What Finance Professionals Should Understand Before Transitioning to Private Equity

Jordan Blake
9 Min Read

A lot of people in finance see private equity (PE) as the natural next step — better deals, more autonomy, stronger long-term pay. The numbers support the appeal: according to Bain & Company’s 2025 Global Private Equity Report, the buyout category has averaged 11% annual growth over two decades, with dealmaking rebounding in 2024 after two years of decline.

But a private equity career transition is a shift into genuinely different work, with different skills, a different timeline, and a different way of measuring performance. People who understand that before they start tend to do better both in the recruiting process and once they arrive.

We explain the main aspects PE career seekers want to know in this article.

How Private Equity Roles Differ From Investment Banking

The investment banking to private equity move is one of the most common transitions in finance — but it comes with a genuine change in what your days actually look like. Here’s a side-by-side that captures the key differences:

Area Investment Banking Private Equity
Primary focus Executing client transactions Sourcing, evaluating, and managing investments
Investment horizon Months (deal timeline) 3–7 years (hold period)
Post-deal role Team moves on after close Ongoing portfolio engagement
Team size Larger, more hierarchical Lean; broad junior responsibility
Coverage model Sector-specific desks Generalist (mid-market) or specialist (large-cap)

In banking, your job is to get a deal done for a client. In PE, you’re the one deploying capital — so much more time goes into deciding whether a deal is worth doing at all. Post-close, PE professionals remain actively involved with portfolio companies, working alongside management to drive value creation rather than moving on to the next mandate. And because teams are lean, junior professionals carry real responsibility early — with less hand-holding than in a larger banking environment.

Private Equity Roles and Responsibilities: What Skills PE Firms Actually Look For

Most banking alumni can build a clean LBO model, so that’s not what sets people apart. What PE firms are really trying to gauge is whether you can think independently and form a genuine view on a business. Here’s what actually matters:

  • LBO modeling proficiency. A baseline, not a differentiator. Speed and accuracy are expected; what separates candidates is the quality of their recommendation.
  • Judgment on business quality. Can you assess competitive position, market dynamics, and management quality, and then defend a view? That’s the core skill firms test for.
  • Due diligence experience. Hands-on legal, financial, and operational review. You need to be comfortable surfacing problems, not just confirming the thesis.
  • Investment memo writing. Framing an investment clearly and persuasively for a committee is a core deliverable — and firms test it, often without saying so.
  • Process ownership. Small teams expect junior professionals to drive processes independently. Waiting for direction at each step is noticed.

How Compensation Is Structured Across Career Levels

One thing that surprises many people is that the pay bump from banking to PE isn’t always as dramatic as expected — at least not right away. If you want to understand what you’re really getting into on the financial side, looking at private equity analyst compensation benchmarks by fund size and strategy is a good place to start. At smaller funds, especially, total comp can actually come in below what you’d earn staying in banking.

Level Compensation Components Notes
Analyst Base salary + annual bonus Similar structure to IB; varies by fund size
Associate Base salary + annual bonus Modest premium over banking; carry not yet typical
Principal / VP Base + bonus + early carry access Carry eligibility begins; co-invest rights emerge
Partner / MD Base + bonus + carried interest + co-invest Carry is the primary long-term wealth driver

The real upside in PE is carried interest (or “carry”) — a share of the fund’s profits paid once a return threshold is met. But “carry” doesn’t arrive early. It takes sustained performance across multiple investment cycles.

Fund size matters a lot here: a $500M mid-market fund and a $10B buyout firm offer fundamentally different compensation ceilings, deal exposure, and career trajectories — and where you sit on the PE analyst vs. associate career path shapes which of those trajectories is even available to you. Co-investment rights are increasingly common at mid and senior levels, but those too take time to access.

How to Break Into Private Equity: The Recruiting Process

Most on-cycle PE recruiting moves fast — headhunters often reach out within the first year of an analyst program, and the process can close in weeks. Here’s what firms are actually testing:

  • LBO modeling and case studies. Standard at every firm. Accuracy matters, but so does the quality of your recommendation under time pressure.
  • Deal experience deep-dives. Expect detailed questions on every transaction, including the ones that ran into problems. Honesty about what went wrong earns points.
  • Investment judgment. Firms want to see how you’d think about a business, not just model it. A clear, logical framework for assessing quality matters.
  • Cultural and philosophical fit. Small teams with long deal cycles require real alignment. Investment philosophy and working style are evaluated, often informally.
  • Off-cycle paths. Smaller funds and growth equity firms hire on a rolling basis, which creates an alternative entry point for candidates with sector or operational backgrounds.

The Preqin 2025 Global Private Equity Report found that half of investors plan to increase their PE allocations in 2025, up from 28% the year before — a signal that demand for investment talent is set to grow alongside capital deployment.

Choosing the Right Type of PE Firm

Here’s something that gets glossed over in many PE career conversations: not all private equity is the same. Buyout, growth equity, venture capital, and private credit are genuinely different businesses. The day-to-day work is different, the risk profile is different, and what you’re learning is different.

Here are the main things to consider when you want to try working in private equity.

Firm Type Deal Focus Junior Exposure Best For
Buyout (large-cap) Control acquisitions, $500M+ Deep into complex deals IB analysts seeking deal complexity
Mid-market buyout Control deals, $50–500M Full deal lifecycle visibility Broad exposure, faster ownership
Growth equity Minority stakes in a growing company More sourcing, less leverage work Operators with sector knowledge
Private credit Debt instruments, structured loans Credit analysis, covenant work Credit-focused professionals

Beyond firm type, two other things are worth thinking through carefully:

  • Sector focus. Deep expertise in healthcare, technology, or industrials compounds over time into a real career asset — in deal access, your network, and future options.
  • Geographic scope. Domestic-only vs. cross-border investing affects both what you work on and your lifestyle. Cross-border brings broader exposure but more complexity.

Conclusion

Private equity offers a genuinely different career model from banking — more ownership, longer time horizons, and real financial upside for those who reach the carry-earning level.

The transition requires clear expectations for the learning curve, the recruiting process, and the extent to which experience varies across fund types and sizes.

Professionals who know what they’re optimizing for, deal complexity, sector depth, compensation trajectory, or operational involvement, make better decisions about which firms to target and arrive better prepared to perform.

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Jordan Blake is a Chicago-based business strategist and writer with over 2 years of experience helping entrepreneurs and growing companies find clarity in the chaos. As a lead contributor to MidpointBusiness, Jordan focuses on the “messy middle” of business—where scaling, decision-making, and leadership intersect. His writing blends strategic thinking with down-to-earth advice, helping business owners stay grounded while pushing forward. When he's not writing or consulting, Jordan enjoys weekend cycling, reading biographies of founders, and teaching small business workshops in his local community.