arguing otherwise, this is NOT usual for executive search, where researchers are remunerated regularly for their efforts. Thurn Partners’ most worrying concern is the office environment and company culture. Female associates were privy to uncomfortable comments and conversations from consultant to director level, both directly and indirectly, with little consequence. I would particularly like to address comments made in responses by Thurn Partners that matters such as these were taken seriously and led to the removal of an employee. Without going into specifics, comments were raised about this person months before they were let go on the basis of performance, while their actions were left largely without punishment, so to speak. I understand I may be recollecting a different incident, but regardless, it is extremely disappointing that this situation was not considered as serious as it should have been, particularly given the all-female People Team. Finally, the responses to recent reviews are very telling, and speak to the company culture at Thurn Partners. Comments such as ‘if [the turnover numbers] were as high as you suggest, the office would be empty by now’ are not only untrue – headcount can easily be tracked on LinkedIn – but come across as immature and show a lack of accountability that is apparent throughout the organisation. This is ironic given accountability is listed as a core value on the website. Overall, I appreciate it is not impossible to succeed at Thurn Partners, but I believe this is through a combination of luck and favouritism from management, and very little to do with skill or hard work.

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Thurn Partners Response
10mo
Thank you for your comments and clarifications on others’ comments. You mention Thurn Partners is not an executive search business. We operate both a retained and contingent model and handle some of the most senior, strategic hires in our market. Naturally, new Associates start on more junior roles with faster deal cycles so they can build experience before moving onto longer-lead, higher-fee mandates – the work you referenced when talking about our ‘timely commission scheme’. On performance: yes, we measure both qualitative and quantitative metrics, and yes, metrics are on a TV on the wall for all in the business to see. This is a results-driven business where delivery requires constant assessment. Management and L&D give a structure for success, and while we want all employees to continually evolve our processes, Associates first need to master our core processes before being given entire autonomy for structuring their desk. We will do more to ensure people are aware of the day-to-day set-up moving forward. On compensation: the starting salary is £26,000, rising to £30,000 on probation pass, with further increases tied to each promotion. For Associates, commission is partly advanced in the same month the deal is done, so you don’t have to wait until the client has settled their invoice as more senior consultants do. New starters join as Associate Consultants, not researcher, and accumulate commission from day one. Deal cycles in our space are typically 3–24 months – this is explained during interview. If that wasn’t clear enough, that’s on us to make even clearer going forward to new starters. Regarding the point on environment and behaviour – we’ve addressed this in other responses but to be clear: it was taken seriously, it was investigated fully, and the individual involved was removed from the business. Employees not directly involved naturally aren’t privy to confidential HR processes that are taking place at the time. As you’ll recall, everyone was updated once the matter was resolved. Thurn Partners is a meritocracy. Success here is down to the individual. We provide the platform, support, and opportunity – it’s always a shame when it doesn’t work out for any individual, but we’re glad in some cases we’re still the place an individual can start their career in London and pick up skills they’ll take wherever they go next.
1.0
28 July 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Free snacks, free coffee and lunch break (when they’re not telling you what you should and shouldn’t be doing on it)

Cons

Every single part of this business has cracks from the 0% diversity, to the aggressive micromanagement, to the fake culture and beyond. Everyone hates eachother and a bandaid (team social) is always put over it to conceal the wounds. On average around 10 leavers every year due to how awful it is. All positive feedback on here is from internal colleagues that are forced to leave a review by the people team! Avoid.

