Thread regarding JPMorgan Chase & Co. layoffs

Company Culture is rotten

I couldn't possibly commute 5 days to when that does happen. So I recently left the company and joined another bank.

Its so nice to be in a new environment, where people actually care about their work and are engaged. The place is actually vibrant, there is a nice vibe to it. People like to come to office and talk to each other, not just sit on zoom calls.

The Jersey City Office feels so soulless in comparison. There was no vibe to the place. No wonder, nobody wanted to be there and they coffee badged.

Get out while you have the luxury of time. Don't wait forever for that package. Your most exciting opportunity might be waiting for you, but you're sitting there waiting for a package.

by
| 3152 views | | 5 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jshvr6m9

5 replies (most recent on top)

Dumpster fire it was - I just got laid off cause my manager didn’t like me so he put me on chopping block - never been in my entire career until now / HR is not your friend ever nor os complaining to your level up manager - just try to leave

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @2d4+1jshvr6m9

JPM is a dumpster fire….the new Leaders are fools. The technology is from the Stone Age. I got out and I pity you people who still work there

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @171+1jshvr6m9

Where did you go? Pls share

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @wb+1jshvr6m9

Couldn’t agree more. Very rotten and backwards.

My time at JPMC was marked by a baffling devotion to inefficiency, the kind you’d expect from a government agency circa 2002, not a Fortune 100 financial powerhouse. One particularly absurd example: recording meetings. You’d think with a multi-billion-dollar tech budget, they’d have figured out how to hit “record” like the rest of the civilized world. But no—at JPMC, we used Zoom for calls, while simultaneously launching Adobe Connect (yes, that Adobe Connect) just to record the screen. It was a Frankenstein’s monster of a process, patched together with duct tape and denial. Zoom for audio, Adobe for visuals, and an entire team groaning in unison every time we had to do it.

To call it inefficient would be generous. It was embarrassing.

Now that I’m at a company that uses Microsoft Teams—a single, unified platform that does what it’s supposed to—everything feels refreshingly sane. Calls, recordings, documentation, all in one place. You know… normal.

JPMC’s insistence on clinging to broken tools like Adobe Connect is either a result of poor decision-making, institutional arrogance, or, more likely, both. For a company that prides itself on innovation and market leadership, its internal operations feel more like a cautionary tale in how not to run a modern workplace.

And don’t get me started on the documentation. Outdated, irrelevant, and often just plain wrong. Trying to find accurate internal resources felt like archeology—digging through layers of obsolete Confluence pages, hoping to strike gold. Spoiler: I never did.

There’s no excuse for a company with JPMC’s resources to operate like this. None. It’s not lean. It’s not “secure.” It’s not smart. It’s just lazy. A culture that tolerates this level of dysfunction shouldn’t be surprised when talent runs for the exits.

They should be ashamed—but based on my experience, shame requires self-awareness.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ed+1jshvr6m9

Ok

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ah+1jshvr6m9

Post a reply

: