Lists are wildly popular throughout the publishing world. Take the Fortune 500, which is highly influential in business. Others have a real impact on our daily lives—Money's Best Places to Live, U.S. News' Best Colleges list, and Consumer Reports' Best Cars list.
But what kind of list would hold import in engineering? How about the Top 100 Employers of Electronic Designers? After collecting reams of relevant data, we weighed various factors to determine the companies that have the most influence on today's engineering careers (see the table).
Of course, we're well aware that many of you work for startups and independent design houses that may be the source of the next big thing. We're also aware that the current state of design requires partnering, outsourcing, and boutique intellectual property.
Nonetheless, the Top 100 Employers continue to lead the way based on their established brands and sales channels, patent and IP portfolios, and substantial R&D budgets. Our research began with the Lexis-Nexis service and the Hoover's and Standard & Poor's databases. But unfortunately, these sources couldn't provide the latest information about smaller companies.
Also, finding reliable data about the few, large private companies in the industry proved challenging. Companies not based in the U.S., public agencies and research facilities, and subidiaries and divisions of non-U.S. companies presented some obstacles. And, subsidiaries of U.S. public companies often don't offer numbers separately from their parent corporations.
In the interest of data integrity, we narrowed the list down to U.S. public companies, where data would be available through 10-K SEC filings for both 2005 and 2006. We then chose specific data categories after evaluating what we could consistently compare within this public-company universe.
Design-influence dollars came from information generated by iSuppli, an applied market intelligence research firm that covers the entire supply chain for the electronics industry. These dollars reflect the level of semiconductor purchasing driven by electronic equipment design activities at a company. This is a key measure for two reasons. First, it shows the sheer number of designs made by a company. And more importantly, it reveals the level of success those designs achieved in terms of how much semiconductor purchasing they drove.
In addition, we incorporated employee feedback on certain questions from our 2006 ED Reader Profile Survey. This original, comprehensive survey included questions related to employee job satisfaction, including years at the company, number of promotions, and advancement potential (see electronicdesign.com/eesurvey).
LINE SCORE METHODOLOGY
Our methodology let us compare disparate company sizes and results for a quick, top-line view of how companies fared in the chosen data categories. Each category divided companies into segments, which allowed for a ranking between 1 and 10. These categories included:
- Employee growth percentage (2006 versus 2005)
- Sales growth percentage (2006 versus 2005)
- Operating profit growth percentage (2006 versus 2005)
- Operating profit margin improvement (2006 versus 2005)
- Long-term debt to stockholders equity ratio improvement (2006 versus 2005)
- 2006 total number of patents issued
- 2006 stock price closing as a percentage of 2006 stock price high
- R&D expense change percentage (2006 versus 2005)
- Design influence on semiconductor spending (dollars)
- Design influence on semiconductor spending percentage increase
These categories provided a good balance of financials, human resources, technology, stock market perception, and engineering. We then awarded a maximum 10-point bonus based on employee responses to questions on our 2006 Reader Profile Survey.
The total company line score is a sum of all category points plus any bonus points assigned. The maximum would be 110. Final company rank was based on total company line score. This approach focuses on company strengths while highlighting areas where companies can improve.