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General Dynamics Mission Systems main competitors are Texas Instruments, Fujitsu, and Kulicke & Soffa.

Competitor Summary. See how General Dynamics Mission Systems compares to its main competitors:

  • General Electric has the most employees (305,000).
  • Employees at Texas Instruments earn more than most of the competitors, with an average yearly salary of $100,326.
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General Dynamics Mission Systems vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1999
4.9
Fairfax, VA1$2.3B13,000
1911
4.7
Armonk, NY71$62.8B270,000
2018
4.7
West Palm Beach, FL9$2.4B50,000
1892
4.8
Boston, MA39$68.0B305,000
1884
4.3
Atlanta, GA26$2.8B36,000
1939
4.7
Falls Church, VA38$41.0B97,000
1930
4.6
Dallas, TX15$15.6B29,888
1960
4.5
Thousand Oaks, CA4$5.7B10,850
SLM Technologies
2014
3.7
Tampa, FL1-6
1994
4.5
McLean, VA1-376
1972
4.5
Chantilly, VA1$300.0M1,319
1958
4.6
McLean, VA40$1.8B8,425
1951
4.5
Willow Grove, PA11$706.2M2,469
2008
4.7
Sunnyvale, CA8$3.6B10,001
1981
4.4
Atlanta, GA1$25.3M125
1981
4.5
Andover, MA19$835.3M2,400
1992
4.6
Houston, TX3$150.0M850
-
4.2
Fair Lakes, VA1$49.9M780
1974
4.7
Huntsville, AL9$293.0M1,900
1999
4.7
Arlington, VA27$11.4B35,000
1969
4.4
Reston, VA28$7.4B25,500

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General Dynamics Mission Systems salaries vs competitors

Among General Dynamics Mission Systems competitors, employees at Texas Instruments earn the most with an average yearly salary of $100,326.

Compare General Dynamics Mission Systems salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
General Dynamics Mission Systems
$80,674$38.79-
IBM
$86,845$41.75-
Collins Aerospace
$85,837$41.27-
General Electric
$86,183$41.43-
NCR
$70,396$33.84-
Northrop Grumman
$77,399$37.21-

Compare General Dynamics Mission Systems job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
General Dynamics Mission Systems
$97,241$46.75
IBM
$134,367$64.60
Texas Instruments
$133,970$64.41
Fujitsu
$115,855$55.70
Collins Aerospace
$109,564$52.68
General Electric
$95,297$45.82
Kulicke & Soffa
$94,410$45.39
SLM Technologies
$86,595$41.63
Northrop Grumman
$85,880$41.29
MITRE
$77,573$37.29
NCR
$76,540$36.80
Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
$76,534$36.80
SAIC
$75,493$36.29
Mercury Systems
$71,116$34.19
Wireless Facilities, Inc. (WFI)
$70,278$33.79
BAE Systems
$68,675$33.02
Nortel Government Solutions
$64,924$31.21
EOIR Technologies
$64,360$30.94
MEI Technologies
$64,146$30.84
Dynetics
$59,409$28.56

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General Dynamics Mission Systems demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at General Dynamics Mission Systems vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
NCR66%34%
IBM68%32%
General Dynamics Mission Systems70%30%
General Electric71%29%
Northrop Grumman71%29%
Mercury Systems74%26%

Compare race at General Dynamics Mission Systems vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
60%13%13%10%4%
9.9
59%14%11%11%4%
9.9
55%13%11%16%5%
9.9
65%12%9%11%3%
9.8
58%13%16%10%4%
9.9
57%15%15%9%4%
9.9

General Dynamics Mission Systems and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
H. Lawrence Culp
General Electric

Arvind Krishna
IBM

Arvind Krishna (born 1962) is an Indian-American business executive serving as Chairman and CEO of IBM. He has been the CEO of IBM since April 2020 and took on the role of Chairman & CEO in January 2021. Krishna began his career at IBM in 1990, at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center, and was promoted to Senior Vice President in 2015, managing IBM Cloud & Cognitive Software and IBM Research divisions. He was a principal architect of the acquisition of Red Hat, the largest acquisition in the Company’s history.

Mark Aslett
Mercury Systems

MARK ASLETT is a CEO at MERCURY SYSTEMS INC. He has worked as CEO at Enterasys Networks Inc, President NA at Ericsson, and Managing Partner at Wedgemere Partners. MARK attended Harvard Business School between 1995 and 1997 and UNIVERSITY OF SUNDERLAND between 1987 and 1991.

Michael Dale Hayford
NCR

Mike served as Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Executive Vice President of FIS, Fortune 500’s #1 financial technology company, from 2009 until 2013. As the President and Chief Operating Officer of Metavante Technologies, Inc., Mike led the successful completion of Metavante’s merger with FIS to create the world’s largest financial technology company. Mike was instrumental in building Metavante from a $93 million annual revenue company into the global leader of financial technology with over $6 billion of annual revenue. Previously, he served as Metavante’s CIO, CFO, head of product development, and head of corporate development, and he led the company’s successful carve-out from a bank holding company and IPO in 2007. During his tenure, Mike led a significant number of acquisitions, public offerings for equity sales and debt raising, and led teams to innovate and build technology. Mike is a Director of Endurance International Group Holdings, Inc. and has served on the Board of West Bend Mutual Insurance Company, for which he chairs the Audit Committee. Mike is a Certified Public Accountant and holds a Master Degree in Business Administration from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Business and a B.S. in Accounting and Computer Science from the University of Wisconsin.

Kathy J. Warden
Northrop Grumman

Kathy J. Warden is an American business executive who serves as chief executive officer and president of Northrop Grumman, as of 2019.

Robert Ortberg
Rockwell Collins

Nazzic S. Keene
SAIC

Richard K. Templeton
Texas Instruments

Richard K. Templeton is an American electrical engineer and business executive. He is chairman and chief executive officer of Texas Instruments.

Thomas A. Arseneault
BAE Systems

Tom Arseneault is president and CEO of BAE Systems, Inc., the company’s U.S.-based, international defense, aerospace, and security company with more than 35,000 employees and major operations in the U.S., UK, and Sweden. Ranking among the top 10 prime contractors to the U.S. Department of Defense, the company generated sales revenues of nearly $11.5 billion in 2019, delivering a full range of products and services across a broad and diverse portfolio for air, land and naval forces, as well as advanced electronics, commercial avionics, security, IT solutions and support services. Arseneault is also an executive director on the BAE Systems plc Board of Directors, a member of the company’s Executive Committee, and an officer director on the BAE Systems, Inc. Board of Directors. Throughout his career, Arseneault has led complex organizations responsible for fulfilling critical and technologically challenging missions. Recently he served as president and COO for the organization and was integral to its return to profitable growth. Previously, he was president of the company’s Electronic Systems Sector, responsible for operations spanning the commercial and defense electronics markets, and its extensive portfolio of mission critical electronic systems. He also served as executive vice president of BAE Systems’ Product Sectors, responsible for articulating and executing a vision that drove optimal business performance across the Electronic Systems and legacy Land & Armaments businesses. Prior to his senior leadership appointments, Arseneault managed various organizations and programs for Sanders, a Lockheed Martin Company, and he remained with the unit when it was acquired by BAE Systems in 2000. Earlier in his career, he held a variety of engineering and program management positions with General Electric and TASC. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees in electrical engineering from Worcester Polytechnic Institute and an MBA from Boston University.

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