Layoffs continuing through 2027 - Anonymous employee Edward Jones Employee Review

2.0
Dec 28, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Coworkers are lovely Work from home was nice while it lasted, now moving back to 4 days in office

Cons

This is a private, employee-owned company and does not need to play the Wallstreet quarterly earnings game. For 100 years the company avoided layoffs, even during the 2008 recession. The company was full of dedicated and talented employees that could be paid more elsewhere, but made the fair tradeoff to stay due to long-term job stability. The firm is now the most profitable it's ever been, yet due to greed, a desire to be acquired, or lack of imagination and playing follow-the-other-CEOs and consulting firm recommendations has been and will be laying off people over the next 3 years in a stressful ongoing process. They are offshoring, automating, and getting rid of talented people - but keeping layers and layers of senior management which takes in much of the firms' earnings but are prime examples of the Peter principle - while everyone else remains stressed about whether or not they will have a job in 6 months, a year, or two as they have made clear that more layoffs are coming through 2027. It is a stressful work environment due to this and I would recommend staying away until the dust settles post-2027. The culture and trust has been ruined and this is now just like any other corporation, thus no longer worth the lower pay. The last round of layoffs I saw a department that fired all the senior skilled talented workers, but kept the unnecessary TWO layers of management that had NO experience in the job family to manage over the junior workers. Thus the junior workers have no one to mentor them to grow into those more senior roles, and there are no seniors or leaders left that have any experience in the job family to lead the group whatsoever. The leader above these two layers of management that made the latest layoff decisions have zero experience or knowledge about the job family themselves, and only started leading the group a few months prior to the layoffs since the firm decided first to re-org leadership and then immediately have them cut their new orgs that contain skillsets they've never worked with and are unfamiliar with. Competency will not get you promoted here.

Explore other reviews about Edward Jones

5.0
Jun 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great place to transition into the world of Financial Advising

Cons

Tough business to get started on your own.

2.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Holds firm to its conservative investment philosophy.

Cons

The firm has been behind the times for decades. It is great that they are finally trying to get up to speed, but the rate of change is not manageable. There has been a high turnover in support staff and it's hard to get accurate information when needing support. It also seems like they have lost their original focus of being the local friendly financial advisor in your backyard and being accessible to the masses. The focus has shifted to high-net-worth individuals and catering to the wealthy. I've watched several advisors get pushed out because they expressed concern and needed support they weren't receiving. When hired as an advisor I was told I'd receive all of this wonderful training of what to say and how to overcome objections and did not receive any of that training. Most of the training is a high-level overview with homework of figuring it out on your own time. In order to be successful as an advisor at Edward Jones, you need to plan on working 80 hours a week for at least the first five years at the firm with little to no support.

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