Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,458 members, 7,819,669 topics. Date: Monday, 06 May 2024 at 08:26 PM

Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin - Jobs/Vacancies - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Jobs/Vacancies / Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin (1052 Views)

Make Employers Find You By Linkedin Optimization / Job Vacancy For Dispatch Bike Rider With B.sc In LinkedIn Got Nigerians Talking / Best 100 Companies To Work For In Nigeria - By Jobberman (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by fleps(m): 3:34pm On Jun 18, 2017
LinkedIn Releases Top Companies to Work For in the World

If Jobberman released Top Companies to Work For in Nigeria, it is therefore apt that LinkedIn focused on a wider scale - the world. LinkedIn has released global companies top talents in the world want to work for.

The Top Companies list is based on the billions of actions taken by LinkedIn's millions of members and looks at three main pillars: interest in a company's jobs, interest in a company's brand and employees, and employee retention.

LinkedIn and Microsoft are excluded from the list. Microsoft is a parent company to LinkedIn

METHODOLOGY

How the list was assembled

The methodology leverages metrics like:

Job applications: At what rate are people viewing and applying to job postings featured on LinkedIn?

Engagement: How many non-employees are viewing and asking to connect with a company’s employees? How many professionals are viewing a company’s career page? What's the reach and engagement of a company's content? How are a company's follows performing? Etc.

Retention: Are employees sticking around for at least a year?


Top 25 Companies to Work For in the World

1. Alphabet

Creating the future: For those who want to tackle big issues, some division of Alphabet is working on it: from putting self-driving cars on the road to fighting extremism online. As CEO Larry Page says: “You need to stay a bit uncomfortable to stay relevant.”

Global headcount: 72,000

Innovation focus: More than 27,100 employees globally work in research and development, and Alphabet devoted $13.9 billion last year to R&grin. That dedication has produced new products like Google Home and cutting-edge research like a deep learning algorithm that can detect a specific eye disease.


2. Amazon
The everything store: Amazon is transforming how the world shops and consumes entertainment. This past year, Amazon delivered its first package by drone in the UK, launched Prime Video in India and opened brick-and-mortar stores in the U.S.

Global headcount: 341,400

“The best place to fail”: “People are often surprised to hear that working at Amazon is much like working for a series of startups. We’re constantly piloting, testing and launching new products, businesses and services,” Amazon told LinkedIn. “We take risks and make big bets, and when we fail, we apply the lessons learned and keep moving.”


3. Facebook
The global network: Facebook believes it’s only ever 1 percent done, an ethos physically reflected by its headquarter offices. The unfinished look is “on purpose,” said CEO Mark Zuckerberg. “When you enter our buildings, we want you to feel how much left there is to be done in our mission to connect the world.”

Global headcount: 17,000

Application advice: "Know or explore your passion around connecting the world, because it is at the heart of every single thing we do here," says Miranda Kalinowski, Facebook’s Global Head of Recruiting. "Once you know it, be able to demonstrate it.”


4. Uber
Driving forward: Uber is one of the most valuable startups, worth some $68 billion. While culture issues have plagued the company over the last several months, it still attracted outsize attention from global job seekers looking to boost their careers. LinkedIn’s Caroline Fairchild talked to experts as well as former and current employees to find out why Uber keeps attracting top talent even as its culture faces questions. Check out her latest update.

Global headcount: 12,000

Get acquainted: Worldwide nUbers, as new employees are dubbed, descend on the company’s headquarters for the three-day Uberversity program where they get to meet directly with the leadership team.


5. Apple
The work: Apple designs and develops some of the world’s most-popular gadgets, and it’s not done innovating yet. CEO Tim Cook recently debuted the company’s newest innovation: the HomePod. He also plans on doubling the size of Apple services, like iTunes, Apple Pay and more, over the next four years.

[/b]Global headcount:[/b] 110,000

Retail reach: Nearly 67,000 of Apple’s employees work in its 463 stores around the world. These positions don’t lack the perks of a traditional corporate gig: They get the same benefits, including shares in the company and education aid.


