Signal Leadership Communication Inc. (SLC), a social public relations firm for executives and companies dealing with digital disruption, today released the results of a new study of how leading Canadian chief executives are using – and not using – social media. The Signal Social CEO Index is based on the Canadian Business magazine list of Canada’s Top 100 highest-paid CEOs (published on January 4th 2016).
There are 2.5 billion Millennials globally, today in 2015.
Millennials are the biggest consumer group of all. They are also driving change in every industry, especially mobile. From Twitter usage data to smartphone ownership, use these 15 statistics about the Millennial mobile owner in your next presentation.
All these statistics come from my new Total Youth Mobile Report 2015. Get a sneak peak here...
There are 2.5 billion Millennials globally, today in 2015.
Millennials are the biggest consumer group of all. They are also driving change in every industry, especially mobile. From Twitter usage data to smartphone ownership, use these 15 statistics about the Millennial mobile owner in your next presentation.
All these statistics come from my new Total Youth Mobile Report 2015. Get a sneak peak here...
The study brings new insights on the steps that senior financial executives need to take
to enhance their career and how CFOs themselves can bridge their current position with one that reflects their evolving value and clearly features their potential to organizations to finally become trusted strategic advisors. Branding the CFO confirms the findings of the 2011 CFERF study Beyond the Numbers that the value of CFOs in interpreting and anticipating risk, being an objective advocate and understanding the greater business context were seen as critical to ensuring the success of businesses.
Slides from the January 24th 2014 Facebook for Small Business Class held at the Guilford Technical Community College Small Business Center in Greensboro, North Carolina. Instructor - Mitch Miles
www.about.me/mitchmiles
Social won’t work without search….and today search will be improved by social...Michael Pranikoff
Presentation by PR Newswire Global Director of Emerging Media – Michael Pranikoff – at the IABC 2012 World Congress in Chicago, IL June 2012. Search and social are on a collision course. Google, Bing, Baidu, Sina, and traditional search engines all over the world are adding social components just as Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare, and other popular social tools are seeing their content into search and providing capabilities within their applications. Marketing and communication professionals around the world want to take advantage of the trends, but many are stuck in organizations where the search teams and social teams, let alone the marketing and PR teams, rarely talk. Integrating search and social together can have extraordinary results, increasing the visibility and engagement of your brand, product, or message with your intended audience.
This presentation, which I delivered at the TerminalFOUR conference in Dublin, Ireland, on 19 November 2014, focuses on how to incorporate social media into a college or university website.
The study brings new insights on the steps that senior financial executives need to take
to enhance their career and how CFOs themselves can bridge their current position with one that reflects their evolving value and clearly features their potential to organizations to finally become trusted strategic advisors. Branding the CFO confirms the findings of the 2011 CFERF study Beyond the Numbers that the value of CFOs in interpreting and anticipating risk, being an objective advocate and understanding the greater business context were seen as critical to ensuring the success of businesses.
Slides from the January 24th 2014 Facebook for Small Business Class held at the Guilford Technical Community College Small Business Center in Greensboro, North Carolina. Instructor - Mitch Miles
www.about.me/mitchmiles
Social won’t work without search….and today search will be improved by social...Michael Pranikoff
Presentation by PR Newswire Global Director of Emerging Media – Michael Pranikoff – at the IABC 2012 World Congress in Chicago, IL June 2012. Search and social are on a collision course. Google, Bing, Baidu, Sina, and traditional search engines all over the world are adding social components just as Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare, and other popular social tools are seeing their content into search and providing capabilities within their applications. Marketing and communication professionals around the world want to take advantage of the trends, but many are stuck in organizations where the search teams and social teams, let alone the marketing and PR teams, rarely talk. Integrating search and social together can have extraordinary results, increasing the visibility and engagement of your brand, product, or message with your intended audience.
This presentation, which I delivered at the TerminalFOUR conference in Dublin, Ireland, on 19 November 2014, focuses on how to incorporate social media into a college or university website.
