The best places for women to work are mainly in tech

Women at work
Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko from Pexels

Six of the 10 best companies for women to work at in the U.S. right now are in the technology sector, a new survey from Comparably shows.

IBM was listed as the top large company for women to work at this year, according to Comparably, a platform where workers review employers. Comparably compiled its list from ratings made by female users between November 2020 and November 2021. The next highest-ranking tech company was Adobe in third place; HubSpot in fourth; Medallia in fifth; Microsoft in ninth; and The Knot in 10th.RingCentral topped a separate list by Comparably that ranked companies with diversity in mind. Adobe and IBM rounded out the top three.

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Workers of all backgrounds and identities have faced numerous hurdles while working during the pandemic, and a brunt of those complications are falling on women. School closures and difficulty finding child care have contributed to the strain on working mothers, and women of all races and ethnicities have not reentered the workforce at the same rates as other groups.

The numbers are starkest for Black and Latinx women, who tend to work in healthcare, hospitality and education — and often in jobs where remote work is difficult or impossible.

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For companies, the pressure is on to keep existing workers happy and appeal to prospective ones. Workers are quitting their jobs at increased rates across the country in a phenomenon known as the “Great Resignation.” Job openings in the U.S. jumped in October to the second-highest on record.

Some in the technology industry are taking action. Salesforce.com was among the companies that amended and extended its work-from-home policies, and a cohort of 190 companies including Spotify and Pinterest have lobbied Congress to pass paid family and medical leave policies.

While tech companies often tout their commitment to diversity and inclusion, some say they still have a long way to go.

Bloomberg News
HR Technology Diversity and equality
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