6. Salesforce
The work: Salesforce is famous for bringing customer relationship management to the cloud, and now it’s pushing CRM further into the future by pairing it with artificial intelligence via its new Einstein AI. It’s creations like this and Einstein Vision (which enables image recognition) that reflect CEO Marc Benioff’s drive for ongoing innovation.

Global headcount: 25,000

Island life: Benioff’s fascination with Hawaii informs Salesforce’s “Ohana” culture. (It means "family" in Hawaiian.)


7. McKinsey & Company
Worldwide influence: From healthcare to retail, McKinsey staffs employees who are the best fit, regardless of location. About 40 percent of its consultants have at least one international engagement per year. “Our approach is to bring the best expertise to clients no matter where in the world that expertise is,” the firm told LinkedIn.

Global headcount: 25,000

Personal time: Want to learn a new language or go on a dream trip? McKinsey allows its consultants to take off an extra five to 10 weeks per year beyond vacation time to pursue personal interests and passions.


8. LVMH
Luxury across the board: LVMH brings the French concept of “art de vivre” to consumers around the world via its 70 luxury houses across a range of sectors like fashion and leather goods, perfumes and cosmetics, watches and jewellery and wine and spirits.

Global headcount: 135,000

Moving on up: With such a wide range of brands, LVMH offers a lot of internal mobility. Nearly 75 percent of management positions are filled through internal promotions.


9. L’Oréal
Beauty queen: L’Oréal may have 36 brands in 140 countries, but it’s best known for one thing: cosmetics. The company raked in $28.6 billion in sales last year, making it the top beauty company worldwide.

Global headcount: 83,000

Rising the ranks: Attn: students and recent grads. Thanks to the company’s philosophy that you are “never too young to lead,” 30 percent of L’Oréal’s hires last year were young graduates. L’Oréal’s current CEO even started as an intern himself in 1978.


10. Dell Technologies
Digital transformation: Dell Technologies has come a long way since founder and CEO Michael Dell created his first PC in 1985. Thanks to the company’s $60 billion acquisition of storage provider EMC in September, it’s now a global IT leader with seven tech powerhouses under its hood.

Global headcount: 145,000

Flexible working: If you want to work from home, set your own hours or even change career paths, Dell can make it happen. The company aims to have at least half its employees participate in its Connected Workplace program by 2020.


11. Cisco
Connecting the unconnected: Cisco’s husband and wife co-founders created the multi-protocol router when they weren’t able to email each other from their respective offices. Today, Cisco continues to shape the future of the Internet via cutting-edge technology, including products and services like WebEx, OpenDNS, and its Tetration Analytics.

Global headcount: 73,000

Giving back: Cisco employees get five days off in addition to regular paid time off that they can use to volunteer. Last year, Cisco employees logged 227,000 volunteer hours.


12. Tesla
Energy innovation: Not only is Tesla leading the transition to sustainable transportation with its electric vehicles, the company is also making strides in renewable energy generation and storage through its investments in solar panels and products like Powerwall.

Global headcount: 30,000

Fun-filled future: Because Tesla is not yet profitable, its employees don’t receive the kind of extravagant perks that the tech industry is known for. CEO Elon Musk says that will soon change. In a recent email to employees, Musk revealed free frozen yogurt stands and an electric pod roller coaster are on the horizon.


13. Oracle
On cloud nine: Oracle has been making a move to the cloud: bringing its traditional software businesses online to better rival the likes of Salesforce and Workday. The move seems to be paying off. Third quarter sales of its cloud-based products rose 62 percent.

Global headcount: 135,000

Corporate citizenship: Oracle takes social responsibility to a whole new level. It built a public charter school on its headquarters campus and recycled or reused 99.5 percent of its electronic waste in its most recent fiscal year.


14. Siemens
At the core: Siemens’ breadth is impressive, including divisions devoted to energy, healthcare and financial services. Across those units, the company is innovating new ways to power the world, automate work and push into software and data analysis.

