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Competitor Summary. See how Commonweal compares to its main competitors:

  • National Institutes of Health has the most employees (350).
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Commonweal vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1976
4.0
Bolinas, CA1$5.3M25
1887
4.5
Bethesda, MD1$28.0M350
1972
3.9
Washington, DC1$3.2M30
1977
4.4
Washington, DC1$63.6M304
1986
4.0
Chicago, IL1$6.0M26
Enterprise Community Partners
1982
4.5
Columbia, MD1$10.0M24
RLF Architecture
-
4.2
Orlando, FL1--
-
4.2
Lansing, MI1$19.0M337
The Partnership
1987
4.0
Boston, MA1$2.9M20
1991
4.1
Temecula, CA1$4.8M125
ACCESS Destination Services
1969
3.5
San Diego, CA1$5.0M20
1994
4.0
San Francisco, CA1$3.6M47
Common Sense Solutions
-
4.2
Lombard, IL1$25.5M20
1945
3.4
Saint Helena, CA1$270,00036
Society for Conservation Biology
1986
3.7
Washington, DC1$2.8M16
1960
3.9
Bloomfield, CT1$5.2M43
1884
3.3
Harrisburg, PA1$999,99925
1974
3.7
Brockton, MA1$3.5M35
1984
3.9
New York, NY1$5.4M50
2014
3.6
Hopkins, MN1$1.8M40
Sorge CPA
1990
3.5
Monona, WI3$1.6M17

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Commonweal salaries vs competitors

Compare Commonweal salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Commonweal
$51,731$24.87-

Compare Commonweal job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Commonweal
$55,319$26.60
Harrisburg Regional Chamber & CREDC
$73,955$35.56
LUZ
$71,627$34.44
ActionAid USA
$70,521$33.90
Pure Michigan
$68,582$32.97
Common Sense Solutions
$68,292$32.83
RLF Architecture
$66,554$32.00
BKA Architects
$66,472$31.96
Meristem Family Wealth
$64,432$30.98
Economic Development Coalition
$64,302$30.91
Enterprise Community Partners
$63,705$30.63
National Institutes of Health
$63,387$30.47
The Partnership
$63,169$30.37
Women's Business Development Center
$61,638$29.63
Finding
$61,486$29.56
Sorge CPA
$57,806$27.79
Abernathy MacGregor
$56,071$26.96
ZERO TO THREE
$54,941$26.41
ACCESS Destination Services
$44,720$21.50
Fidelco Guide Dog Foundation
$41,292$19.85

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Commonweal demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Commonweal vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
ZERO TO THREE29%71%
ActionAid USA45%55%
Harrisburg Regional Chamber & CREDC46%54%
Pure Michigan51%49%
Common Sense Solutions54%46%
Commonweal--
Male
Female

Compare race at Commonweal vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
Common Sense Solutions
63%16%9%8%4%
9.8
64%13%13%7%3%
7.6
50%15%19%10%5%
9.2
47%12%18%15%9%
9.1
62%12%10%12%4%
9.6
The Partnership
62%15%12%8%4%
9.7

Commonweal and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
Jim Steyer
Common Sense Solutions

