Which Industry’s Companies Earn The Most Profit Per Worker?

Tipalti examined data from the Fortune Global 500 and found some interesting gaps between industries. The analysis shows that companies built around digital products bring in far more money per worker than labour heavy sectors.

Industry structure shapes how much each worker adds to profit. Companies that rely on data or lighter assets can run smaller teams and still grow profit. Labour heavy work needs large teams, which limits how far profit per worker can come up.

 

Top sectors ranked by profit per employee

Media, social platforms, marketing: $22,167
Construction and air conditioning: $13,799
Robots, sensors and IT hardware: $11,024
Healthcare, drugs and biotechnology: $7,171
Financial and insurance services: $6,873
Consumer products: $5,123
IT infrastructure and hosting: $4,723
Energy, raw materials and utilities: $4,208
Food and beverages: $2,723
Business processes and support services: $2,648

The list shows how far ahead media and marketing companies sit. Tipalti says these firms use advertising and scalable digital tools that help them raise returns without bringing in large teams. Construction and air conditioning come next at $13,799 per worker. Tipalti links this to strong post pandemic demand and better materials that have made work quicker.

The first technology heavy sector appears in third place. Robots, sensors and IT hardware earn $11,024 per worker and run on long standing investment in automation and advanced equipment.

 

Which Companies Earn The Most Money From Each Worker?

 

Tipalti also ranked the companies with the highest profit per worker. The numbers show huge gaps between the average Fortune Global 500 company and top earners. Tipalti says the average sits near $77,000 per employee, while leaders reach more than 25 times that figure.

 

 

Top companies ranked by profit per employee

Fannie Mae: $2,070,488
Nvidia: $2,024,444
Freddie Mac: $1,465,760
Saudi Aramco: $1,397,565
Meta Platforms: $841,940
ConocoPhillips: $783,475
Enterprise Products Partners: $756,538
PDD Holdings: $665,945
Visa: $624,778
Netflix: $622,257

Fannie Mae leads the table with $2.07 million per worker. The firm earned nearly $17 billion across 8,200 employees. Tipalti links this to lower operating costs and a model that brings in profit once its systems are built. Nvidia follows at just over $2 million per employee. Tipalti notes its large gains came from demand for its data centre products and Hopper GPU line. Freddie Mac takes third with nearly $1.5 million per worker.

 

Are Smaller Companies Keeping Up?

 

Tipalti also looked at companies with under 4,500 staff. The data shows that smaller teams can still earn strong profit per worker and match or pass larger firms.

 

Top smaller teams ranked by profit per employee:

St. James’s Place: $152,669
Hangzhou Industrial Investment Group: $92,618
StoneX Group: $57,956
GS Caltex: $24,961
Plains GP Holdings: $24,524

These firms bring in less total profit but often earn more per worker than much larger groups. St. James’s Place brings in $152,669 per employee. GS Caltex earns nearly $25,000 per worker from a team of just over 3,200 employees.

 

Is AI Changing How Much Companies Earn Per Worker?

 

Tipalti compared AI investment with profit per employee and found that high spending links closely to strong returns in only a few areas. Media and marketing show the clearest connection, as they place first for both AI investment and profit per worker.

IT infrastructure and hosting spends heavily on AI but ranks lower for profit due to high early costs. Healthcare and biotechnology also show high investment, though long testing and regulatory checks slow gains. Construction and air conditioning place lower for AI but reach second place for profit per worker, while robots, sensors and IT hardware sit mid table for both measures.