Global headcount: 351,000

Staying power: Siemens employees stick around. The company has the longest average employee tenure of any on this list: Siemens workers stay 8.6 years, on average, according to LinkedIn Premium Insights data.


15. Unilever
In your pantry: Consumer goods behemoth Unilever is parent to more than 400 well-known brands used by billions of people each day from Suave to Lipton to Lifebuoy. The company reports that 57 percent of its business is in emerging markets.

Global headcount: 169,000

Cool job: Being a “Tea Expertise Director” at Unilever includes tasting 1,000 cups of tea per day and touring fellow employees through tea plantations.


16. The Walt Disney Company
The happiest place: From worldwide theme parks to consumer goods to hitmakers on the big and small screen including ABC, Marvel and Pixar, one important element connects Disney’s multiple divisions: storytelling. “Disney employees play an important role in bringing to life what others only dream of,” the company told LinkedIn.

Global headcount: 195,000

Calling all fans: Trainers on the Disney English team use Disney stories and characters to teach children English in China. 


17. Johnson & Johnson
The prescription: Johnson & Johnson’s mission to improve lives through healthcare is carried out by a family of 275 companies around the world, including pharmaceuticals and consumer products. It’s a decentralized structure, meaning each company has autonomy to make the best decisions for its market.

Global headcount: 126,000

Uniting purpose: The company’s 70-year-old credo emphasizes responsibility — to healthcare professionals, employees, communities and stockholders.


18. IBM
Building the future: “I believe the most disruptive and transformative trend is now in front of us, and it’s cognitive,” says IBM CEO Ginni Rometty. IBM is ready to pounce on this new era with computer systems like Watson that know how to learn and reason.

Global headcount:c 380,000

[b]R&grin:
IBM employs its own technology in the hiring process, using Watson to match resumes to open positions. 


19. Deloitte
Get packing: At auditor and consultancy Deloitte, international experience goes beyond overseas travel. Employees may take on assignments abroad, transfer to one of the more than 150 countries and territories Deloitte operates in or manage global teams. Last year, the firm saw more than 6,000 such arrangements.

Global headcount: 244,400

Hit the books: Leadership center Deloitte University has campuses in the US, Singapore, Belgium, France, India and Canada where employees can boost their professional skills.  


20. PepsiCo
Snack attack: PepsiCo’s 22 iconic brands, like Lay’s, Gatorade and Tropicana, are sold in more than 200 countries and territories around the world. The company’s now on a mission, dubbed Performance with Purpose 2025, to develop healthier product options, limit its environmental footprint and support a diverse workforce (including ensuring pay equity).

Global headcount: 264,000

Innovation: PepsiCo has increased its spending on R&grin by 45 percent over the past six years, creating new products that have generated revenues of more than $5 billion annually, on average, since 2013.


21. Accenture
Problem solving: Accenture is one of the largest professional services firms in the world with consulting, digital, technology, strategy and operations projects in more than 120 countries. It works with 75 percent of the Fortune Global 500 across more than 40 different industries.

Global headcount: 401,000

Family friendly: In the U.S., Accenture offers 16 weeks maternity leave, 8 weeks of primary caregiver leave, up to one year of local work after returning from leave and free breast milk shipping for mothers who choose to travel for work.


22. EY
Accounting and beyond: EY, one of the “Big Four” accounting firms, provides assurance, advisory, transaction and tax services to companies in more than 150 countries. The firm is growing rapidly and is expected to reach a global workforce of 300,000 employees by 2020.

Global headcount: 250,000

Making an impact: EY in Germany launched a pilot refugee internship, a four-month training program where participants are paired with mentors and offered a full-time job at EY after completing the program.


23. Schneider Electric
Powering the world: France-based Schneider Electric creates the technology behind electric car charging stations, solar power storage systems and energy management software for factories and office buildings. It’s been in business for over 180 years and it has projects in over 100 countries.

Global headcount: 144,000

Making moves: Schneider Electric’s Global International Mobility Center helped 400 employees make the move to a new country in 2016. It’s part of the company’s overall strategy to encourage wider transfer of knowledge and skills among its employees.


