Wegmans Listed #5 Best Place to Work in the USA
By: Lou Baxter
Updated: January 16, 2013
Wegmans has appeared on the FORTUNE list every year since the list was first published in 1998, and has been ranked among the top 10 for 11 consecutive years. Wegmans is one of only 13 companies that have been on this list since it began in 1998.
"Our employees are the number one reason our customers shop at Wegmans," says CEO Danny Wegman. "I'm convinced there is only one path to great customer service, and that is through employees who feel they are cared about and empowered."
Jobs at
Wegmans
In 2013, Wegmans will be hiring for new stores
it will open in Germantown, MD (September) and Montgomeryville, PA (November),
and for a store to open in Newton, MA early in 2014. In combination, the three
new stores will employ approximately 1,500 people. There are also positions
available at Wegmans' existing stores and in manufacturing, distribution, and
corporate. Interested candidates should visit wegmans.com and click on careers.
Celebration at
Wegmans
Customers and employees will celebrate the
honor on Saturday,
January 19, when cake will be served at every Wegmans store at a time
selected by individual stores. Stores will announce the
time when cake will be served on signs posted in entryways.
Methodology:
To pick the 100 Best Companies to Work For, Fortune partners
with the Great Place to Work Institute to conduct the most extensive employee
survey in corporate America: 259 firms participated in this year's survey. More
than 277,000 employees at those companies responded to a survey created by the
institute, a global research and consulting firm operating in 45 countries
around the world. Two-thirds of a company's score is based on the results of the
institute's Trust Index survey, which is sent to a random sample of employees
from each company. The survey asks questions related to their attitudes about
management's credibility, job satisfaction, and camaraderie. The other third is
based on responses to the institute's Culture Audit, which includes detailed
questions about pay and benefit programs and a series of open-ended questions
about hiring practices, methods of internal communication, training, recognition
programs, and diversity efforts. After evaluations are completed, if news about
a company comes to light that may significantly damage employees' faith in
management, we may exclude it from the list. Any company that is at least five
years old and has more than 1,000 U.S. employees is
eligible.



