

The bank reinstated a five-day, in-person workweek in early 2025, aligning with other corporate giants like Amazon and Dell.

Getty Images
Key Takeaways Jamie Dimon says companies that stick with remote-first models will fall behind, claiming JPMorgan’s fully in-office culture will “crush” more flexible rivals. JPMorgan reinstated a five-day, in-person workweek in early 2025, aligning with other corporate giants like Amazon and Dell. Dimon says that physical proximity is key to communication, speed and decision-making.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon is doubling down on his belief that an in-office culture is a competitive advantage, arguing that companies clinging to remote-first policies risk falling behind.
In a recent interview on CBS Evening News, Dimon framed work models as a strategic choice. “You could build a company one way and I could build another company one way,” he said, referring to in-person work policies versus a remote-first business. “But I’ll tell you one thing: We would crush you.”
He tied that confidence directly to JPMorgan’s insistence on employees being together in offices, framing physical proximity as key to communication, speed and decision-making.
JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. (Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images)
JPMorgan brought back a five-day in-person work policy at the start of 2025 for most roles, pressing on with the measure despite pushback from employees and a widely circulated petition to keep hybrid work.
Other companies, including Dell and Amazon, have also implemented return-to-office policies since the end of the Covid pandemic. Employment platform Robert Half estimates that today, 65% of U.S. jobs require workers to be fully in-person.
In the interview, Dimon referred to JPMorgan as a “neural network.” Its connections weaken when colleagues are hard to reach, he elaborated. He used the metaphor to argue that remote work degrades the bank’s operating system.
JPMorgan’s operating committee told employees last year that full-time, in-person office work is the “best way to run the company,” highlighting the mentoring, learning and brainstorming opportunities that could arise from in-person work.
Dimon’s case against remote work
Dimon has long been a vocal critic of remote work, especially for early-career employees. He told the Hill and Valley Forum in Washington, D.C. last week, that remote work stunts younger workers’ growth because they miss informal learning, in-person coaching and hallway conversations. Remote work also slows down innovation and decision-making, Dimon asserted.
The CEO also said that meeting and working together face-to-face builds emotional intelligence — something people can’t develop over video calls. Dimon pushed back against virtual meetings altogether, saying at the forum that “a lot of people aren’t paying attention at all” on Zoom calls and are instead texting each other.
“If you go to a meeting with me, you’ve got my full friggin’ attention the whole time,” he said.
JPMorgan Chase is considered the biggest bank in the U.S. with $3.9 trillion in assets and a market capitalization of $791 billion at the time of writing.
Workers disagree with Dimon
Despite Dimon’s criticism of remote work, many skilled workers and a growing body of research do not see remote work as a drag on performance or pay. A recent analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco found that remote workers actually earn about 12% more on average than fully in-office workers, largely because they tend to be more senior and in higher positions.
Remote work also doesn’t hurt productivity levels, per research studies. According to the U.S. Career Institute, nearly 80% of managers indicate that their team is more productive when working remotely. Great Place To Work’s two-year study of more than 800,000 employees in 2022 found the same or improved productivity after transitioning to remote work.
Additionally, workers overwhelmingly prefer remote and hybrid jobs. A 2025 Gallup survey discovered that more than half of employees (52%) prefer a hybrid work setup, and 26% want to be fully remote. Only about 20% want to work fully in-person.