24. Adobe
Design standard: Adobe is the reigning king of creative software, and it doesn’t look to be letting go of that title anytime soon. The company has made a successful transition to the cloud, with its Creative Cloud suite boasting over 9 million subscribers, according to analyst estimates.

Global headcount: 15,000

Adobe Kickbox: To encourage employee creativity, Adobe offers an “innovation in a box” kit that contains a $1,000 prepaid credit card, a Starbucks gift card, a candy bar, and a few instructions to any staffer who is interested in testing out new business ideas. The company has given out more than 1,000 boxes.


25) General Electric
A return to its industrial roots: GE has undergone a massive transition in recent years, returning to its core industrial businesses, selling off pieces of its finance arm and doubling down on what it refers to as the “industrial internet.” The company is now focusing on turbines, aircraft engines and big data rather than credit cards and personal loans.

Global headcount: 295,000

Leadership training: GE runs eight different leadership programs, giving recent graduates hands-on experience and training in a wide range of disciplines, including engineering, human resources, operations and finance. Some 25 percent of GE senior management graduated from a GE leadership program.


So there, you've got it!

One noticeable thing about the list is that Tech companies are making the rounds and doing big things while companies in the oil and gas sector are nowhere to be found.

Coca-Cola did not make the list too whilst their arch rival. Pepsi is sitting boldly on the chart.

The only Consumer Goods firm is Unilever and only one Healthcare firm made the list.

Another interpretation of this list is that ICT skills are becoming important daily, starting from the most basic like knowing how to efficiently operate the computer and using the Microsoft Word Packages to the seeming complex ones like programming and writing codes.

https://www.acegoals.com/linkedin-releases-top-companies-work-world/
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by fleps(m): 3:35pm On Jun 18, 2017
SO all, go get skilled in ICT today

lalasticlala

Seun
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by Beverages: 3:49pm On Jun 18, 2017
Good to know.
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by littlewonders: 3:52pm On Jun 18, 2017
Nice write up
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by littlewonders: 3:54pm On Jun 18, 2017
Nice write up. Many people will read this and still not understand it as a motivation.
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by fleps(m): 4:13pm On Jun 18, 2017
littlewonders:
Nice write up. Many people will read this and still not understand it as a motivation.

Exactly! That's the angle I'm shooting from. Get skilled especially in ICT before you gain admission, during your school years, during IT, whilst waiting for NYSC, during the long break...

My boss told me something.

He said the IT companies are soon going to breakforth destructively as Africa is almost ripe and all these oil and gas firms will not be seen as haven for the best pay.

There was a time Banks attracted great talents like mad, today, the reverse is almost the case.
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by Sirhethat12(f): 5:20pm On Jun 18, 2017
fleps:


Exactly! That's the angle I'm shooting from. Get skilled especially in ICT before you gain admission, during your school years, during IT, whilst waiting for NYSC, during the long break...

My boss told me something.

He said the IT companies are soon going to breakforth destructively as Africa is almost ripe and all these oil and gas firms will not be seen as haven for the best pay.

There was a time Banks attracted great talents like mad, today, the reverse is almost the case.

please which aspect of ICT is best for a chemical engineering undergraduate?
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by DonManuel01(m): 5:34pm On Jun 18, 2017
Please which IT skill is relevant to an Economics graduate? Or which skill would you rather recommend??
Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by fleps(m): 8:24am On Jun 19, 2017
Sirhethat12:


please which aspect of ICT is best for a chemical engineering undergraduate?

There is always one something for everyone in any field of study. Get close to final year course mates, ask. Meet digital inclined lecturers in your department.

1 Like

Re: Top Company To Work For In The World By Linkedin by Logansmith: 7:19am On Jan 06, 2022
Once the export is complete, you'll be able to analyze your contacts' behavior on LinkedIn and use the data to make better campaigns. Source to know more about Contact Intelligence - Lix.

(1) (Reply)

I Need A Job My Friendz Help Me. / How True Is This Offer...did Someone Get Same / Vfd Group Graduate Executive Management Trainee Program 2017

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 53
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.