Anxieties were already running high inside JPMorgan Chase last month, days after top leadership announced that employees would soon be required to work in-office full-time, when an executive found himself responding to a question about another contentious issue at the bank.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has served in the role for more than 15 years. A look back at an investment in JPM stock when he took the leadership role.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says that despite employee pushback, and a petition signed by over 1,800 staff at the time of writing, most of JPMorgan's 300,000 employees are still returning to the office full-time in March.
The nation’s biggest bank is committed to getting everyone back in the office, but some workers say the conditions aren’t ideal.
CEO Jamie Dimon said he regretted cursing during a recent company town hall but stands by the importance of the company’s new return-to-office policy.
In many ways the nation’s largest lender is an outlier in continuing to support DEI, or the use of racial and “intersectional” (gender and genderidentity) preferences in hiring.
Jamie Dimon, a fierce advocate of returning to the office, said he “completely respects” why some people need to work from home.
Jamie Dimon is the CEO and Chairman of JPMorgan Chase & Co. He is also a billionaire. Obviously, Dimon has a pretty great job heading up one of the largest banks in the country. However, he has made clear that he actually does not believe that any job is bad.
As JPMorgan Chase enforces its five-day-a-week office mandate, employees are struggling with limited desks, noisy workspaces.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has doubled down on the bank’s return-to-office (RTO) policy despite strong employee resistance. A leaked town hall recording from February revealed his frustration over workplace attendance,
JPMorgan Chase will continue its diversity efforts, its CEO Jamie Dimon said in an interview with CNBC on Monday, despite a broader corporate retreat from such initiatives. The bank will continue its outreach to Black,
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said that he hopes the Department of Government Efficiency will be “quite successful" in its bid to pare back spending and boost efficiency.