News & Politics

Great Places to Work: More Great Workplaces

There is no association between this article and the San Francisco consulting firm that uses the trademark GREAT PLACES TO WORK ® 

Fortune magazine also publishes a list of great places to work, the 100 best in America. Winners with headquarters in the Washington area are: Arnold & Porter, Booz Allen Hamilton, Capital One, Marriott, Mitre, Network Appliance, SRA International, and Stanley.

Some of these firms are among The Washingtonian’s Great Places to Work, but some are not. Why do companies show up on one list and not another?

Fortune limits its competition to companies with more than 1,000 workers; The Washingtonian doesn’t. Small and midsize firms compete for our list, too. While small firms may not offer some of the benefits of large ones—such as on-site daycare and gyms—they usually receive higher scores for job satisfaction on employee surveys. The Washingtonian heavily weights employee satisfaction.

Other magazines run lists of best places to work using different criteria. Working Mother, which looks at such things as childcare and maternity leave, named these local firms as winners: Arnold & Porter, Capital One, Covington & Burling, Discovery Communications, Fannie Mae, Inova Health System, and Marriott.

One reason some of these companies aren’t on The Washingtonian’s list: Some didn’t participate in our contest. To limit the number of surveys employees get, some companies don’t participate in every “best places to work” competition—which employees might say makes them a great place to work.

Editor in chief

Sherri Dalphonse joined Washingtonian in 1986 as an editorial intern, and worked her way to the top of the masthead when she was named editor-in-chief in 2022. She oversees the magazine’s editorial staff, and guides the magazine’s stories and direction. She lives in DC.