J.P. Morgan reviews

3.9

72% would recommend to a friend

(23,987 total reviews)
avatar

Jamie Dimon

78% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

J.P. Morgan has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 23,987 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The J.P. Morgan employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzas industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

24K reviews
3.0
Feb 15, 2023

No Work Life Balance

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent pay Cutting edge technology Very smart people Very friendly people An amazing atmosphere if you're young and single. I highly recommend this place for anyone who is hungry to succeed and has the time to do so.

Cons

This is a terrible place for a family man/woman. You are expected to come in 3 days a week on top of getting certified for new technologies (on your own time, you will not be given time to do so), a big list of HR related "classes", and also keeping up with a mountain of work while (for senior developers) also helping junior developers finish their work or learn the required technologies. To add the cherry on top, you may be required to work weekends to the release teams. It's also by far the most corporate place I have worked for. You are not speaking to a person, you are speaking to what their job title is. There seems to be an implicit ask that you grovel to people with more seniority.

2.0
Jan 30, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Really good schemes for graduates and retraining non-computer science graduates, veterans and those returning to work after a career break Good perks like private healthcare Salary is good for graduates If you are lucky you will get a good team that have interesting projects and/or good managers that don't take you for granted They are building a nice new Glasgow office

Cons

Technology & Career Growth Outdated technology and mundane programming tasks. Code quality is poor. Too many ‘Yes’ men push untested code into production on a regular basis to get things out quicker to impress management. Absolutely no time or resources dedicated to training or personal growth. Any training you do get is minimal and you have to fight for it. If you are not diligent at spending time outside of work learning new technologies, you will be left behind. There is a lot of internal technology to keep people trapped in their jobs with no transferable skills. Avoid CIB and ‘Athena’ for this reason. Half the job is being on support or calls rather than coding. No concept of agile or proper programming practices. Those who have been at JP Morgan for a while are very stuck in their ways and refuse to try anything new. It is very hard to try anything new because of all the red tape. Compensation Once you roll off the graduate scheme, your pay rises become minimal. Those who just completed the grad scheme are getting paid substantially more than associates who rolled off the grad scheme two years prior. As soon as you get promoted to associate, get yourself out of there! Record breaking profits in pandemic haven’t reached workers who have hardly had pay rise in 2 years (at least in Glasgow), yet CEO gets 9.5% pay rise this year. Work Culture Promotions based on box ticking rather than meaningful contributions. People who are the backbone of their team are often overlooked and management take them for granted. Many stay at JP Morgan for their whole career and focus too much on getting promoted (not their fault, the culture is rewarding the wrong behaviour) and playing politics rather than becoming better software engineers. Forced return to the office despite majority of employees prefer working from home. They are expecting 3 days a week in the office for tech staff. I was forced to go back into the office for a day to ‘show face’ last year and there was 5 people on my floor in that day.. Toxic work culture and pressure to do longer hours and even weekend work. American colleagues answering emails at 4am and on their days off. Colleagues in India are expecting to work 12+ hours regularly and not appreciated at all. It is a depressing work environment. ‘Asked’ to work weekends with no compensation in terms of pay or time off with little notice. I had to work 12 days in a row a few times and was not given anything in return, and when I tried to ask for 2 days back I was told I could leave an hour early on the Friday.. Managers are not given enough training and it shows. I had a manager that told me that I had to stop leaving at 5pm and put in more hours if I wanted to be taken seriously, despite me having one of the highest work outputs on the team. He also made a lot of unprofessional comments about the diversity training that made me very uncomfortable.

2.0
Aug 7, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I think I got very lucky with the team and manager I had. They were great and the work life balance was great. I really got to learn a lot as this was my first job out of college. All of this growth is def attributed to the great manager I had.

Cons

They really don't care about you as an employee. Working in tech I was expecting to work from home until it was 100% safe to return. We've been working remotely since March 2020 and we've kept the company running. They rewarded us by cutting pay raises while the company had record profits. They made us return to work with a flex hybrid model and they aren't mandating vaccines for employees returning. I don't feel safe at work. I have people on my team that are anti-vax and I'm still expected to return to work and interact with them. With the rising delta cases I expected us to return to full time work form home, but management has just doubled down instead and they expect us all to wear masks now at work. They know they will be losing talent due to the return to office plan and they are ok with. Management has stated they are ok with the expected attrition. They don't value domain level knowledge at all.

Viewing 112 - 114 of 23,987 Reviews

Glassdoor has 28,104 J.P. Morgan reviews submitted anonymously by J.P. Morgan employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if J.P. Morgan is right for you.