Employee productivity slipped during ‘work from home’, finds JPMorgan

Bloomberg Updated - December 06, 2021 at 12:39 PM.

The bank is urging more workers to return to offices over the coming weeks

A troubling pattern emerged as most of JPMorgan Chase & Co’s employees worked from home to stem the spread of Covid-19: productivity slipped.

Work output was particularly affected on Mondays and Fridays, according to findings discussed by Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon in a private meeting with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analysts. That, along with worries that remote work is no substitute for organic interaction, is part of why the biggest US bank is urging more workers to return to offices over the coming weeks.

 

The WFH lifestyle seems to have impacted younger employees, and overall productivity and creative combustion has taken a hit, KBW’s Brian Kleinhanzl wrote in a September 13 note to clients, citing an earlier meeting with Dimon.

The bank has noticed the productivity decline among employees in general, not just younger employees, JPMorgan spokesman Michael Fusco clarified in an emailed statement, adding that younger workers could be disadvantaged by missed learning opportunities by not being in offices.

In Covid times, companies may embrace new ways to measure employee productivity, says HR experts

Back to the workplace

JPMorgan’s findings provide a data point in the debate over whether employees perform as well at the kitchen table as they do in the workplace, showing extended remote work may not be all it’s cracked up to be, at least for some job functions. While pre-pandemic studies found remote workers were just as efficient as those in offices, there were questions about how employees would perform under compulsory lockdowns.

JPMorgan last week told its most senior sales and trading employees that they would be required to return to their offices by September 21, the strongest move yet by a US bank to restaff its workplaces. Workers in other functions are also being encouraged to return, up to a maximum building capacity of 50 per cent in New York.

Overall, Jamie thinks a shift back to the office will be good for the young employees and to foster creative ideas, Kleinhanzl wrote.

Published on September 15, 2020 04:30