Jim is one of the most respected experts and entrepreneurs on issues related to children, education, and media and technology in the United States. He is founder and chief executive officer of Common Sense, the nation's leading nonpartisan organization dedicated to improving the lives of kids and families by providing the trustworthy information, education, and impactful voice they need to thrive in the 21st century. Jim is also a nationally known author, having written the widely acclaimed book Talking Back to Facebook in 2012, as well as another highly successful book, The Other Parent: The Inside Story of the Media's Effect on Our Children in 2002. Prior to launching Common Sense, Jim was chairman and CEO of JP Kids, a leading educational kids' media company. Before that, he was the founder and president of Children Now, the highly respected national advocacy and media organization for children, which he founded in 1988. In addition, Jim co-founded the Center for the Next Generation with his younger brother Tom Steyer in 2012. Jim has long been an award-winning professor at Stanford University, where he has taught popular courses for more than 30 years. He is a consulting professor in the Stanford School of Education as well as the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, teaching a variety of courses on civil rights, civil liberties, and education issues. Among other honors, Jim has received the university's highest teaching honor, the Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching, which is awarded annually to three Stanford professors. He was also voted by the students to be Class Day speaker at Stanford's graduation exercises. Jim began his professional career as a law clerk for Justice Allen Broussard of the California Supreme Court. He then served as a civil rights attorney, working for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. There, he helped spearhead the Poverty and Justice Program, focused on developing national legal and legislative strategies on behalf of lower-income African Americans. In addition, while still in law school, Jim was a founder and original chairperson of the East Palo Alto Community Law Project. This nonprofit law office served for over 30 years as the primary source of legal services for lower-income families in East Palo Alto and has been the training ground for hundreds of students at Stanford Law School. Jim's long-standing commitment to disadvantaged children and to teaching began decades ago when he was a remedial reading tutor to at-risk kids in New York City public schools. Since then, he has taught reading and math to disadvantaged students in Harlem, East Palo Alto, and Oakland, California, and he spent more than 10 years as a volunteer teacher to second-, third-, and fifth-graders in East Oakland. In addition to his activities as an advocate, author, and teacher, Jim serves regularly as an expert commentator on many national TV and radio programs. He frequently appears on national television on shows and networks including The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Today Show, Good Morning America, Fresh Air, The CBS Morning Show, CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, and 2020. Jim grew up in New York City and went to college at Stanford University. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa and was awarded the Lindsey Peters Award for Outstanding Work in American Government. After two years of community development work in Asia, he returned to Stanford Law School, from which he received his J.D. in 1983. Jim lives in the Bay Area with his wife, Elizabeth, and their four children, Lily, Kirk, Caroline, and Jesse.

Tom Johnson is Chief Executive Officer of Abernathy MacGregor and head of its Mergers and Acquisitions practice. He works with companies across multiple sectors on a wide variety of topics, and has a particular expertise with M&A, private equity and closely held companies. His client experience includes work with a number of Fortune 100 companies and several of the world’s largest and best-known private companies on a wide variety of corporate communication and investor relations challenges, including reputation management, executive changes, activist investor preparedness and crisis response plans. His M&A expertise covers the full range of high-profile takeovers, cross-border acquisitions, contested merger situations and proxy contests. He is also an expert in media strategy, having spent more than a decade as a financial journalist prior to joining Abernathy. Mr. Johnson’s recent M&A advisory work includes working with Anthem on its acquisition of Cigna, Exor on its acquisition of PartnerRe, Coty on its acquisition of P&G’s beauty business, Office Depot on its merger with Staples, Sprint on its merger with Softbank and acquisition of Clearwire and Joh A. Benckiser on its acquisition of Peet’s Coffee & Tea and D.E. Master Blenders. Other transaction clients include Sanofi, Hewlett Packard, Alcatel SA, Carlyle Group, Blackstone Group and Starwood Capital. His proxy contest and activist defense experience includes advising CVR Energy, Office Depot, QEP Resources, Hewlett Packard, Sovereign Bancorp and Yahoo!. Prior to Abernathy MacGregor, Mr. Johnson was editor-in-charge of Investment Banking and Finance for Reuters, where he also ran the M&A and IPO desks. Earlier, he worked at CNN Financial News and at The Daily Record newspaper in Baltimore. He serves on the Board of Volunteers of America’s Greater New York Chapter.

Michael R. Olenick
ZERO TO THREE

Monique Rivas
LUZ

Cecd Quentin Messer
Pure Michigan

Quentin Messer is a Board Member at International Economic Development and Chief Executive Officer at Michigan Economic Development Corporation and is based in New Orleans, Louisiana. He works or has worked as Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) for Children at Capital Area CASA. Quentin L attended Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and Columbia University Center for Law & Economics.

Carol Fulp
The Partnership

Priscilla Almodovar
Enterprise Community Partners

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