Science of Social Signals for Relative Link BuildingPallab Kakoty
Understand the growing influence of social signal in SEO, how efforts on social link building from authoritative domain matters and why focus on Social SEO even if it is not a part of search engine algorithm. #plbkkt via #hshdsh
Digital Storytelling for Asian MultinationalsBob Pickard
Bob Pickard, CEO of Burson-Marsteller Asia-Pacific, gave a presentation to students at Singapore Management University (SMU) on image, reputation and the power of digital storytelling.
The CEO Reputation Premium: Gaining Advantage in the Engagement EraWeber Shandwick
At an event in New York City to launch The CEO Reputation Premium: Gaining Advantage in the Engagement Era, Weber Shandwick Chief Reputation Strategist Dr. Leslie Gaines-Ross presented results from the research. A panel, moderated by Fortune's Jennifer Reingold, then continued the discussion, with experts from Campbell Soup Company and PIMCO, Micho Spring, Chair, Global Corporate Practice and President, New England at Weber Shandwick and Carol Ballock, Executive Vice President, Executive Equity & Engagement Lead at Weber Shandwick, sharing insights and stories about CEO reputation. View Dr. Gaines-Ross’ presentation for her key findings from the research.
Fresh and Diverse Social Signals: Any Impacts on Search?Ismail BADACHE
In this paper, we extensively study the impact of social signals (users' actions) obtained from several social networks on search ranking task. Social signals associated with web resources (documents) can be considered as an additional information that can play a vital role to estimate a priori importance of these resources. Particularly, we are interested in the freshness of signals and their diversity. We hypothesize that the moment (the date) when the user actions occur and the diversity of actions may impact the search performance. We propose to model these heterogeneous social features as document prior. We evaluate the effectiveness of our approach by carrying out extensive experiments on two different INEX datasets, namely SBS and IMDb, enriched with several social signals collected from social networks. Our experimental results consistently demonstrate the interest of integrating fresh and diverse signals in the retrieval process.
Proving that $1M in revenue doesn't always translate to 1M followers, The Social CEO Report shares the surprising social habits of Fortune 500 CEOs. See which Fortune 500 CEOs are the most social media savvy?
15 Tips for Compelling Company Updates on LinkedInLinkedIn
LinkedIn has evolved into a platform for content marketing. With more than 225 million members worldwide, professionals are using LinkedIn to become great at what they do by seeking and sharing insights. On LinkedIn, marketers are able to build relationships with professionals by using accurate targeting to share relevant content. LinkedIn Company Updates, shared from your Company Page, are a powerful way to reach professionals with relevant content across devices. We’ve created these 15 tips for compelling company updates to help you drive better results.
For more about content marketing on LinkedIn, visit http://lnkd.in/LIContentMarketing
Socializing Your CEO III: From Marginal to Mainstream (Weber Shandwick - June...yann le gigan
>>Socializing Your CEO III: From Marginal to Mainstream
[webershandwick.com 23.06.15]
Weber Shandwick released Socializing Your CEO: From Marginal to Mainstream, an audit of the online presence of CEOs from the world’s largest companies. This third installment of the Socializing Your CEO series finds that CEO online engagement has increased dramatically since we first began tracking the online sociability of chief executives several years ago. As of 2015, CEOs have found their social footing.
http://www.webershandwick.com/uploads/news/files/socializing-your-ceo-iii-exec-summary.pdf
Many hurdles traditionally stood in the way of CEOs’ entry into the world of social media. Top barriers cited in prior Weber
Shandwick research on “unsocial” CEOs in 2013 included: social media usage by CEOs was unusual for the industry or region,
there was no proof that it returns value, there was no demand, and it was too risky. Interestingly, barriers such as legal
obstruction and industry regulation were infrequently raised (The Social CEO: Executives Tell All, Weber Shandwick and KRC
Research). Much to their credit, CEOs are overcoming these challenges and, to a growing degree, embracing the opportunities
that come from being social.
Operating in an increasingly connected and transparent digital world where the general public is acutely attuned to what CEOs
say and do, executives see online engagement as a prime opportunity for their chief executives to share their companies’
stories and elevate the reputation of their companies. With eight in 10 global executives reporting that it is important for
CEOs to have a visible public profile for a company to be highly regarded, online channels and social media become one set of
tools for CEOs to increase their external equity. And doing so comes with reputational rewards: highly regarded companies
are more than three times as likely as those with weak reputations to have a CEO who participates in social media. (The CEO
Reputation Premium: Gaining Advantage in the Engagement Era, Weber Shandwick and KRC Research.)
