The 2008 DiversityInc Top 10 Companies for Recruitment & Retention
The Top 10 Companies for Recruitment & Retention have a heads up on the rest of corporate Consider these points of comparison:
* Source: Equal Employment Here's the list and a key factor about why each company was named: No. 1: JPMorgan Chase, No. 13 on The 2008 DiversityInc Top 50 Companies for Diversity® list. Also No. 8 on The Top 10 Companies for Executive Women. No. 2: Verizon Communications, No. 1 on the Top 50. Also No. 2 on The Top 10 Companies for Latinos. The No. 1 company on the Top 50 for the second time in two years, Verizon relies on its strong employee-resource groups as essential to its recruitment and retention efforts. That pays off--39 percent of its managers were Black, Asian, Latino and Native American, compared with a national average of 17 percent (EEOC). This company, which is very strong overall for diversity, links up to 25 percent of executive bonuses to diversity performance. This pays off in its demographics, especially for management. Fifty percent of its work force was Black, Asian, Latino and Native American. Sixty percent of its work force and 48 percent of those promoted in management were women. No. 4: Wachovia, No. 14 on the Top 50. Also No. 9 on The Top 10 Companies for African Americans, No. 9 on The Top 10 Companies for Executive Women and No. 3 on The Top 10 Companies for LGBT Employees. An outstanding 81 percent of those promoted in management were Black, Asian, Latino and Native American, and 51 percent of new hires were from those groups. Wachovia's performance in this area, especially because it is in the financial-service industry, is remarkable. No. 5: Bank of An innovator in work/life programs and a model of unbiased retention, Bank of America reports that 50 percent of managers promoted were women. Fifty-five percent of new hires were Black, Asian, Latino and Native American. No. 6: American Express, No. 10 on the Top 50. Also No. 3 on The Top 10 Companies for Latinos and No. 2 on The Top 10 Companies for Executive Women.
No. 7: Macy's, No. 39 on the Top 50. Also No. 6 on The Top 10 Companies for African Americans. Macy's, which has an excellent mentoring program, with 33 percent of its managers enrolled, reports that 49 percent of its work force and 54 percent of new hires were Black, Asian, Latino and Native American. No. 8: The Coca-Cola Co., No. 2 on the Top 50. Also No. 6 on The Top 10 Companies for Executive Women. This first-rate diversity company puts strong emphasis on employee engagement and on developing a pipeline of talented people from all groups. Thirty-three percent of its managers and 20 percent of its most senior managers were Black, Asian, Latino and Native American. Forty percent of managers promoted were from those groups. No. 9: Wells Fargo & Co., No. 26 on the Top 50. Also No. 4 on The Top 10 Companies for Latinos and No. 3 on The Top 10 Companies for Executive Women. With innovative work/life programs, Wells Fargo is especially strong in retention and promotion of women. Sixty percent of its work force and 54 percent of managers promoted were women. Known for its talent development, the accounting giant has senior management (direct reports to the CEO) that was 22 percent Black, Asian, Latino and Native American. All of its managers participate in its mentoring program, compared with a Top 50 average of 35 percent.
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