Satisfied, but there is room for improvement - Application Developer J.P. Morgan Employee Review

4.0
11 Jun 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. When teams are cohesive, the work can be exciting and rewarding. 3. Immediate leadership is supportive and encourages self-development. 4. Job security; if you are in a business critical role. There are many employees with 25 year tenures. 5. Interesting programs and opportunities for people who excel (the top 1%). 6. Information from management. The senior management always gives an accurate account the current situation. They never sugar-coat the situation; thereby making it easier to see pending job cuts or reorganizations are immanent.

Cons

Promotions are random and lateral moves are difficult. - New people are at an advantage. They are not tied into a particular function. Therefore, they can go up the food chain easier. To maintain business continuity, they will place new hires, instead of hiring within the firm, into lateral or new roles. It makes it hard for existing employees to learn new skills or improve their standing within the firm. Poor company sponsored development. - Only those who are on the edge get development/career advancement opportunities. It is a carrot of sorts to preserve your position. Otherwise, employees who work (normal people, not the 1% mentioned above) are considered too valuable to develop into new positions. They are given the slow track to improve their careers. This also explains the amount of employees who stay for 10 to 15 years in JPM. It takes them that long to get into management or senior development roles.

Explore other reviews about J.P. Morgan

5.0
22 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great employer, good benefits, good people

Cons

No real cons to the job.

3.0
12 May 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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