CFOs on Social Media: Social Insights ReportLeadtail
There is a persistent belief that CFOs don’t participate in social media; even as they are leading organizations that are increasingly being challenged by social media and the disruption it enables. As a matter of fact, best in class financial executives are now actively getting social, both so they can better understand social media’s implications and to benefit from all it can offer.
We developed this report: “How CFOs Engage on Twitter”, using Leadtail’s Social Media Insights Technology to analyze data from Twitter and share what real CFOs are really doing on social media.
The goal of this special report is to help you answer questions such as:
How can you find and connect with other finance leaders on the social web?
What topics are CFOs discussing and debating on social media?
Which online publications do finance executives turn to for news and information?
Who are the most influential publications and people with CFOs?
So whether you’re already in the CFO seat trying to navigate the social media waters, or aspire to the role in the future, these insights will help you take a more informed look at how you can use social media to communicate, collaborate, and build your own network of relationships and influence.
Ready to launch the greatest social media campaign ever? In many organizations, you'll have to get the approval of a senior leadership team. In this presentation, you'll learn a variety of insights, strategies and tactics for overcoming executive resistance toward social media efforts.
Presented by Ryan Cohn, Vice President of Social/Digital Operations at Sachs Media Group, at the Social Fresh EAST Conference in Tampa on April 19, 2013.
How Are HR Executives Using Twitter? | Social Insights Report Q1 2013Leadtail
Imagine if you could listen to the daily conversations of human resources executives? How would you use what you heard to better reach, engage, and influence these business decision makers to take the actions you care most about?
For example, would it provide you insights into where to advertise, what content to create, who to build relationships with, and how best to develop and implement your social media strategy? Sure it would.
We created the Social Insights Report: HR Executives on Twitter to provide you with social media insights to help you make more informed decisions for reaching, engaging, and influencing HR decision makers.
Inside this free guide, you'll discover:
* Which social networks should you invest your time and effort in?
* Is mobile something that you should prioritize?
* Which media publications should you advertise with?
* What topics should you create content around?
* Who should you get to speak at your events?
Download the guide and share your feedback with us on Twitter - we're @Leadtail.
DUP (DELOITTE UNIVERSITY PRESS)
Social Business Report: Shifting Out of First Gear
Explore the findings of the second annual global study, conducted in collaboration with MIT Sloan Management Review, to gain fresh insight into the social business landscape today and discover how some businesses are reaping value.
Current State of Social Engagement Inside The Large Enterprise | Engagement @...Dachis Group
Established in 2009, the Social Business Council (SBC) is a member-driven peer forum of business professionals from large organizations that are engaged in an enterprise-wide social business initiative. Members share best practices, advice, encouragement and experiential insights regarding every aspect of social business transformation. The SBC includes industry representation from a variety of G2000 sectors.
Communication as a leadership skill is becoming more important than ever before. As we have seen in the case of Elon Musk, how CEOs signal their leadership on social media can make or break a company's reputation. Social is making PR a more critical corporate function, and now leadership communication by executives online is the key to public relations success for senior leaders.
PR in the c-suite: harnessing the disruptive power of social media for leader...Bob Pickard
If the cautionary Trump case study teaches us anything, it is the disruptive power of social media for leadership communication.
Communication technology has always been used for good and for ill, but when it is applied by leaders who understand public relations — or propaganda, its ‘evil twin’ — social media is now probably the most formidable force both for ethical persuasion and mass manipulation.
Especially when something goes wrong for an organization in the public domain, all eyes go online looking for the leader. But often CEOs are absent from social media and among those who are online, there are many who don’t know how to communicate with the public.
What we are seeing today is one PR disaster after another playing out on social media, with the character and capability of CEO communication proving decisive in deciding whether reputations are ruined or brands are built at these spectacular moments of truth.
Success in the c-suite has always been the holiest of grails for the public relations industry, but Bob Pickard of Signal Leadership Communication Inc. — one of Canada’s best known corporate communicators with a 20 year record building PR businesses overseas — believes that our industry is not yet realizing its potential when it comes to the public communication of top executives on social media.
