Prøve GULL - Gratis
Dell Is NO.1
Newsweek US
|October 14, 2022
DESPITE ITS SIZE-SOME 130,000 EMPLOYEES AND $100 BILLION IN SALES-THE TEXAS TECH GIANT HAS MANAGED TO MAINTAIN ITS REP AS A Good Employer and Talent Magnet
IT'S BEEN A LONG TIME SINCE THE COMPANY now known as Dell Technologies was a glamorous youngster with a runaway share price, one of the marquee firms of the tech-boomy 1990s. The company went on to endure some humbling setbacks and resets as the tech market morphed well beyond the original PC revolution.
But it may be a surprise that Dell has not only evolved into a diversified tech giant-topping $100 billion in revenue last year generated from products and services ranging from computer hardware to data-center software-it also has maintained a reputation as an attractive employer and talent magnet.
After all, even the sexiest startups can descend into stultifying bureaucracies when they grow to the 130,000 head count that Dell has reached. Yet somehow the Round Rock, Texas, company has, in this mature phase of life, remained a great place to build, and extend, a career-so much so that it tops Newsweek's 2022 list of America's 100 Most Loved Workplaces.
It's tempting to explain this by simply pointing to the welter of employee-development programs and career tools the company has developed. (Among other examples, Dell was ahead of the curve on not just accommodating, but cultivating, remote talent.) But dig a little deeper-because what can sometimes sound like an everyone-gets-a-hug ethos, is actually grounded in a practice of mutual accountability.

Denne historien er fra October 14, 2022-utgaven av Newsweek US.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Newsweek US
Newsweek US
'THE PAPACY IS BIGGER THAN ONE INDIVIDUAL'
Bishop Joseph Strickland tells Newsweek that a pope is not beholden to any world leader or government's wishes
3 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
THE MAKING OF LEO XIV
WHEN POPE LEO XIV WAS ELED IN MAY 2025, many observers expected a quieter pontificate than his predecessor, Francis a scholar-administrator from Chicago, steeped in liturgical tradition, wearing the red mozzetta and moving into the Apostolic Palace.
12 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
Too Rich To Care
Eat the rich. Tax the rich. President Donald Trump? He wants to nominate the rich. Kevin Warsh, Trump's pick to become the next Federal Reserve chairman, could be the wealthiest central bank leader.
1 min
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
To Know the Enemy, Less and Less
The Art of War says to “know the enemy.”
1 min
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
HOT AND COLD WAR
The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has reshaped President Donald Trump's case for taking control of Greenland—and exposed widening cracks in the NATO alliance
6 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
'IRAN MAY BE THE CRISIS BUT INDIA IS THE OPPORTUNITY'
The war with Tehran is testing Washington's ties with New Delhi, putting strain on a strategic partnership the U.S. cannot afford to lose
4 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
REBELLION OR RENEWAL
As Nancy Pelosi prepares to leave Congress, Saikat Chakrabarti's insurgent campaign forces Democrats to confront deeper questions about power, purpose and leadership
7 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
WHAT AFRIKA BAMBAATAA DID
Tributes following the hip-hop pioneer's death have been brutally blunt amid necessary reflections about the final 10 years of his journey
4 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not
It's a tale as old as Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw, or Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor.
1 mins
May 01, 2026
Newsweek US
UNCOMMON KNOWLEDGE Magyar's Russia Issue
Péter Magyar's win in Hungary's election was cheered in Kyiv and European NATO capitals, which toasted the downfall of Viktor Orbán, seen as Vladimir Putin's man in Budapest.
1 mins
May 01, 2026
Translate
Change font size
