Finding the Best Place to Work: A Look at Careers at More Than 1,700 Companies
A new analysis identifies the workplaces that provide the best earnings potential and professional growth—overall and for your specific job
Where You Work Matters More Than You Think — And Now There's Data to Prove It
Your career isn't just shaped by your talent, your hustle, or your degree. It's shaped by the company you choose to work for.
That might sound like an obvious statement, but for most people navigating the job market, finding a truly great employer has always felt like a guessing game. Word of mouth from a friend. A few reviews on Glassdoor. A gut feeling after an interview. For decades, that's largely been the toolkit available to job seekers — and honestly, it hasn't been enough.
But a major new analysis is changing that. And if you're someone who wants more from your career — more growth, more stability, more opportunity — this is the research you've been waiting for.
The Research That's Rewriting the Rules
The Where You Work Matters List, produced by the Burning Glass Institute and the Schultz Family Foundation, is one of the most comprehensive career studies ever conducted. Researchers tracked the job titles and career moves of more than 12 million people working at over 1,700 U.S. companies and nonprofits between 2019 and 2024, pulling data from LinkedIn, Indeed, Glassdoor, and dozens of other sources.
They weren't just asking "Is this a nice place to work?" They were asking something far more powerful: Does this company actually move people forward?
Three things were measured — early-career opportunity, career growth, and job stability, including pay. The top 20% of companies in each category earned a Platinum designation. The next 20% received Gold.
Only 22 companies earned Platinum across all three categories. Names like General Motors, Mayo Clinic, Fidelity Investments, Lockheed Martin, Procter & Gamble, and HubSpot made the cut.
Matt Sigelman, president of the Burning Glass Institute, described the list perfectly: "My hope is that this can be a nutrition label for workers — that it can give them more agency for making better-informed decisions that are of tremendous consequence to them."
A nutrition label for your career. Think about that for a second. You read labels before you eat. Why wouldn't you do the same before committing years of your life to an employer?
The Numbers Don't Lie
Here's where things get truly eye-opening. Working at a top-rated company isn't just a feel-good advantage — it translates into concrete, measurable outcomes that compound over time.
Take software engineers. Those at top-rated companies earn a median salary of $164,182 — that's 51% more than peers at unranked companies. They're 102% more likely to be promoted within five years, 27% more likely to stay at least three years, and 45% more likely to land a better job when they eventually move on.
For registered nurses, the picture is just as striking. Top-company nurses earn $97,258 — 31% more than those elsewhere — and are 43% more likely to be promoted within five years.
Even food and beverage workers see a massive difference. Employees at top-rated companies in this sector earn $37,422 — 32% more than those at unranked employers — and are a staggering 377% more likely to be promoted within five years.
That last number deserves a moment of pause. Not 37%. Not 77%. Three hundred and seventy-seven percent. The employer you choose can be the single biggest variable in whether your career climbs or stagnates.
The Best Employer Might Surprise You
One of the most fascinating revelations in this research is that the best place to work for your specific role might not be the most obvious one.
Financial and investment analysts, for instance, might assume that Wall Street firms or big banks are the ultimate destination. But the data says otherwise — more tech companies than financial firms earned top marks for analyst careers. Companies like Bath & Body Works, Nike, and Verizon Communications also ranked highly for those roles. Would you have guessed that?
Data scientists face a similar surprise. While Microsoft and Amazon are iconic names in tech, they made up less than a quarter of the top-rated employers for data science talent. Finance and insurance companies — including Capital One and Citadel Securities — ranked just as high. And Walmart and Domino's Pizza? They made the list too.
The takeaway is powerful: stop limiting your job search to the obvious names in your industry. The company that will accelerate your career the most might be somewhere you've never thought to look.
What Great Companies Actually Do Differently
The companies earning top marks aren't there by accident. They've built deliberate systems to help people grow — and their strategies offer lessons for every job seeker in knowing what to look for.
Chipotle Mexican Grill, which earned Gold overall and Platinum for early-career roles, has developed a clear six-step promotion path that can take a restaurant line worker all the way to a management role earning over $100,000 in annual cash and equity — in roughly three and a half years. They also offer tuition reimbursement available within about four months of hire, and employees who use those education programs stay longer and advance faster.
"One of the things we are most proud of as a company is the level of opportunity we offer employees for career growth," said Ilene Eskenazi, Chipotle's head of human resources and legal. That pride is backed up by real data.
Newell Brands — maker of Rubbermaid and Yankee Candle — didn't earn a top overall ranking, but three-quarters of its job categories scored highly for career growth. Their secret? They actively search their internal talent pool for potential promotions, even reaching out to employees who haven't applied for open roles.
"We used to have a post-and-pray model," said Bill Huffaker, Newell's senior VP for talent development. "Now, we go after passive candidates."
That shift — from treating employees as replaceable to treating them as assets worth developing — is what separates the companies on this list from the rest.
Your Career Is a Mountain. Choose the Right Trail.
Rajiv Chandrasekaran of the Schultz Family Foundation offered what might be the most memorable framing of all: "Having mobility strength is like having done the physical training and having the whole canteen of water as you hike up that mountain."
The mountain is your career. You're going to climb it regardless. The question is whether you'll be well-equipped and supported — or whether you'll be scrambling uphill without resources, without a map, and without anyone pointing out the best path.
In a job market rattled by layoffs, hiring freezes, and the looming uncertainty of artificial intelligence and automation, the stakes have never been higher. Job insecurity that once seemed limited to hourly workers now casts a shadow over white-collar professions too. Nobody is immune.
But here's the motivating truth in all of this: you have more power than you think. The research exists. The data is there. The companies that genuinely invest in the people they hire — that promote from within, that pay fairly, that build careers rather than just fill seats — can be identified and sought out.
What You Should Do Next
Before your next job application, ask yourself:
- Does this company have a track record of promoting people from within?
- Are there clear growth pathways in my specific role?
- What do employees say about career development, not just perks?
- Have I considered industries outside my own for this type of role?
The days of flying blind in your job search are over. Use the data. Seek out companies that treat your career as an investment, not a transaction. Because where you work doesn't just determine your paycheck — it shapes the entire trajectory of your professional life.
Your next move could change everything. Make it count.
