Flexible work arrangements at the 2011 Working Mother 100 Best Companies are themselves flexible, giving employees the power to create their own workday and workplace, even their own flexible career path. "The Working Mother 100 Best Companies allow employees to flex their day, their week, their year and their career," said Carol Evans, President of Working Mother Media. "And these companies are benefitting in so many ways. Not only do they enhance loyalty and dedication among their employees with children, but their entire workforce has a high level of readiness and adaptability when disasters strike."
The Working Mother 100 Best Companies are judged on answers to 650 questions, including data on the access and usage of flexible work arrangements, parental leave, childcare, health and wellness support and the advancement of women to all levels of management. The top ten scoring companies, which receive special recognition for scoring the highest on the application, are Bank of America, Deloitte, Discovery Communications, Ernst & Young, General Mills, KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Prudential Financial, TriHealth and WellStar.
Jennifer Owens, Editorial Director of Working Mother said, "The reason flexibility is so important to working moms is that they want to do their best at home and in the office. Flexible work arrangements allow moms both. The Working Mother Best Companies want to win the war for talent and productivity— especially in a down economy—and they have figured out how to make flex work.”
Some of the creative and advanced flexible work arrangements offered by the Working Mother 100 Best Companies include:
- Flex coupons that allow workers to take paid time off in increments as short as two hours, rather than forcing parents to take a full day off for an after-school doctor’s visit
- The ability to shift start and stop times to fit commuting, child-care and eldercare schedules
- Compressed workweeks that give workers longer weekends to attend to life and family needs
- Job sharing to split an all-consuming workload between two colleagues looking for more time for their kids or aging parents
- On- and off-ramp programs that let staffers take long breaks away from work to bond with a baby or go back to school while still maintaining professional connections, skills and even certifications for when they’re ready to return
- Automatic phase-back programs that allow new moms to transition back to work on a temporary part-time schedule
- Options for employees to speed or slow their advancement without penalty to help them better balance work and home responsibilities
Companies that have been on the Working Mother list the longest include IBM and Johnson & Johnson, which have both been honored all 26 years, as well as American Express (21 years), Citi (21 years), DuPont (23 years), Marriott International (20 years), Merck (25 years) and Procter & Gamble (23 years). Two companies, Ernst & Young and KPMG, also joined the prestigious Working Mother Hall of Fame in 2011 after earning a place on the Working Mother 100 Best Companies for 15 years.
THE 2011 WORKING MOTHER 100 BEST COMPANIES
Bold Font Indicates a Top 10 winning company
+ Indicates Hall of Fame winner
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