Gates, Jobs top leadership list

Bill Gates and Steve Jobs are atop a new list of the most admired company leaders, as ranked by business decision makers around the world.

Technology executives in general did well in the "2005 CEO Capital" survey (which included chairmen, as well as chief executives) done by global public affairs firm Burson-Marsteller and the Economist Intelligence Unit.

Among the 15 executives listed -- along with No. 1 Gates, chairman of Microsoft, and No. 2 Jobs, CEO of both Apple Computer and Pixar Animation Studios -- were Dell Chairman Michael Dell (No. 4), N.R. Narayana Murthy, chairman of Infosys Technologies (No. 8), John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems (No. 12) and Jorma Ollila, chairman and CEO of Nokia (No. 13).

Burson-Marsteller pointed to Gates' philanthropic work as a key factor, alongside his continuing stewardship of the company he helped found, behind his landing in the top spot.

"Leaders and their companies can no longer safely ignore the value placed on corporate responsibility and commitment by 21st century citizens," Leslie Gaines-Ross, Burson-Marsteller's chief knowledge and research officer, said in a statement released on Wednesday.

Longevity played a role in determining the top 15 as well. Eight of the men on the list are company founders; all had been with their companies at least three years; and the average tenure with the company was 21 years.

Also on the list: Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway (3); Richard Branson, Virgin Group (5); John Browne, BP (6); Carlos Ghosn, Nissan Motor (7); Jeffrey Immelt, General Electric (9); Rupert Murdoch, News Corp. (10); John Bond, HSBC Holdings (11); Terry Leahy, Tesco (14); and Lakshmi Mittal, Mittal Steel (15).

The 2005 CEO Capital involved 685 respondents -- including CEOs, other senior executives, financial analysts and government officials -- in 65 countries.

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Talkback 3 comments

    Where is Linus John -- 15/12/05 (in reply to #120125266)

    Linus is a boss I am sure, why isn't he on the list rather than Jobs and Gates. It just isn't fair

    Linus is not a corporate **** Anonymous Moocow -- 27/12/05 (in reply to #120125267)

    He is not a corporate **** like Jobs and Gates therefore he doesn't rate a mention.

    Bill Gates Gary Hardinge -- 16/12/05

    You're kidding me, right? Bill Gates builds one of the largest monopolies in commercial history; gets hauled into anti trust courts (and convicted); crushes every emerging technology he can find; deliberately makes his products non-interoperable; currently is using every dirty trick in the book to kill off a truly open document format.... and for all this (and more) gets labelled as the "the most admired (whatever)..."

    I'm speechless.

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