Bob, who has counselled and coached hundreds of senior leaders around the world, will explain the challenges of access and attitude for CEO communication and share the latest ideas and insights about what he will argue is increasingly one of the most important segments of the public relations consulting business.
PR disasters: is social the problem or the solution?Bob Pickard
As this presentation outlines, the answer is 'both.' Social CEOs - using digital communications platforms effectively real-time and in tune with community emotion - can intercept and attenuate most corporate issues and incidents to prevent them from becoming full-blown PR disasters.
International communication for Asian multinationals: PR's next big thing?Bob Pickard
It won't be long before a majority of the FORTUNE 500 multinationals are based in Asia. China alone has 109 of these MNCs, but most of these are unknown globally. How these companies decide to use corporate communication to promote image and protect reputation as they build global brands in a social media age is the 'next big thing' in global public relations.
PR disasters: is social media the problem or the solution?Bob Pickard
In the social media age, managing your message and communicating effectively during a crisis has never been more important for leaders and their organizations. Social media’s power to build image and to destroy reputation is making public relations more important, while many of the old methods of corporate communication have suddenly become outmoded. This presentation contains recent public opinion research on social media, fake news, and PR disasters — backed by practical recommendations for leaders who need to communicate effectively as they deal with digital disruption.
PR disasters! Is social media the problem...or the solution?Bob Pickard
Just about everything that famously goes wrong is now called a 'PR disaster'. What can we do to deal with this new form of digital PR disruption? This presentation was delivered in Canada but includes global cases and international insights.
Public opinion poll on PR disasters and social mediaBob Pickard
Real and perceived PR disasters have become all the rage and they are happening in a famous way almost every day. This new study by Signal Leadership Communication Inc. (conducted by its partner company Nanos Research) points to the public's belief that social media is causing the problem of PR disasters, and that communicating on social media is the best solution.
New poll finds that social media is seen as the top threat to public imageBob Pickard
Signal Leadership Communication Inc., a social PR consultancy for executives dealing with digital disruption, commissioned Nanos Research to conduct a public opinion poll of 1,000 Canadians which has found that social media is seen as the medium most able to cause damage to public image. Eighty-four percent (84%) of respondents surveyed said that social media ‘can do a great deal of damage to the image of an individual or organization.’ Only 71% felt this was true of both online news and broadcast television, while just over half (52%) said it about print newspapers and just under half (48%) about radio.
Communicating with social media to make corruption obsoleteBob Pickard
"Communicating with social media to make corruption obsolete: applying the technology of transparent times to inspire informed citizens" is the theme of this presentation which was delivered at Hong Kong to the 2015 Symposium of the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).
Worldwide communication for Asian multinationals Bob Pickard
Almost 200 companies on the Fortune 500 list are now from Asia, but most of these rising multinationals - notably the nearly 100 based in China - remain relatively unknown outside their home regions. This next generation of worldwide titans are now wondering whether and how to use public relations to help build global brands, representing one of the industry’s biggest commercial opportunities. This new wave of companies will become world famous for the very first time in a social media age, but their embrace of PR as a critical corporate function is by no means a foregone conclusion. With Asia the world’s emerging centre of economic gravity, the region will be a critical battleground for the future of international public relations.
This presentation was delivered on April 29th 2014 to an audience of financial services organizations at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Hong Kong. It outlines why the financial services sector has been a social media late-bloomer, how it can get with the digital program, and things to think about in the design of their social business (as viewed through the prism of marketing communications).
Overseas corporate communications for Chinese companiesBob Pickard
This presentation was delivered in Beijing on March 20th 2014 to the 'China Going Global' think tank. The theme was "Overseas corporate communications for Chinese companies: building image and protecting reputation"
The marketing might of modern public relationsBob Pickard
Social media is revolutionizing the way the world communicates and it is powering the public relations industry’s global ascendancy. In Asia, PR has traditionally been a relatively minor and subordinate part of the marketing mix but now it increasingly occupies centre stage. Because public relations is at its essence a social networking business, it is well positioned to thrive in the digital domain, especially in a region where mobile communications are the new marketing battleground. Media relations and publicity will always be a key part of PR, but now creating content, building communities, understanding analytics and applying the psychology of persuasion are all part of the picture. PR will always be about the art of relationships, but increasingly it is a measurable communications science.
