Research is divided on when is the best time to look for a new job, but it’s undeniable that a new year tends to hasten psychological effects: new beginnings, fresh clarity, and a renewed purpose. So for those on the lookout, it’s also useful to know which companies are the best places to work in the country—as rated by their employees.
Based on data gathered by recruiting website Glassdoor, Visual Capitalist’s Niccolo Conte shows in the graphic below, America’s top 15 best places to work in 2024.
Glassdoor’s results are determined by their ‘proprietary algorithm’ which converts workplace reviews (rating companies on nine attributes like compensation, benefits, culture, etc.) from current and former employees, into a ranking. To read their full methodology, visit their website.
Ranked: America’s Best Places to Work in 2024
Based in Boston, Massachusetts, consulting firm Bain & Company is the best place to work in 2024 according to their employees on Glassdoor. The company’s page specifies what makes them so good: benefits, reliable teammates, growth opportunities, and crucially, strong leadership.
Here’s America’s top 15 best places to work in in 2024.
Chipmaker Nvidia, whose stock has been on a tear in the last year, ranks second. Reviews cite work flexibility, workplace culture, and of course, focused leadership. In fact, Jensen Huang was recently rated America’s most popular CEO by professional social networking site Blind.
Three mid-sized tech companies, ServiceNow (cloud computing), MathWorks (mathematical computing software), and Procore Technologies (construction management software), round out the top five best workplaces in America.
Ranked in sixth is a break from the norm so far: beloved fast food place, In-N-Out Burger.
Missing from 2024’s list is Google which has dropped to 26th from eighth place in 2023. By doing so: no Big Tech company features in the top 15 best places to work for the first time in five years.
Rank | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | HubSpot | Bain & Co | NVIDIA | Gainsight |
2 | Bain & Co | NVIDIA | HubSpot | Box |
3 | DocuSign | In-N-Out Burger | Bain & Co | Bain & Co |
4 | In-N-Out Burger | HubSpot | eXp Realty | McKinsey |
5 | Sammons Financial Group |
McKinsey | Box | NVIDIA |
6 | Lawrence Livermore National Lab |
BCG | MathWorks | |
7 | Intuitive Surgical | Delta Air Lines | BCG | |
8 | UKG | Lululemon | Veterans United Home Loans |
|
9 | VIPKid | Microsoft | Lululemon | ServiceNow |
10 | Southwest Airlines | H E B | Salesforce | In-N-Out Burger |
11 | Meta | Royal Caribbean Group |
HubSpot | |
12 | BCG | NASA Jet Propulsion |
Slalom | |
13 | BCG | Five9 | Microsoft | |
14 | Trader Joe’s | Stryker | Twilio | Adobe |
15 | CoverMyMeds | DocuSign | Johns Hopkins Applied Physics |
CrowdStrike |
In fact, Big Tech does surprisingly poorly on these rankings despite the record profit and revenue they pull in every year.
Tech & Consulting Losing Sheen
Apple for example has never been ranked higher than 31—which they achieved back in 2021.
Microsoft and Meta have done better in the past, but together with Google have slid down Glassdoor’s rankings rapidly, in conjunction with the recurring mass layoffs they’ve executed in the last two years.
And while Bain & Co head this year’s list, other major players in the same space—Boston Consulting Group and McKinsey & Company—are now at their worst ranks since 2019.
Smaller consulting firms have been struggling in the last year or so, as higher interest rates have hit everything from technology companies, to banks, to real estate conglomerates—all usual clients for consulting companies.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/15/2024 – 07:45