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Thurn Partners Response
10mo
There seems to be quite a disparity between your characterisation of our culture, practices, and turnover numbers - if these were as high as you suggest, the office would be empty by now. Like any sales-driven business, we’ve had people leave due to performance. Executive search is not for everyone: it’s demanding and requires consistency, but it’s also rewarding. Our current team is proof of that. Thurn Partners is an inclusive place to work. A good example is our Women at Thurn network - we don’t believe in quotas, but we do believe in providing real opportunities, mentorship and support that make a difference. Colleagues are encouraged to share their views honestly, whether positive or negative, through Glassdoor and also via our anonymous engagement surveys. Regarding lunch breaks, we offer an extended lunch break so people can exercise or go to the gym. This extended lunch break is a privilege for performing team members to be used reasonably and the only times we’ve stepped in have been when the flexibility was being taken advantage of. If you’d like to discuss your experience further, please do reach out confidentially to anna.bethell@thurnpartners.com.
1.0
28 July 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Regular, enjoyable socials and charity events. - Generous annual leave and office closure periods (though, as you'll see below, this isn't respected). - Solid place to build confidence in people-facing situations.

Cons

- The turnover speaks for itself. The company doubled in size from 21 employees to 42 by hiring 21 graduates at once in Sep 2024. Within less than a year, only 6 of those 21 grads remain. Many were let go, pushed out, or just resigned. Even senior members steadily resigned for better working environments. - The commission model is heavily delayed and disheartening, especially for graduates who relocate/commute to London with expectations of earning more. You will only receive your full commission once the candidate you've placed starts their role. Due to long notice and non-compete periods in the hedge fund space (6–18 months is typical), you may not see any meaningful commission for over a year. To be clear, this is a model unique to Thurn. Most other hedge fund recruitment agencies with similar clients offer much more immediate and rewarding schemes. - Expect to work 50–60 hours a week, including evenings, weekends, and holidays. If you don’t, you’re seen as not trying hard enough. - Uncomfortable atmosphere with a clear lack of boundaries, including invasive personal questions inappropriate for the workplace. Your value is judged through a single lens, which is how aggressively money-motivated you seem. - Training was minimal and misrepresentative of the actual job. You're expected to self-teach in your own time, then immediately meet ambitious performance targets. - So much time lost in performative meetings filled with vague motivational slogans and constantly reframed company goals, with very little actually changing. A classic case of 'this could've been an email'. - You must log your activities down to the half-hour every single day and run through them with managers constantly. This ridiculous tracking of your time shows a deep lack of trust in their employees, which just feeds a vicious cycle of distrust. I hate to use this word, but this is classic 'micromanagement'. - The directors often appear unaware of what their consultants are working on. For such a small company, this level of detachment is questionable. - Incidents of misogyny and ableism were not addressed or acted on despite being reported, which makes initiatives like “Women at Thurn” feel performative.

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Thurn Partners Response
10mo
Thank you for sharing your perspective. While we don’t agree with several of the points raised, we do value feedback and are always looking at ways to improve. At Thurn Partners, we take any concerns about discriminatory or inappropriate behaviour extremely seriously. We have clear policies in place, a zero-tolerance approach, and have acted decisively in the past - including removing one individual from the business. Executive search is a demanding career, and fewer than 40% of graduates across the wider industry complete their first year. We aim to support every graduate, but the reality is that the role is not for everyone. The playing field is level, and success comes down to resilience, consistency, and application. On commission: our model is very much in line with the rest of the industry. Consultants are paid as soon as the business is paid, i.e. when a candidate starts and the client has settled their invoice. This is the norm in executive search – it would be unusual for consultants to be paid commissions months before revenue is actually received. We are upfront about the commitment required from the outset, both in our job specifications and during interviews. This is a high-performance career and inevitably involves some evenings or ad-hoc weekend work – this is why people are paid commission. That’s not for everyone, but for those who embrace it, the rewards are significant. It’s also important to note that beyond the first year, our retention is strong. Many of our earliest hires remain with us and have built long-term, successful careers here. Our Learning & Development programme is designed to set people up for long-term success - building strong foundations in planning, time management, and client/candidate engagement. Naturally, no graduate role offers complete autonomy in how to spend your day from day one - structure and guidance are essential to development, and the results our current graduates are achieving show this approach works. If you’d like to discuss your experience further, please reach out to anna.bethell@thurnpartners.com for a confidential conversation.
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Glassdoor has 26 Thurn Partners reviews submitted anonymously by Thurn Partners employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Thurn Partners is right for you.