The Jerusalem Post

What are Israel’s best hi-tech companies to work for?

- • By EYTAN HALON

If you happen to work at Google Israel, you are likely to be a satisfied employee.

For the third year running, the company has held on to the top spot in Dun & Bradstreet’s annual report of the 50 best hi-tech companies to work for in the country.

Fellow technology giants Facebook Israel and Microsoft were ranked second and third respective­ly in the report, with Microsoft rising considerab­ly from its 13th-place ranking last year. Amazon Israel was also a notable climber, rising from 33th place to 22nd place this year.

Dun & Bradstreet, a company providing commercial data and analytics for businesses, based its report on a range of company factors including working conditions and benefits, career developmen­t, employment stability and workplace wellness.

A total of 64% of the companies in the list were Israeli companies rather than foreign employers, including Wix (5th), SimilarWeb (7th) and CyberArk (10th). Approximat­ely 300,000 or 8% of Israelis are employed today in the country’s hi-tech sector, with 70% of those employees working in Dun & Bradstreet’s top 50 ranked businesses.

Companies featured on the list are active in a range of hi-tech fields, ranging from cybersecur­ity and fintech to gaming and semiconduc­tor production.

“The complex reality of an industry based on human capital has led companies to understand that every employee is important, and if there are talented population groups that aren’t represente­d in these companies, it is solely the companies’ responsibi­lity to make themselves relevant,” according to Efrat Segev, deputy director of business developmen­t at Dun & Bradstreet Israel.

“This process is characteri­zed by continuous thinking about how to assist the recruitmen­t and retention of workers from different population groups and sectors... such as providing specially-designed benefits for parents and inclusion programs – based on the understand­ing that an employee who feels comfortabl­e at work will be inclined to recommend to other talented individual­s to join the company,” he said.

 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ?? A DOOR at Google’s Tel Aviv office features the company’s old logo.
(Baz Ratner/Reuters) A DOOR at Google’s Tel Aviv office features the company’s old logo.

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