Startups
5 Ways You Can Avoid Micromanaging Employees
November 17, 2022
October 7, 2021
Adobe was named the No. 1 company with the happiest employees in 2021, according to a new report from the company review site Comparably.
The annual ranking considers 70,000 U.S. companies and identifies where workers are most satisfied with aspects related to their work environment, pay, benefits and company goals.
Here are the top 10 large companies, with 500 or more people, who have the happiest employees this year:
CEO: Shantanu Narayen
Headquarters: San Jose, California
CEO: Vladimir Shmunis
Headquarters: Belmont, California
CEO: Brian Halligan
Headquarters: Cambridge, Massachusetts
CEO: John Foley
Headquarters: New York
CEO: Satya Nadella
Headquarters: Redmond, Washington
CEO: Jeff Dailey
Headquarters: Woodland Hills, California
CEO: Arvind Krishna
Headquarters: Armonk, New York
CEO: Leslie Stretch
Headquarters: San Francisco
CEO: Eric Yuan
Headquarters: San Jose, California
CEO: Craig Boundy
Headquarters: Costa Mesa, California
Rankings are based on anonymous employee ratings on topics that contribute to overall happiness at work, which were submitted to Comparably over a 12-month period from September 2020 to September 2021. Some questions that guide the data analysis include:
Adobe’s No. 1 ranking dethrones Zoom’s two-year run of having the happiest employees in 2019 and 2020, and the videoconferencing company fell to ninth place this year. But Comparably CEO Jason Nazar says the different scores among the top 10 companies are negligible and based on tens of thousands of data points — he likens it to scoring a 99 on a test out of 100.
What stands out about Adobe’s reviews, Nazar says, is the positive feedback from multiple departments, including product, marketing, design, sales and engineering employees who rate the company highly across factors that indicate a rewarding culture and supportive environment.
Gloria Chen, Adobe’s chief people officer, says the company measured employee sentiment throughout the pandemic through surveys, company all-hands meetings and focus groups to better understand the challenges of working through Covid, and propose solutions to meet changing needs.
In response to feedback, the company introduced monthly companywide days off; 20 new paid days off each year for employees “directly impacted by significant events like pandemics or natural disasters;” flexible work schedules to accommodate caregiving responsibilities; and an increase of its wellness reimbursement to $600 per year.
The company has prioritized building community and staying connected while apart, Chen says, such as through a biweekly “coffee break” series and its annual diversity and inclusion event. “We’re fortunate to have genuine employees who are invested in our culture and community, and many of our best initiatives are those that are driven by employees themselves,” Chen says.
After the risks of the pandemic subside, “the default work arrangement for all employees will be flexible,” Chen says, “meaning Adobe employees will have the option to work from home when it makes sense for them, their team and the business.” She says employees “co-created” Adobe’s future work model through a series of global surveys, focus groups, workshops and working sessions.
Currently, some Adobe offices are open at limited capacity with employees back in-person on a voluntary basis.
SOURCE: CNBC
IMAGE SOURCE: PIXABAY