Which tech PE shop would you join?

Hi everyone,

Have seen a fair amount of recent activity on this forum on software/tech investing and likewise shops such as Thoma, Vista, Silver Lake, H&F etc.

Among those four, which shop would be the best to join as an associate (or even an analyst)? Not even purely considering PE track record and returns, but from a career standpoint as of right now. All are obviously great, but in terms of learning experience, exits, MBA, trajectory, comp, and all that, I'm seeing a lot of tradeoff between these firms.

For example, H&F may be viewed as the most "WSO prestigious", top-notch exits to other PE/HF, but has hellish junior culture and very little promotion visibility. Silver Lake also has insane culture but operates under a wider mandate than the other 3, giving analysts/associates exposure to more aside from just B2B SaaS (which certainly helps their exits). And then you've got Vista/TB which may be viewed as less prestigious than say H&F, with decent PE/HF exits, but have much clearer promotion visibility beyond ASO and no MBA requirement.

Just curious to hear people's thoughts on this forum, but obviously the reality is you take whichever one of these offers you can even get, since you must be the next Stephen Schwarzman if you get all 4.

 
Most Helpful

I’d say that all 4 of these names are pretty much on equal footing when it comes to Tech PE. Work in TMT banking right now and can tell you (from my limited experience) that all 4 of the names you mentioned are pretty much the exact 4 names that we see consistently on the buyer list for pretty much every software mandate. Any of these 4 are some of the absolute best spots in private equity, don’t think there’s a banking analyst out there in any group that’d turn down an offer from any of these guys. Outside of these 4, the drop off is pretty steep (except for maybe FP, which is also rapidly joining this “tier” of tech PE shops). Just my 2 cents.

 

All great seats, agreed, but I think OP was also comparing within those 4 in that upper echelon of PE. Also, you said these are some of the best seats in private equity, not didnt specify just tech PE? Would people take these shops over a BX APO KKR?

And back to the 4, as OP was asking about the differences, wouldn’t H&F have better HF exits, vs Vista/Thoma is likely a far better long term PE seat? How does an analyst/associate do the calculus in their head when the time comes?

 

If you’re sure you want to do Tech, think you can defensibly make the argument that these 4 seats are better than BX APO KKR. If not, probably not.

 

I work at one of these four (username is inaccurate -- I am current an aso2). The reality is that, even if you are interested in all of these firms, it's not very common to have an offer from more than one of these firms at a given time. Personally, I was just grateful to have my offer. I figured whatever minute differences between these firms exist I'll figure out when I get there. 

To OP's question on what are the minute differences: Vista and TB are pretty similar in their focus on VMS. SL more of a focus on investing across the capital structure and media. H&F: focus on buying "above the bar" assets. The highest quality, widest moat, often growth-y assets.

Also, just wanted to add re: HF exist & Vista/TB. There is less representation of these firms in the HF world because over the past decade staying at Vista/TB has been so lucrative. In addition, historically, more of the exits have been oriented to other areas of private technology investing. I can tell you with 100% certainty based on personal experience that Vista/TB associates can get HF looks at both multi-managers and "top" single-managers (including V/LP/TGM).

 

You sure that the lesser representation of Vista/TB is simply from self selection on those paths being “more lucrative”?

What about how “playbook oriented” they are - would you say that slightly limits the associate experience and hence exits? ie you think despite all that, associates at those shops can get looks at any kind of HF (Tiger Cubs, Pershing, Citadel)?

 

If you are including H&F, I would include TA. According to ACG, TA did 46 tech platform deals and 358 add-ons over the past 6 years.

 

Some are better than others. For Tech, I’d say it goes:

Tier 1A: H&F, SLP, Vista, TB
Tier 1B: FP
Tier 2A: Permira, Apax, TA, Genstar
Tier 3A: TPG Tech, Carlyle Tech

Tier 3B: KKR Tech, BX

Then everyone else. I think TPG and Carlyle are the only 2 "non-tech focused" MFs that really compare to the heavy hitters in tier 2, nobody else touches the folks in tier 1A and FP.

 

From my experience / what I've seen from peers:

Thoma Bravo is a firm you want to go to if you'd like to stay in Tech PE. Associates at the firm are very heads down from what I saw during banking, don't get real exposure for a few years. Vista is similar to Thoma in the ways that I described, seen more exits. 

I think the god-tier "tech" PE firm for exits is Silver Lake

Other good firms for exits WP, HF, and FP. 

I would say if you're optimizing for SM HF exit go to Silver Lake, WP, H&F, or Francisco.

If you want to go to a pod, you can do any of these firms.

