Monday 23 September 2013

Ranking Of The Top 60 CEOs On Social Media



This is our second global ranking of CEOs on social media. As more CEOs have transitioned into social media, we have expanded it from 30 to 60 individuals. The ranking methodology is set out at the bottom of the article.

Social Media Ranking Developments: June To September

The most significant change has been a number of Fortune 500 CEOs joining the LinkedIn Influencers program. They include Burberry’s Angela Ahrendts, WPP’s Martin Sorrell and Standard Chartered’s Peter Sands. However, the majority of top CEOs, particularly in big Fortune 500 companies (including WPP and Standard Chartered) continue not be on the Twitter platform.
We have expanded the rankings to 60 CEOs, reflecting the significantly increased number of CEOs now active on social media. We have included new CEOs from Asia and the Middle East, as well as some social CEOs we were not previously aware of suggested by commenters in the first edition of our ranking.
A number of concerns were raised when the first ranking was published in June, around the lack of women in the list. There were only four women on the original list of 30 – while we have added a number of women to the expanded ranking, we are looking to add more. However, we’re found that there’s a real lack of women actively involved in social media who are running big companies, and would welcome your suggestions of new female candidates.

So Here Are The Top 60 CEOs:

* Click On Their Pictures For A Full World Of CEOs Dossier, News, Profile, Social Links & To See How You're Connected To Them & Their Companies Via LinkedIn *


Ranking Methodology

The ranking has been done by World Of CEOs and combines the best of both quantitative and qualitative approaches, to determine the CEOs who are really making an impact. Our team has monitored Twitter, LinkedIn and the blogging activities of all CEOs from the Fortune 500 Global, FTSE 100 to Silicon Valley. As well as counting the numbers of followers, we’re interested in who is creating true “value-added content”, as determined by users. Value-added was measured in terms of originality and positive impact on the corporate world, the their industry, and application to their own company. We favored CEOs who had actively contributed to the leadership agenda.
We reduced their score if it was seen as too obviously self-promoting or if we believed that they have no direct involvement in social media content. We favored CEOs who had consistently contributed over time
As with our last ranking, we are taking into account ‘Klout’, which measures engagement across multiple social networks, with a “score” out of 100. However, as well as being a bit raw and purely quantitative, our research shows that Klout is not yet properly measuring the extended impact of the LinkedIn Influencer Program and giving sufficient additional credit to those CEOs active on the platform – even those who have amassed hundreds of thousands of followers, page views, likes and shares. We believe that this should change, and in the meantime have adjusted our rankings to redress the balance.
Disclosure : World of CEOs is a Xinfu company and I am a director of both companies.

Over To You

LIKE: Please like this article if you think this represents a good picture of engaged CEOs across social media.
SHARE: Please share this article with your team and people in your network who would have a view on who else should be included or whether they themselves should be included.
COMMENT: Please let us know who your favorite CEOs are on the list, and let us know if you think there are any gaps or people we should add to our next ranking.

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