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Bell Potter Securities

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Poor Company Culture - Portfolio Administrator Bell Potter Securities Employee Review

2.0
15 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- End of trip facilities at 101 Collins street are amazing. - The building and office have breathtaking views of the city. - The company shouts everyone a drink in the office on Friday afternoon at 4PM. - Access to high quality research for investments

Cons

Unfortunately, to many cons to list but ill do my best. In essence, I wouldn't recommend working here. The company has a very old school corporate culture, which it desperately is trying to hold onto, despite resistance from staff members. I would describe it as there is a "Senior" vs "Junior" culture, in which if you're aged between 18-30, you will be treated like you're back in high school. The PAS department earns bucketloads of money for the company/advisers, but it is the punching bag of the company. Expect to be treated poorly at some point, by people in different departments or by financial advisers, who are quick to get angry at the department. Despite the fact that the work is extremely manual and has bucketloads of time consuming procedures. - 10 day WFH policy a year- There is a lot of double standards in the office, especially with regards to this policy. It appears that this policy does not apply to managers/team leaders, who for some easily exceed the 10 days. This policy only applies to staff members who are aged between 18-30. -No Headphone Policy - The Portfolio Administration Department and it's jobs become extremely predictable and easy, especially once you're competent. In fact, the job itself is a very repetitive data entry job and is unbelievably manual. Around the entire office, heaps of people disobey this rule. However, every 3 months management and team leaders kick up a fuss about this rule, and tell their staff to take headphones out, as to enhance 'productivity'. The company would rather punish their staff with an extremely mundane and boring job, by not allowing any other stimuli to keep them engaged. What's next? Making sure I slept for 8 hours to ensure my output at work is optimized for productivity? I honestly believe that less than 5% of companies in Melbourne in 2025 have this policy, it's ludicrous. - Poor management - The head of the department was somewhat of a nightmare to work with. Constantly exhibited inappropriate and unethical behavior. The whole department did not respect him and I am gobsmacked of how he even landed the position in the first place. However, The managers/team leaders below him were genuinely good at their job, despite having some issues. -Wage/progression/ staff brokerage - The wage is pretty shocking and do not expect to get a pay increase, even if you work really hard ( It's 60k Inclusive of super). Competitors on average offer more, usually 70k-80k P.A. for the same role. It also requires a level of accounting/finance acumen, which 60k simply does not cut in today's economy. When you start the job, they will tell you that they want to progress you after 18-24 months into a role you want (either working under a financial adviser or as a research analyst). These job opportunities open up very rarely, and even if it does, you're competing with numerous staff from other departments for the same role. There is zero guarantee you will land these roles, even if you're amazing at your job. Lastly, the staff trading policy is unbelievable. You technically (Although a lot don't) have to transfer all of your stocks into a Bell's Account, when you start. You are not allowed to trade at anywhere else but at Bell Potter, otherwise you get fired. If you like to invest, they force you to pay $40 brokerage on each trade. The price for brokerage makes it unappetizing to invest, which is a culture I would think at a broker would/should exist. Especially when you have aspiring/future equity analysts and financial advisers. Couple this with a below average wage, and pretty much no staff members invest on a regular basis.

Explore other reviews about Bell Potter Securities

5.0
6 Mar 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

great staff good culture amazing team

Cons

no cons. it all was perfect

1.0
29 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Honestly not much that stands out positively. The Collins Street office view is nice if you’re lucky enough to be on the right side of the building, but that’s about it. Some exposure to dealing and financial markets through assisting brokers and advisers.

Cons

Everything negative said in other reviews largely reflects my experience as well. Compensation is poor for the level of workload expected, especially when compared to competitors in the industry who offer significantly better pay for less demanding assistant roles. It genuinely raises the question of why a younger person would stay long term. The culture feels very outdated and stuck in a different era, almost like a company still operating in the 90s in terms of structure, mindset, and approach. There is a strong old boys club / relationship-driven dynamic that can make the environment feel exclusionary rather than merit-based. Career progression for junior staff is unclear and not well structured. Most younger employees tend to leave after a short period, largely due to lack of visible growth opportunities. Workload can be heavy as a dealer’s assistant supporting multiple advisers/stockbrokers, particularly given the relatively low compensation compared to peer firms. Learning and development is mostly informal and inconsistent, making it difficult to build a clear path of progression within the company.

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