Associate (Korea team in Shanghai, China) - Anonymous employee Third Bridge Employee Review

1.0
Jan 29, 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I only recommend this job (Korea team researcher) for only who are living in Shanghai and have a career gap and need working experience just for 3-6 months. Easy work. You just need cold calling skills and fast response to emails and calls even on weekends and at night.

Cons

- This job is not related to finance or consulting or market research. “Researching” role does not require much knowledge or skills and can be easily replaced by anyone. - I was not confident with my job when my friends and family asked what I do for a living. ( and hard to explain too!) Hated moral conflict inside me as if I am doing illegal job (industrial spy) or deceiving specialists with compliance rules. - If you are a Korean and looking for a job in Shanghai, you really need to think twice. This job in Shanghai does not provide employment and social insurance( 4DaeBoHum). As foreigners, it is very difficult to be protected by Chinese labor law when we face unfair treatment at work.

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5.0
Apr 25, 2026
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CEO approval
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Pros

Growth, ownership, collaboration, management engagment, client facing opportunities.

Cons

Pace of work and expectations to succeed making a high pressure environment.

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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