CEOs are Silicon Valley’s version of celebrities. We watch their every move and soak up their every word, hoping for pearls of wisdom that will lead to glory and riches.
News aggregator News360 took a look at which of these illustrious personas attracted the most media coverage this year. The company analyzed more than 400,000 news sources between January 1 and November 30 of 2013, indexing stories where the CEO’s name made the headline.
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Each of these companies generated attention-grabbing news stories. Tesla had to put out various fires (literally and figuratively speaking), commercial space travel really took off in 2013 with SpaceX leading the way, and Musk’s Hyperloop super train is an insane and expensive pipe dream that may just come true.
Musk followed Cook with 2,733 headlines.
He also created buzz for his extracurricular activities with immigration reform and FWD.us, Internet.org, and all the NSA drama.
Zuck was also ranked top CEO of 2013 in a Glassdoor survey and made the world’s richest billionaires list.
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Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer is predictably in the top five and predictably the only woman there. She generating 2,029 headlines. 2013 was Mayer’s first full year as the CEO of Yahoo, and she was covered by media everywhere, ranging from tech blogs to Vogue.
Mayer went on an aggressive acquisition spree this year, making high-profile purchases (like Tumblr) and a number of acqui-hires.
Mayer’s role as an executive-woman-mother also garnered media attention. She attracted praise, vitriol, and inevitably, controversy for some of her leadership decisions, most notably the work-from-home ban.
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Whatever he’s doing is working — Amazon’s stock steadily climbed this year, passing $400 for the first time ever today and marking a 60 percent growth in 2013 alone.
Steve Ballmer, Michael Dell, Larry Page, and Jack Dorsey also made the top 10. Interestingly, despite boatloads of media attention for its IPO, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo came in 15th.
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