- Nvidia ranked No. 1 in the WSJ’s inaugural Best Companies for the Future list, followed by Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta Platforms, and Cisco Systems in the top five.
- The ranking scores S&P 500 companies on 30 metrics across six categories: AI readiness, innovation, talent readiness, financial fitness, supply-chain resilience, and corporate agility.
- Tech companies account for roughly a third of the top 100 spots, though non-tech names including Mastercard (No. 7), S&P Global (No. 13), and Eli Lilly (No. 22) also cracked the top 25.
- Apple ranked No. 12 overall but scored just No. 56 on AI readiness — the weakest of the Magnificent Seven — partly due to its historically limited public disclosures on AI strategy and investment.
What Happened?
The Wall Street Journal, in collaboration with Bendable Labs and the WSJ Leadership Institute, released its inaugural Best Companies for the Future ranking of S&P 500 companies. Nvidia claimed the top spot, placing first or second in five of the ranking’s six main components. The full top five: Nvidia, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta Platforms, and Cisco Systems. Companies were scored on 30 metrics from 20 data providers covering AI readiness, innovation, talent readiness, financial fitness, supply-chain resilience, and corporate agility. Standout non-tech companies in the top 25 included Mastercard (No. 7), S&P Global (No. 13), Visa (No. 15), Johnson & Johnson (No. 20), and Eli Lilly (No. 22).
Why It Matters?
The ranking offers investors and managers a structured way to compare how well large companies are positioned for an AI-driven economy — rewarding not just current profitability but long-term durability. The heavy tech dominance at the top underscores how AI is reshaping competitive advantage across industries. Notably, size correlates with stronger scores but doesn’t guarantee them: Broadcom, far larger than AMD, ranked just No. 110, weighed down by weaker talent and AI readiness scores. Apple’s relatively low AI readiness rank likely reflects its tight-lipped disclosure practices more than poor AI investment, Bendable Labs noted — companies that disclose little tend to score lower even if meaningful work is underway.
What’s Next?
The ranking is designed as an annual diagnostic tool, allowing year-over-year comparisons as companies navigate AI and geopolitical shifts. WSJ Leadership Institute members can access a competitive intelligence tool at wsj.com/bestcompanies to benchmark their own companies. Historical data suggests companies that score well on early AI adoption measures tend to maintain that edge — making the ranking a potential leading indicator for long-term performance.
Source: The Wall Street Journal











