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Business Insider5 days ago
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This PE boss now asks AI for midnight help instead of waking up his junior employees

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Thoma Bravo founder Orlando Bravo says AI reduces late-night requests to junior employees, allowing them to focus on higher-order work, and he now needs to hire more associates for the first time in his career.

This PE boss now asks AI for midnight help instead of waking up his junior employees

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The Big Picture
Orlando Bravo, founder of software-focused private equity firm Thoma Bravo, told CNBC that AI tools let him handle tasks at midnight without waking junior associates, improving their work-life balance. He said associates now focus on higher-order thinking, relationship-building with CEOs, and investing, rather than rote tasks like building spreadsheets or pitch decks. Bravo rejected the idea that AI would eliminate junior roles, stating his firm needs more associates for the first time in 30 years. Thoma Bravo manages over $180 billion and employs about 220 people. The comments come amid broader Wall Street discussions about AI transforming entry-level roles, with Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon noting potential hiring contraction over the next three years.
Why It Matters
AI is reshaping entry-level finance roles by automating grunt work, allowing juniors to focus on higher-value tasks like client relationships. This shift could reduce burnout and improve career progression, but it also raises the bar for new hires who must quickly develop strategic skills. Thoma Bravo's need to hire more associates signals that AI may augment rather than eliminate junior roles, though the long-term impact on hiring volumes remains uncertain.

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Orlando Bravo
Orlando Bravo
Orlando Bravo said he has to hire more junior employees for the first time in his career.

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  • The founder of private equity firm Thoma Bravo said AI means fewer late-night requests for juniors.
  • Orlando Bravo said that he feels he needs to hire more associates for the first time in his career.
  • Entry-level jobs at his lean firm will change, he said, as associates handle more higher-order work.

AI might mean the end of the frantic 2 a.m. email from the boss.

Orlando Bravo, the billionaire founder of software-focused private equity firm Thoma Bravo, said that AI is changing how much he relies on junior associates to perform the rote tasks that have historically kept them glued to their computers into the early hours.

"I bother them a lot less, because at midnight I can do something really quickly with AI, instead of calling them to do it in the middle of the night, which improves their life anyway, which is what they want," Bravo told CNBC at a conference in Berlin on Tuesday.

Questions about the brutal entry-level hours on Wall Street have persisted for decades, with some employees reporting weeks exceeding 100 hours. AI tools can handle many of the time-consuming tasks that juniors on Wall Street have typically been responsible for, such as building models or pitch decks.

That prospect has fueled fears that AI could reduce demand for junior employees. Still, Wall Street executives have largely framed the technology as a productivity tool rather than a replacement effort.

Bravo said that associates can now focus more on higher-order thinking and investing, and that AI will generally allow young employees to "mature" faster. Employers across industries are offering entry-level employees the chance to work on bigger, more advanced projects, creating both opportunity and a steeper learning curve.

He rejected the notion that the technology will automate associates out of a job, saying that the opposite is true at his firm, which employs around 220 people. He said he feels the need to hire more people for the first time in his three-decade career in private equity.

"If you define the role of an associate as just doing a spreadsheet, you don't need that, but our associates are now calling on companies a lot more, they're developing relationships with CEOs, and we need a lot more of them," he said.

Bravo, whose firm manages more than $180 billion and has built its business around software investing, is among the many high-profile finance leaders weighing in on the future of junior roles.

Leaders at many Wall Street banks also said AI will transform entry-level roles on the sell side, but none have publicly announced large-scale cuts related to the technology, and the number of summer interns on Wall Street has largely held steady or risen.

Some changes might be coming, though — Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said earlier this month that his bank's post-graduation hiring could "contract a little" over the next three years as AI reshapes work.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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This PE boss now asks AI for midnight help instead of waking up his junior employees | TechCulture