Some companies offer employees free gourmet meals. Others boast sleep pods and paid paternity leave.
It’s perks like these that help a company top the list of Forbes’ first-ever Global 2000 list of the World’s Best Employers.
With 72,000 employees, Google parent company Alphabet GOOGL +1.84% took the top spot, as employees cited approval with the company’s image, working conditions and diversity. For the past year, Alphabet saw $98.9 billion in sales, $19.3 billion in profit, $178.6 billion in assets and a market cap of $622.9 billion.
Alphabet, as well as second place Microsoft MSFT +0.17% and third place Japan Exchange Group , was ranked high for it’s outstanding attractiveness for employees.
Employers from the United States dominate the list, with 157 of the top 500 hailing from the U.S. In the top 10 alone, six employers are U.S. based: Alphabet, Microsoft, Apple, Noble Energy, Williams and IBM.
Second-place Microsoft also came in third this year on Forbes’ list of the world’s largest tech companies.The company saw $89 billion in sales, $21.2 billion in profit, assets of $241 billion and a $573.7 billion market value this year.
Founded in 1959, Japan Exchange Group came in as the third-best employer, with $337 billion in assets and a market cap of $9.7 billion. It was one of 22 companies in the investment-services industry that made the list.
However, the regional-banks industry was the most represented as a top employer. U.S.-based Northern Trust NTRS +0.48% ranked 12th, followed by Thailand’s Kasikornbank at 16th and the Philippines’ BDO Unibank at 23rd.
More than 36,000 global recommendations were analyzed by Statista to create the World’s Best Employers list. Employees were asked to rate their own employer and the likelihood they would recommend the company to a friend or family member. They were also asked to recommend other employers they admired.
This list is based on Forbes’ 2017 Global 2000 rankings, which featured public companies from 58 countries that together accounted for $35.3 trillion in revenue.
Courtesy : Forbes
It’s perks like these that help a company top the list of Forbes’ first-ever Global 2000 list of the World’s Best Employers.
With 72,000 employees, Google parent company Alphabet GOOGL +1.84% took the top spot, as employees cited approval with the company’s image, working conditions and diversity. For the past year, Alphabet saw $98.9 billion in sales, $19.3 billion in profit, $178.6 billion in assets and a market cap of $622.9 billion.
Alphabet, as well as second place Microsoft MSFT +0.17% and third place Japan Exchange Group , was ranked high for it’s outstanding attractiveness for employees.
Employers from the United States dominate the list, with 157 of the top 500 hailing from the U.S. In the top 10 alone, six employers are U.S. based: Alphabet, Microsoft, Apple, Noble Energy, Williams and IBM.
Second-place Microsoft also came in third this year on Forbes’ list of the world’s largest tech companies.The company saw $89 billion in sales, $21.2 billion in profit, assets of $241 billion and a $573.7 billion market value this year.
Founded in 1959, Japan Exchange Group came in as the third-best employer, with $337 billion in assets and a market cap of $9.7 billion. It was one of 22 companies in the investment-services industry that made the list.
However, the regional-banks industry was the most represented as a top employer. U.S.-based Northern Trust NTRS +0.48% ranked 12th, followed by Thailand’s Kasikornbank at 16th and the Philippines’ BDO Unibank at 23rd.
More than 36,000 global recommendations were analyzed by Statista to create the World’s Best Employers list. Employees were asked to rate their own employer and the likelihood they would recommend the company to a friend or family member. They were also asked to recommend other employers they admired.
This list is based on Forbes’ 2017 Global 2000 rankings, which featured public companies from 58 countries that together accounted for $35.3 trillion in revenue.
Courtesy : Forbes
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