Which of the 20 Best-Liked CEOs Has the Largest Digital Footprint?

What is PeekScore?: PeekScore is a rank from 1 to 10, assigned to every person. The higher someone’s score, the “more important” they are on the web. In calculating your PeekScore and updating it often, PeekYou takes into account your known presence and activity on the Internet, including but not limited to; your blogging, participation in social networks, the number of your friends, followers, or readers, the amount of web content you create, and your prominence in the news. For first time visitors a more in-depth explanation of what the PeekScore is, and how to increase your own, can be found by clicking through here.

Recently, the popular job rating site Glassdoor.com posted their annual list of the CEOs most highly rated by their employees. We’ve taken the top 20 executives from the list and measured and compared their PeekScores.

Simply, and as before and as ever, we’re sizing these bigwigs up not based upon the varying quantities of wealth contained within their bonus checks, nor even – as Glassdoor has already done – the degree to which their employees are satisfied with the jobs they’re doing. This is a look at how these popular chiefs compare to one another here on the web, in terms of their respective impacts and presences (i.e., their digital footprints, as outlined above and more in depth by clicking through here), as measured on our nifty PeekScore scale.

Note: SAP has co-CEOs, both of whom are on this list. The list, therefore, features 21 names.

Rank Picture Name Company PeekScore
1

Mark Zuckerberg Facebook 10.00 / 10.00
2

Larry Page Google 9.25 / 10.00
3

Tim Cook Apple 8.68 / 10.00
4

Jeff Bezos Amazon 8.08 / 10.00
5

Paul Otellini Intel 7.98 / 10.00
6

Richard K. Davis U.S. Bank 7.95 / 10.00
7

Howard Schultz Starbucks 7.74 / 10.00
8

Paul E. Jacobs QUALCOMM 7.46 / 10.00
9

Jen-Hsun Huang NVIDIA 7.26 / 10.00
10

Joe Tucci EMC 7.20 / 10.00
11

Ken Chenault American Express 7.19 / 10.00
12

Hans Vestberg Ericsson-Worldwide 7.13 / 10.00
13

Bill McDermott SAP 7.08 / 10.00
14

Dominic Barton McKinsey & Company 7.07 / 10.00
15

Mark B. Templeton Citrix Systems 7.06 / 10.00
16

Jim Hagemann SAP 7.05 / 10.00
17

Jim Turley Ernst & Young 7.03 / 10.00
18

John Schlifske Northwestern Mutual 7.02 / 10.00
19

Frank D’Souza Cognizant Technology Solutions 7.01 / 10.00
20

Pierre Nanterme Accenture 7.00 / 10.00
21

Carlos Rodriguez ADP 6.96 / 10.00

The Digital Footprints of Time Magazine’s Persons of the Year

What is PeekScore?: PeekScore is a rank from 1 to 10, assigned to every person. The higher someone’s score, the “more important” they are on the web. In calculating your PeekScore and updating it often, PeekYou takes into account your known presence and activity on the Internet, including but not limited to; your blogging, participation in social networks, the number of your friends, followers, or readers, the amount of web content you create, and your prominence in the news. For first time visitors a more in-depth explanation of what the PeekScore is, and how to increase your own, can be found by clicking through here.

In 1927, Time Magazine selected transatlantic aviator Charles Lindbergh as their first ever “Man of the Year” (a distinction later made less blatantly politically wrong and renamed “Person of the Year”). Since then they have annually selected a person – and sometimes an object, concept, or group of people – that they believe “for better or for worse” has had the greatest impact on that year’s events. From Martin Luther King, Jr. to Adolph Hitler, from Mark Zuckerberg to Pope John Paul II to the “The Middle Americans” their selections have run the gamut from the clearly deserved to the esoteric, and have frequently been the stuff of controversy. With yet another year upon this planet coming to a close, and another “Person if the Year” issue inevitably upon us, it seemed timely (no pun) to do a PeekScore list of this nature.

The ten names below are the ten still living recipients of this sometimes dubious honor who have – at this moment in time – made the most profound impacts in cyberspace. We’ve measured them on our PeekScore scale, not to assess their values as humans, nor even their respective degrees of global fame in the grandest senses, but to gauge their digital footprints; a concept you can find elaborated upon in the above disclaimer, and more in depth by clicking through here.

Rank Picture Name Year(s) PeekScore
1

Barack Obama 2008 10.00 / 10.00
2

George W. Bush 2000 & 2004 10.00 / 10.00
3

Mark Zuckerberg 2010 9.64 / 10.00
4

Vladimir Putin 2007 9.63 / 10.00
5

Bill Clinton 1992 & 1998 9.62 / 10.00
6

Ben Bernanke 2009 9.08 / 10.00
7

Rudolph Giuliani 2001 8.85 / 10.00
8

Jeffery Bezos 1999 8.08 / 10.00
9

David Ho 1996 7.36 / 10.00
10

Andrew Grove 1997 7.22 / 10.00

The Digital Footprints of “The Best-Liked Tech CEOs”

What is PeekScore?: PeekScore is a rank from 1 to 10, assigned to every person. The higher someone’s score, the “more important” they are on the web. In calculating your PeekScore and updating it often, PeekYou takes into account your known presence and activity on the Internet, including but not limited to; your blogging, participation in social networks, the number of your friends, followers, or readers, the amount of web content you create, and your prominence in the news. For first time visitors a more in-depth explanation of what the PeekScore is, and how to increase your own, can be found by clicking through here.

Recently, the job rating site Glassdoor.com posted their list of the CEOs most highly rated by their employees. Additionally, Glassdoor provided more granular breakdowns by industry, including the top 10 highest rated tech CEOs. It is this more specific list of well-liked executives with which this PeekScore blog entry is concerned.

Simply, and as before and as ever, we’re sizing these bigwigs up not based upon the varying quantities of wealth contained within their bonus checks, nor even – as Glassdoor has already done – the degree to which their employees are satisfied with the jobs they’re doing. This is a look at how these popular chiefs compare to one another here on the web, in terms of their respective impacts and presences (i.e., their digital footprints, as outlined above and more in depth by clicking through here), as measured on our PeekScore scale.

Are there any tech CEOs you’d have expected to see so highly rated among their underlings? Don’t keep it yourself. Share with us in the comments.

Rank Picture Name Company PeekScore
1

Meg Whitman Hewlett-Packard 8.98 / 10.00
2

Larry Ellison Oracle 8.97 / 10.00
3

Larry Page Google 8.95 / 10.00
4

Tim Cook Apple 8.95 / 10.00
5

Jeff Bezos Amazon 8.20 / 10.00
6

Paul Otellini Intel 8.08 / 10.00
7

Paul Jacobs Qualcomm 8.01 / 10.00
8

Paul Maritz VMWare 7.59 / 10.00
9

Dan Hesse Sprint 7.52 / 10.00
10

Joe Tucci EMC 7.49 / 10.00