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Desirable employers? Google and Apple, say young professionals

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Google has come out top in a survey looking at the attractiveness of US companies among prospective employees.

The US Professional Survey, conducted by employment data and consulting company Universum, interviewed 6,698 college graduates below 40 years of age who have had between one and eight years of professional work experience. Those involved in the survey were asked to choose between one and five companies from a list of 200, though they could also choose a company that wasn’t in the list.

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Almost 20 percent of the respondents cited Google as the company they would most like to work for, followed in second place by Apple (12.7 percent). Facebook was also a popular choice, with 8.9 percent of respondents choosing Mark Zuckerberg’s social networking giant as the ideal place to work. When the survey was first taken a year ago, Google was top of the tree then, too.

The top 100 included around 15 tech/web firms, with Amazon in 6th place, Microsoft in 8th and Sony in 9th.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Speaking to the Wall Street Journal, Universum’s Chris Cordery explained the results, saying that Google had “established a very strong brand in what its culture is, in what it’s like to work there.”

Cordery added that professionals “look at Google as compensating employees well.” Prospective employees believe working at the Mountain View company would be challenging, as well as fun, he said.

Firms in the financial services sector were deemed less desirable among respondents compared to a year ago, with Bank of America Merrill Lynch, for example, dropping from 48 in the list to 77.

In a similar study conducted recently by Universum looking at desirable companies among workers with a business or engineering background, Google again performed well, coming out top in both categories. Apple also made the top 10, taking the number 9 spot in the business category, and the number 7 spot in the engineering category.

Universum’s study was conducted between June and September of this year.

[Image: Tom Mc Nemar / Shutterstock]

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
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