Apple’s Tim Cook is the CEO employees love most, Glassdoor says
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When Tim Cook took over the helm at Apple Inc. in August, many wondered how he would set himself apart from his predecessor, the formidable Steve Jobs. But a new study that ranks Cook as the country’s top-rated chief executive suggests that he’s doing just fine.
Cook landed a 97% approval rating from employees, according to careers website Glassdoor -- the same rating Jobs had when he stepped down from the CEO post. In his short tenure, Cook has unveiled the new iPad and the iPhone 4S and has instituted a new quarterly dividend for shareholders.
Cook’s high score put him ahead of the 95% rating bestowed on Ernst & Young’s Jim Turley and Qualcomm’s Paul Jacobs, as well as the 94% earned by American Express’ Ken Chenault and Google’s Larry Page.
Leaders of major banks also made the list, with an 88% rating for US Bank’s Richard Davis and an 87% for JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon. Even Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, who was recently publicly harangued by a former employee who accused him of running a company with a “toxic and destructive” culture, had a score of 89%.
GE’s Jeffrey Immelt, who heads President Obama’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, was the most improved among the top 25 CEOs, boosting his score from 64% last year to 83%.
And Cook isn’t the only newcomer holding his own. Meg Whitman, who took Hewlett-Packard’s top post in September, has an 80% approval rating -- higher than her predecessors’ cumulative scores of 57% (for Leo Apotheker) and 34% (for Mark Hurd).
The Glassdoor list also includes CEOs from Lockheed Martin, Starbucks and theU.S. Army.
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