Executive Director applicants have rated the interview process at J.P. Morgan with 2.7 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty) and assessed their interview experience as 27% positive. To compare, the company-average is 61.4% positive. This is according to Glassdoor user ratings.
Candidates applying for Executive Director roles take an average of 72 days to get hired, when considering 15 user submitted interviews for this role. To compare, the hiring process at J.P. Morgan overall takes an average of 27 days.
Common stages of the interview process at J.P. Morgan as a Executive Director according to 15 Glassdoor interviews include:
One on one interview: 38%
Phone interview: 25%
Background check: 13%
Drug test: 8%
Presentation: 4%
Skills test: 4%
Personality test: 4%
Group panel interview: 4%
Here are the most commonly searched roles for interview reports -
I applied online. I interviewed at J.P. Morgan in Jul 2010
Interview
Applied through the company website. I was contacted very quickly after my application was submitted for an initial meeting with the HR recruiter. I had a total of six interviews, over the course of three weeks.
Passed the HR screen and had a first round interview. All technical knowledge based questions related to the job itself. Very open ended questions allowing you to speak and share your knowledge
Really got to talk to almost all the inividuals on the team. When there's an interview, the logistics were well arranged.
However the entire process took too long (over three months), with interview requests popping up unexpectedly after a while, and minimal feedback in the process, Fully understand there can be too many qualified candidates under current environment, but the long process could discourage some good candidate and reflects on the internal efficiency,,,
I applied online. I interviewed at J.P. Morgan (New York, NY)
Interview
Interview process was average, as the women asked the best questions but the men seemed like they had their mind made up the second they saw me. Women like me don’t get a seat at the table with them so my gut told me it was a no the second we met. I was ghosted after 5 rounds of interviews, didn’t even receive a rejection letter until over a month after. I normally would not leave such negative comments but this experience is making me want to switch banks at this point. Someone in my network with zero experience in this field got a role at this company, so I sounds like Chase needs to revisit their unconscious bias training and stop hiring who they prefer to work with than who is capable of actually doing the job. I was told the team lacks initiative and that they need a leader. Sounds like to me both the existing leadership and team need to go.