What Private Equity Actually Is
Private equity firms raise capital from institutional investors (pension funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds) and use it to acquire companies — typically taking a majority or controlling stake. They then work to improve those companies over 3–7 years through operational improvements, financial restructuring, strategic repositioning, or add-on acquisitions, before selling the company to another buyer or taking it public through an IPO. The profit generated — the "carry" — is split between the firm's partners and the fund investors.
PE operates across every industry. A PE firm might own a chain of dental practices, a software company, a distribution business, and a manufacturing plant simultaneously. The work combines financial analysis with hands-on operational involvement in portfolio companies — a meaningfully different role than investment banking, where you advise but don't own.
PE firms hire tiny classes — a top firm might hire 4–8 associates per year globally. They recruit almost exclusively from 2nd-year IB analysts at bulge bracket and elite boutique banks, using a recruiting process that happens on an extremely compressed timeline (sometimes within weeks of being a first-year analyst). The combination of tiny class sizes, selective sourcing from only the best banks, and a recruitment process that rewards preparation means getting into PE requires nearly everything to go right.
The PE Career Ladder
What You Can Earn — and How Carry Works
PE compensation has two components: salary + bonus (like banking) and carried interest (unlike banking). Carry is where the real wealth is generated.
Associate: $150,000–$200,000 base + $80,000–$150,000 bonus = $230,000–$350,000 all-in
VP / Senior Associate: $200,000–$300,000 base + bonus + small carry allocation
Principal / Director: $300,000–$500,000 + meaningful carry
Partner / MD: $500,000–$1,000,000+ base + bonus + significant carry that can generate millions per fund
Carried interest is typically 20% of the fund's profits above a hurdle rate, allocated among partners. A successful fund returning 3x on $1 billion generates $200 million in carry — distributed among a small group of partners over multiple years. This is why senior PE partners generate extraordinary wealth.