Headline
LinkedIn Releases 25 Best Places To Work In Nigeria

LinkedIn Releases 25 Best Places To Work In Nigeria
The world’s foremost professional network company, LinkedIn, has released its 2022 list of best places to work in Nigeria.
Tagged “Top companies 2022: The 25 best workplaces to grow your career in Nigeria”, the Nigerian companies that made it onto the list include companies in financial services, information technology, consumer goods, food and beverages, oil and gas, telecommunications, professional services and internet services.
Financial services companies in Nigeria dominated the list with the top four companies ranked being Access Bank, GTB, Stanbic IBTC and Zenith Bank, according to a statement.
Anheuser-Bush Inbev, ranked fifth on the list. Union Bank of Nigeria plc made the cut at number six, followed by Sterling Bank plc at number seven, while British American Tobacco (BAT) Nigeria, was ranked number eight.
First Bank of Nigeria was ranked number nine, while Fidelity Bank and Interswitch ranked number ten and eleven respectively, further demonstrating the dominance of financial services as the best sector to grow a career in Nigeria.
BREAKING: Zuckerberg Announces More Features To WhatsApp Platform
Other companies that featured in the ranking, according to the statement include the Coca-Cola Company, Standard Chartered Bank, Olam, United Bank of Africa, FCMB, Shell, Globacom, Fiverr, PwC, Amazon, MTN, Wema Bank, Nestle and Promasidor.
The 2022 LinkedIn Top Companies list in Nigeria is the first annual ranking of the 25 best workplaces to grow careers in the country based on unique LinkedIn data.
LinkedIn in the statement said, “These are companies offering stability in our ever-changing world of work – the ones that are not only attracting employees but retaining them”.
To compile this year’s rankings, LinkedIn said it considered “LinkedIn data across seven pillars, each revealing an important element of career progression: the ability to advance, skills growth, company stability, external opportunity, company affinity, gender diversity and spread of educational backgrounds”.
Companies that were eligible for the ranking included firms with at least 500 employees as of December 31, 2021, and an attrition rate no higher than 10% from January to December 2021. The methodology timeframe used was based on LinkedIn data.
Companies with layoffs of more than 10 percent of their workforce during that time, based on public announcements, were not considered in the ranking, the statement further said.
More so, only parent companies ranked on the list. “Majority-owned subsidiaries and data about those subsidiaries are incorporated into the parent company score. All data counts are normalised based on company size across the pool of companies eligible for the list,” said LinkedIn about the report’s methodology.
-
Headline1 week ago
Tinubu Replaces NNPC Board, Appoints New CEO, Chairman
-
Headline1 week ago
Defying Constitution, Trump Claims Supporters Want Him for a Third Term
-
Headline6 days ago
VP Shettima: Nigeria’s Tax Challenges Rooted in Hidden Wealth Epidemic
-
Entertainment1 week ago
Jemima Osunde Dismisses Claims of Cosmetic Surgery, Questions Accuser’s Identity
-
Headline1 week ago
FIFA: Super Eagles Rise Up One Spot In Latest Ranking
-
Headline6 days ago
BREAKING: Oba Abimbola Owoade Crowned 46th Alaafin of Oyo Amid Grand Ceremony
-
Headline1 week ago
Trump’s Tariffs: Nigeria Faces 14% Levy, Global Trade Impact Looms
-
Headline1 week ago
BREAKING: Edo Tribunal Dismisses Action Alliance’s Election Petition Against Governor Okpebholo
-
Headline7 days ago
Labour Party Affirms Abure’s Leadership, Disagrees with Supreme Court Interpretation
-
Headline4 days ago
Edo Assembly Ousts Mercy Omoigui, Alleged Tuface’s Lover, Natasha Osawaru from Minority Whip Position