As critical figureheads, Chief Executive Officers play a key role in how corporations are perceived by the public, and so it's vital that organizations keep their fingers on the pulse of CEO-focused media.
In collaboration with .companion, a data consultancy and KPI expert, Meltwater presents the 2022 CEO Echo; a monthly media intelligence analysis of CEOs heading up some of the world's largest brands. The ranking leverages Meltwater's media intelligence capabilities and automated analysis by the .companion bot to offer readers highlights and benchmarks across the following areas:
- Total CEO Digital Footprint
- CEO Communication Excellence
- CEO Social Excellence
- CEO Responsibility Excellence
- CEO Investor Excellence
Contents
September 2022 CEO Echo rankings
September 2022 CEO Echo rankings
9% more CEO mentions
Last month, the .companion CEO metrics bot found 9% more CEO mentions than the average of the previous month. Overall, 47% of mentions captured by the CEO Echo were generated by editorial online content, while social media generated 53%. In September, CEO Echo content saw engagement jump by 2,792%. 44% of all CEO mentions were related to financial news, meaning they simply referred to company figures that are often required to be disclosed by law. In contrast, the context of 56% of mentions was linked to corporate agendas. Overall, the tonality of mentions was equally positive and negative.
Total Digital Footprint
Bernard Arnault, LVMH CEO, dominates with 7% CEO Echo coverage
What role does a CEO play in a company's overall corporate messaging, whether voluntary or involuntary? The CEO Digital Footprint aims to answer this question.
In September, Bernard Arnault, CEO of LVMH, received the highest amount of media coverage. His share of voice totalled 7.4%, the largest footprint of all top board members. In second place was Simon Thompson, CEO of Royal Mail, with 7.0%, and Pat Gelsinger, CEO of Intel, took the third spot with 6.5% share of all mentions. 84% of conversations around Arnault’s echo were not related to company financials and thus were above average for agenda-driving topics and content. 8% of the LVMH CEO's echo came from editorial media and 92% from social media. Content that mentioned Arnault generated 11 interactions (clicks, shares, likes) per mention. This shows that audiences are engaged and made Arnault the 77th most engaged CEO in the ranking. In total, mentions for Bernard Arnault were positive significantly more often than negative. We can assume this had a corresponding impact on his overall reputation.
Communication Excellence
ASML Holding’s CEO, Peter Wennink, takes the number 1 spot
Two common goals widely shared by media teams are communicating key messages and building a favorable reputation, both of which rely heavily on editorial mentions. The Communication Excellence ranking analyses and aggregates media volume (removing financial report listings).
Peter Wennink, CEO of ASML Holding, was ranked first in September. Outside of the paywall, 71% of his digital echo discussed the CEO in stories beyond financial figures. Stories generated 29,069 engagements per menti on, signifying readers are highly interested. Furthermore, coverage was significantly more positi ve than negati ve. As a result, the response to ASML Holding’s CEO received 26.8 points. Jesper Brodin, CEO of IKEA came in second place with a score of 14.2 and Frank Appel, CEO of DHL, took third place with a Communication Excellence score of 6.1 points.
Social Excellence
Andreas Brandstetter, Uniqa’s CEO, wins first place
These days, simply having a social media profile is not enough. If you want to have an impact on opinion leaders outside of editorial offices, or on consumers and digital elites who are not easily accessible through the mass media, you have to be mentioned frequently on social media. The Social Excellence Index answers whether a company's attempts at this have been successful.
Last month, Andreas Brandsteer, CEO of Uniqa, topped the ranking with a Social Excellence score of 4.7 points. 100% of the conversation came from social media and his engagement was somewhat indifferent with 5 interactions per mention. Moreover, the sentiments of his mentions were 92% positive, meaning Brandsteer was ahead of runners-up Xavier Huillard, CEO of Vinci, with 3.9 points and Bjørn Gulden, CEO of Puma, who placed third with 2.9 points.