Digital and social media across Asia-Pacific marketsBob Pickard
This presentation delivered at the Lee Kong Chian School of Business in Singapore Management University provides an overview of digital dynamics in Asia-Pacific and outlines communications approaches designed to resonate with social media communities.
How Asian Corporations are Using Social Media to Communicate with Global Comm...Bob Pickard
More than a third of the world's top 2000 companies are now based in Asia. This presentation is about how they are closing the gap with their Western competition in fostering and engaging international communities using social media.
Social responsibility > Social marketing > Social mediaBob Pickard
The intersection of social responsibility, social marketing and social media presents challenges and opportunities for today's corporate communicators.
Image and reputation in the age of digital communicationBob Pickard
In this presentation to the "Who's afraid of social media?" conference in Athens, Greece, Bob Pickard, President and CEO of Burson-Marsteller in Asia-Pacific, discusses the crafting and co-creation of persuasive narratives, digital storytelling through the newsfeed with stakeholders, producing and packaging content for the new public mind, and how the art of PR is becoming more of a science.
Public Speaking Tips to Help You Be A Strong Leader.pdfPinta Partners
In the realm of effective leadership, a multitude of skills come into play, but one stands out as both crucial and challenging: public speaking.
Public speaking transcends mere eloquence; it serves as the medium through which leaders articulate their vision, inspire action, and foster engagement. For leaders, refining public speaking skills is essential, elevating their ability to influence, persuade, and lead with resolute conviction. Here are some key tips to consider: https://joellandau.com/the-public-speaking-tips-to-help-you-be-a-stronger-leader/
Senior Project and Engineering Leader Jim Smith.pdfJim Smith
I am a Project and Engineering Leader with extensive experience as a Business Operations Leader, Technical Project Manager, Engineering Manager and Operations Experience for Domestic and International companies such as Electrolux, Carrier, and Deutz. I have developed new products using Stage Gate development/MS Project/JIRA, for the pro-duction of Medical Equipment, Large Commercial Refrigeration Systems, Appliances, HVAC, and Diesel engines.
My experience includes:
Managed customized engineered refrigeration system projects with high voltage power panels from quote to ship, coordinating actions between electrical engineering, mechanical design and application engineering, purchasing, production, test, quality assurance and field installation. Managed projects $25k to $1M per project; 4-8 per month. (Hussmann refrigeration)
Successfully developed the $15-20M yearly corporate capital strategy for manufacturing, with the Executive Team and key stakeholders. Created project scope and specifications, business case, ROI, managed project plans with key personnel for nine consumer product manufacturing and distribution sites; to support the company’s strategic sales plan.
Over 15 years of experience managing and developing cost improvement projects with key Stakeholders, site Manufacturing Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Maintenance, and facility support personnel to optimize pro-duction operations, safety, EHS, and new product development. (BioLab, Deutz, Caire)
Experience working as a Technical Manager developing new products with chemical engineers and packaging engineers to enhance and reduce the cost of retail products. I have led the activities of multiple engineering groups with diverse backgrounds.
Great experience managing the product development of products which utilize complex electrical controls, high voltage power panels, product testing, and commissioning.
Created project scope, business case, ROI for multiple capital projects to support electrotechnical assembly and CPG goods. Identified project cost, risk, success criteria, and performed equipment qualifications. (Carrier, Electrolux, Biolab, Price, Hussmann)
Created detailed projects plans using MS Project, Gant charts in excel, and updated new product development in Jira for stakeholders and project team members including critical path.
Great knowledge of ISO9001, NFPA, OSHA regulations.
User level knowledge of MRP/SAP, MS Project, Powerpoint, Visio, Mastercontrol, JIRA, Power BI and Tableau.
I appreciate your consideration, and look forward to discussing this role with you, and how I can lead your company’s growth and profitability. I can be contacted via LinkedIn via phone or E Mail.
