Apple employees raise Tim Cook to 8th place in Glassdoor CEO rankings
An anonymous poll of employees at Apple has given Chief Executive Tim Cook a 96 percent approval rating, ranking him No. 8 among U.S. companies surveyed for Glassdoor's annual Employees' Choice Awards.

The jobs and recruiting website revealed its latest 2016 CEO rankings this week placing Cook in the top 10 in America for the second year in a row. Last year, Apple's CEO ranked number 10, while in the two previous years he came in at number 18.
The awards are based on anonymous feedback from employees who voluntarily complete a company review approving or disapproving their CEO's performance. The review also asks about the quality of jobs, work environment and employer treatment over the past year.
Rated by 4,331 Apple employees, Cook ranked eighth among the 50 highest rated CEOs. Topping the list was Bob Bechek, CEO of Bain Capital in Boston, Mass., with a 99 percent approval rating.

Source: Glassdoor.
In the job satisfaction survey of 7,379 employees, Apple employees rated the company highly for benefits, a stimulating work environment and collegiality. Complaints centered on a lack of work-life balance and long hours.
Other noteworthy CEOs on the list include Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook (No. 4), Jeff Weiner of LinkedIn (No. 5), Sundard Pichai of Google (No. 7), John Legere of T-Mobile USA (No. 12), and Shantanu Narayen of Adobe (No. 20).
Cook has earned a number of accolades over the years in his role as head of Apple, including winning CEO of the year from CNN back in 2014. And last year, Bloomberg's rankings declared Cook the most pay-efficient CEO in America, in terms of salary versus performance.

The jobs and recruiting website revealed its latest 2016 CEO rankings this week placing Cook in the top 10 in America for the second year in a row. Last year, Apple's CEO ranked number 10, while in the two previous years he came in at number 18.
The awards are based on anonymous feedback from employees who voluntarily complete a company review approving or disapproving their CEO's performance. The review also asks about the quality of jobs, work environment and employer treatment over the past year.
Rated by 4,331 Apple employees, Cook ranked eighth among the 50 highest rated CEOs. Topping the list was Bob Bechek, CEO of Bain Capital in Boston, Mass., with a 99 percent approval rating.

Source: Glassdoor.
In the job satisfaction survey of 7,379 employees, Apple employees rated the company highly for benefits, a stimulating work environment and collegiality. Complaints centered on a lack of work-life balance and long hours.
Other noteworthy CEOs on the list include Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook (No. 4), Jeff Weiner of LinkedIn (No. 5), Sundard Pichai of Google (No. 7), John Legere of T-Mobile USA (No. 12), and Shantanu Narayen of Adobe (No. 20).
Cook has earned a number of accolades over the years in his role as head of Apple, including winning CEO of the year from CNN back in 2014. And last year, Bloomberg's rankings declared Cook the most pay-efficient CEO in America, in terms of salary versus performance.
Comments
does anyone believe Sundar's ranking, he has only been in charge a little of a year, has not really done much and any all the employees think he is great. I think some resourceful google people probably wrote an API into glassdoors website and drive up his ranking.
The other thing, if people are on glassdoor they are probably looking for a job, so they probably not to happy with they work.
Maybe Apple is worse off than I thought, when so many employees don't realize the level of mediocrity that's at the top....
---
Because K2director has run several $100b companies and is ready to show Tim Cook how it's done.
does anyone believe Sundar's ranking, he has only been in charge a little of a year, has not really done much and any all the employees think he is great. I think some resourceful google people probably wrote an API into glassdoors website and drive up his ranking.
The other thing, if people are on glassdoor they are probably looking for a job, so they probably not to happy with they work.
---
In the case of MSFT, I suspect it's the stark difference coming from Steve Ballmer that creates the highly favorable ratings among employees. You could have stuck employee #73486 in charge and gotten a boost in ratings coming from Ballmer. And that suggests something about Tim Cook's rating; as he is still compared to his predecessor, a hard act to follow. So the fact he gets such high ratings means even more versus other corporate chiefs, in my view.
---
There's a big difference with Sog. After all, Tim Cook reports to him! Lol
In Apple's case I found a few from employees working at Apple stores.
Out of all them Apple is the only one that creates real "products!"
Best
Just open your eyes and look around...
When the founder dies, and "professional" CEO's are hired, 95% of companies eventually go out of business! Apple, Boeing, MacDonald's, Coke, Ford are the exception, not the rule.
Of the Fortune 500 companies in 1950, 88%(440) are out of business, WTF?
I've never understood why American's revere CEO's so much...must have something to with the celebrity culture? Most of them are overpaid bozo's.
Best