For this problem you need to produce the result set of the query in order to determine the Max ValueCount, then you need to do the query again to pull just the records with Max ValueCount. You can do this many way, like repeating the main query as subqueries, and in SQL Server 2005/2008 by using a CTE. I think using the subqueries gets a little messy and would prefer the CTE, but for SQL Server 2000 you don't have that as an option. So, I've used a temp table instead of a CTE. I run it once to get the MaxValueCount and save that into a temp table, then run the query again and join against the temp table to get just the record with MaxValueCount.
create table #tempMax
(
FirmID int,
MaxValueCount int
)
insert #tempMax
SELECT t.FirmID, MAX(t.ValueCount) AS MaxValueCount
FROM (
SELECT F.FirmID, F.Name, DL.ValueId, DL.ValueName
, count(DL.ValueName) AS ValueCount
FROM dbo.Jobs AS J
INNER JOIN DimensionValues AS DV ON DV.CrossRef = J.JobId
INNER JOIN dbo.DimensionLists AS DL ON DV.ValueId = DL.ValueId
INNER JOIN Firms AS F ON F.FirmId = J.ClientFirmId
WHERE DL.DimensionId = 4
GROUP BY F.FirmID, F.Name, DL.ValueName, DL.ValueId) t
SELECT t.FirmID, t.Name, t.ValueID, t.ValueName, t.ValueCount
FROM (
SELECT F.FirmID, F.Name, DL.ValueId, DL.ValueName
, count(DL.ValueName) AS ValueCount
FROM dbo.Jobs AS J
INNER JOIN DimensionValues AS DV ON DV.CrossRef = J.JobId
INNER JOIN dbo.DimensionLists AS DL ON DV.ValueId = DL.ValueId
INNER JOIN Firms AS F ON F.FirmId = J.ClientFirmId
WHERE DL.DimensionId = 4
GROUP BY F.FirmID, F.Name, DL.ValueName, DL.ValueId) t
INNER JOIN #tempMax m ON t.FirmID = m.FirmID and t.ValueCount = m.MaxValueCount
DROP TABLE #tempMax