If you are optimizing for Khosla / Sequoia I'd go to a crossover fund like Coatue/Tiger, or a VC that regularly participates in top funding rounds alongside the firms you'd like to work for. Issue with that is getting a seat as an associate. 

I rambled but that's how I've thought about it when i mapped out everything. 

S

 

I wouldn't say it's a disadvantage 

If you look at Thoma Bravo, theres a few reasons someone might leave (1) they get to a point where they arent promoted so they go to another tech PE firm, (2) they want change of career/MBA so CorpFin Stanford GSB CorpDev, (3) get better opp to lead at another firm etc 

I haven't seen SM exits (maybe 1 or 2) but not at the scale of a TPG, Silver Lake, Warburg 

I don't think making decisions based on prior exits should heavily weigh your decision, if you land a role at Thoma/Vista/STG/Permira/Carlyle Tech should not be in any way disadvantaged -- if you really really want to go to SM (like really really want the most linear path) look at firms like Silver Lake/TPG as it would be way easier to network/reach out to people at SMs

 

Really think you shoukd take a look on growth funds if you're really interested in tech. You'll probably see more disruptive companies/businesses than in a traditional PE firm. CAVEAT- if you want to do HF you'll probably be better at a traditional MF.

 

Does anyone know how many seats there usually are at places in TB, SLP, Vista, H&F, FP, Genstar, GI, etc.? How many are still available for 2025?

Also, how selective these firms tend to be in terms of background/prestige for someone at a well-known MM IB firm (think Blair/Baird/HL) in TMT?

 

SLP & Vista will have much fewer seats in general bc of their analyst program. The remaining are all top notch shops and to be quite frank, don’t think I’ve encountered maybe more than 1 person with a MM IB background who made the jump to those shops

 

Aut iure iure neque necessitatibus. Magnam ullam in deleniti non minus. Facilis quos aspernatur veritatis rerum aut officia. Rem quod libero vel et. Facilis exercitationem rerum incidunt fuga non.

Laboriosam officia adipisci soluta reprehenderit et ut nostrum. Sequi occaecati atque quo cumque voluptatem. Eos est cum aut quod minus aperiam sunt cum. Doloribus sapiente neque eaque vel autem tempora et. Exercitationem eos earum est aut earum rerum. Hic deserunt minima quae aliquam.

 

Ab molestiae quibusdam hic sit sit. Dignissimos ut harum porro corporis. Illo non sunt harum unde. Aut veritatis quia et voluptatem non alias voluptas. Delectus et ut rerum.

Suscipit hic tenetur velit adipisci eligendi omnis. Quia asperiores sed fuga aperiam provident. Maiores repudiandae neque repudiandae. Perferendis sint molestiae recusandae consequatur quae.

Quam et rem quisquam dolores voluptas aperiam. Similique pariatur incidunt asperiores dicta laboriosam. Praesentium nihil nostrum quo assumenda accusamus aperiam omnis.

 

Sed exercitationem qui architecto eos. Qui ut quibusdam quibusdam qui culpa facere. Aut optio et libero mollitia ad ducimus unde doloribus.

Est possimus ratione modi sed modi molestiae. Qui quod numquam quidem voluptatem asperiores officiis facilis pariatur. Rerum excepturi dicta necessitatibus enim eos. Deleniti qui esse quaerat vel quasi. Accusamus consequatur quasi ducimus ut maiores et. Harum nisi vero ut omnis ad recusandae sed.

Career Advancement Opportunities

June 2024 Private Equity

  • The Riverside Company 99.5%
  • Blackstone Group 99.0%
  • Warburg Pincus 98.4%
  • KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) 97.9%
  • Bain Capital 97.4%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

June 2024 Private Equity

  • The Riverside Company 99.5%
  • Blackstone Group 98.9%
  • KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts) 98.4%
  • Ardian 97.9%
  • Bain Capital 97.4%

Professional Growth Opportunities

June 2024 Private Equity

  • The Riverside Company 99.5%
  • Bain Capital 99.0%
  • Blackstone Group 98.4%
  • Warburg Pincus 97.9%
  • Starwood Capital Group 97.4%

Total Avg Compensation

June 2024 Private Equity

  • Principal (9) $653
  • Director/MD (22) $569
  • Vice President (92) $362
  • 3rd+ Year Associate (91) $281
  • 2nd Year Associate (206) $268
  • 1st Year Associate (389) $229
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (29) $154
  • 2nd Year Analyst (83) $134
  • 1st Year Analyst (246) $122
  • Intern/Summer Associate (32) $82
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (316) $59
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”