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Kestra Financial

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Advisor-Centric, Employee-Neglected: Challenging Environment - Data Engineer Kestra Financial Employee Review

2.0
Apr 16, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Intensive Learning Environment: Working at Kestra provides opportunities to learn and develop professionally, primarily due to a consistently challenging, high-pressure environment. Great Coworkers: Many colleagues across various departments are genuinely good people. Hardworking, collaborative, and supportive. Nice Office Location: The offices are modern, comfortable, and conveniently located, particularly for employees residing in South Austin.

Cons

Distinct Advisor vs. Employee Cultures: While Kestra Financial takes pride in its advisor-focused culture, employees often feel undervalued and overlooked. This imbalance creates dissatisfaction among office staff, as most company attention and resources are directed toward advisor-facing trips and parties. Average-to-Low Industry Pay: Compensation at Kestra tends to fall behind industry comps. Raises and promotions are infrequent and modest, and the advertised bonus structure is often misleading. For example, the stated potential of a "15% annual bonus" is rarely achieved unless market conditions are exceptionally favorable for the entire year. Persistent Understaffing & Tech Debt: Kestra operates under a philosophy of minimal staffing, deliberately maintaining just enough resources to meet basic operational needs. This strategy leads to significant backlogs and substantial tech debt. Critical projects and improvements consistently take a backseat, creating inefficiencies and ongoing frustration among employees struggling to manage the current inefficient systems and processes. Short-Term Venture Capital Mindset: Due to the company's short investment cycles (approximately five years per venture capital group), long-term strategic initiatives and foundational problems rarely receive adequate attention or resources. Instead, temporary solutions and superficial fixes prevail which perpetuate long-term instability and inefficiency. Unrecognized and Uncompensated Overtime: Employees are frequently expected to put in extra hours—often unpaid—to manage overwhelming workloads and mounting tech debt. Unfortunately, this additional effort goes largely unnoticed, unrewarded, and unrecognized, contributing to low morale and burnout. Heavy Employee Surveillance: As of early 2025, Kestra utilizes ActiveTrak to closely monitor nearly all aspects of employee computer usage. This invasive approach negatively impacts employee trust and autonomy, creating an environment of suspicion rather than empowerment. Engineering Talent Drain: Due to these challenging conditions, Kestra has experienced a notable loss of engineering talent ("brain drain"). Among industry professionals, word has spread about the demanding workload, limited recognition, and inadequate compensation. This negative reputation significantly hampers Kestra's ability to attract and retain skilled engineers, perpetuating a cycle of understaffing and persistent technical challenges.

Explore other reviews about Kestra Financial

5.0
Jul 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is a solid place to work if you want to get into tech or wealth management in Austin. They are hiring a lot right now to build out the tech platform that the financial advisors use. You get to see how the wealth management industry works from the inside and work on technology that directly impacts advisors, which gives you good experience. Everyone I work with is professional and handles their business.

Cons

It is financial services, so there is standard corporate red tape and compliance rules you have to deal with.

1.0
Apr 9, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I did not find any meaningful advantages working at this company. It feels quite average - nothing that stands out positively compared to others in the industry - while the downsides are significant and consistent.

Cons

The corporate culture here strongly rewards blind loyalty over actual results and performance. If you value your time, self-respect, and real opportunities for professional growth, this may not be the right place for you. Many of the positive reviews appear to have been submitted under pressure from management. They tend to be vague and generic ("great team," "keep up the good work"). In contrast, the negative reviews consistently describe the same serious issues, with details that are too specific and repetitive to be fabricated. Key concerns include: 1. Lack of proper onboarding and training. 2. Outdated technologies and processes (with only a few minor exceptions). 3. Middle management that blindly follows directives from above without understanding or being able to explain the "why" to their teams. 4. Extremely rigid office policy: 4 days in the office per week with very limited remote flexibility. Working from home is generally not allowed even if you're sick or need to visit family in another city for a couple of weeks. 5. On top of that, the company uses ActivTrak software to monitor employee activity. This, combined with the strict in-office requirements, creates a toxic micromanagement environment - your manager (and the software) decide whether you're being "productive," regardless of your actual output or results. Overall, the combination of these factors creates a frustrating environment for anyone who wants autonomy and trust in how they deliver their work.

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