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Broadview based its map on revenue information from a Hoover’s database of company profiles, and used the location of each company’s corporate headquarters to determine which businesses “belonged” to which states.

“We noticed that many states did not have companies included in the [Fortune 500] list, so we decided to perform our own research to find the largest company by revenue in each state based on the location of the corporate headquarters,” wrote Russ Fordyce, a managing director at Broadview, in a Tuesday blog post about the map.

Many of the results are pretty intuitive. There’s Walmart in Arkansas, General Motors in Michigan and Exxon Mobil in Texas. But in some states, especially the smaller ones, you’ll notice some surprising corporate heavyweights. Johnson & Johnson rules in New Jersey, while CVS is the big fish in Rhode Island’s little pond. Additionally, in the state of Washington, it turns out Costco trumps both Microsoft and Boeing.

You can check out an exhaustive list of the companies, their revenues and their locations here.

 

3 Thoughts on “Our #1 Business? Profiting from the sick and dying.

  1. Dan Daily on June 23, 2014 at 10:30 am said:

    Credit card and medical services.

    When you’re sick from paying 30% on your credit cards, we’ll make money from your health care.

    Not GNP, GNR. Gross National Ripoff.

  2. hornguy on June 23, 2014 at 11:37 pm said:

    Revenue and profit are radically different concepts. Don’t be so sloppy.

  3. Helga on June 24, 2014 at 2:03 am said:

    And oil seems to be the big business in many states also. All the companies who get government welfare already and yet there are some senators and congress people who think those poor babies need more tax breaks.

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