Prioritizes employees and embraces a growth mindset... - Anonymous employee J.P. Morgan Employee Review

5.0
Jun 12, 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

J.P. Morgan embraces a growth mindset and offer many paths to help you develop your skills and promote career mobility. During the pandemic, they also took the necessary steps to keep employees safe and where hiring at a time when many companies were laying off.

Cons

Many employees wish to continue working remote, however, there is a push from senior leaders for everyone to return to the office. J.P.Morgan could do a better job recognizing the cultural shift that took place because of the pandemic. During the pandemic, we've proven our ability to adapt and are even more productive than before. Many employees recognize the benefit and use the reclaimed commute time to spend with our families or complete work tasks. J.P.Morgan launched initiatives to be more green and forcing all employees back to the office conflicts with those priorities. The added expense to employees and the increase in emissions and wear and tear (e.g., tires) is inconsistent with going green.

Explore other reviews about J.P. Morgan

5.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Top tier company with growth opportunity

Cons

The expectation to work 40+ or passed your normal shift as an exempt employee was common among peers and management.

3.0
May 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. One of the best banks, heavy on tech and AI, that makes my life simple 2. Bonus is consistent every year 3. The company is highly social and multicultural. 4. A lot of training program to upskill and develop.

Cons

1. A lot of administrative items to take care of, a significant portion is spent on meetings, meetings are called to establish an agenda for next meetings, and so on. 2. Layoffs, all year round- sometimes significant, while in the middle of delivery. If your manager is off-site/ another city/country, you are more likely to be impacted. 3. Departments may have skewed gender or racial ratios. It is best to stay away to avoid discrimination (to be fair, this has less to do with culture and more to do with who the head of the department is).

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