Jim Smith
678-993-7195
jimsmith30024@gmail.com
Specific ServPoints should be tailored for restaurants in all food service segments. Your ServPoints should be the centerpiece of brand delivery training (guest service) and align with your brand position and marketing initiatives, especially in high-labor-cost conditions.
408-784-7371
Foodservice Consulting + Design
Artificial intelligence (AI) offers new opportunities to radically reinvent the way we do business. This study explores how CEOs and top decision makers around the world are responding to the transformative potential of AI.
Comparing Stability and Sustainability in Agile SystemsRob Healy
Copy of the presentation given at XP2024 based on a research paper.
In this paper we explain wat overwork is and the physical and mental health risks associated with it.
We then explore how overwork relates to system stability and inventory.
Finally there is a call to action for Team Leads / Scrum Masters / Managers to measure and monitor excess work for individual teams.
The case study discusses the potential of drone delivery and the challenges that need to be addressed before it becomes widespread.
Key takeaways:
Drone delivery is in its early stages: Amazon's trial in the UK demonstrates the potential for faster deliveries, but it's still limited by regulations and technology.
Regulations are a major hurdle: Safety concerns around drone collisions with airplanes and people have led to restrictions on flight height and location.
Other challenges exist: Who will use drone delivery the most? Is it cost-effective compared to traditional delivery trucks?
Discussion questions:
Managerial challenges: Integrating drones requires planning for new infrastructure, training staff, and navigating regulations. There are also marketing and recruitment considerations specific to this technology.
External forces vary by country: Regulations, consumer acceptance, and infrastructure all differ between countries.
Demographics matter: Younger generations might be more receptive to drone delivery, while older populations might have concerns.
Stakeholders for Amazon: Customers, regulators, aviation authorities, and competitors are all stakeholders. Regulators likely hold the greatest influence as they determine the feasibility of drone delivery.
The Team Member and Guest Experience - Lead and Take Care of your restaurant team. They are the people closest to and delivering Hospitality to your paying Guests!
Make the call, and we can assist you.
408-784-7371
Foodservice Consulting + Design
W.H.Bender Quote 65 - The Team Member and Guest Experience
The Signal Social CEO Index
1. Social Media Use Among Canadian
Chief Executive Officers (CEOs)
PREPARED BY:
THE INFOSCAPE RESEARCH LAB,
RYERSON UNIVERSITY
Greg Elmer, PhD
Alexandra DiGioseffo, MA
Ana Rita Morais, PhD (ABD)
SIGNAL SOCIAL
CEO INDEX
DATE: SEPTEMBER 2016
for:
SIGNAL LEADERSHIP COMMUNICATION,
TORONTO
Bob Pickard, Principal
Janice Mandel, Principal
2. Signal Social CEO Index
Infoscape Research Lab
// September 2016
TABLEOFCONTENTS
PREPARED BY INFOSCAPE RESEARCH LAB
SIGNAL SOCIAL CEO INDEX
PAGE 3SECTION 1.0 | SUMMARY OF KEY FINDINGS
1.1 // Introduction
1.2 // CEOs on social media
1.3 // CEOs on social media by sector
1.4 // Which social media platforms?
1.5 // What are CEOs posting on social media?
SECTION 2.0 | INTRODUCTION
2.1 // Context of study
2.2 // The social media CEO
2.3 // List of CEOs
SECTION 3.0 | HOW SOCIAL MEDIA IS USED BY CEOs IN TOP 5 SECTORS
3.1 // Mining CEOs
3.2 // Telecommunications CEOs
3.3 // Banking CEOs
3.4 // Energy CEOs
3.5 // Finance CEOs
SECTION 4.0 | CEOs ON LINKEDIN
4.1 // Summary of LinkedIn platform
4.2 // CEOs’ LinkedIn account profiles
4.3 // What CEOs post on LinkedIn
SECTION 5.0 | CEOs ON TWITTER
5.1 // Summary of Twitter platform
5.2 // CEOs’ Twitter account profiles
5.3 // What CEOs post on Twitter
SECTION 6.0 | CEOs ON FACEBOOK
6.1 // Summary of Facebook platform
6.2 // CEOs’ Facebook profiles
6.3 // What CEOs post on Facebook
SECTION 7.0 | CEOs ON YOUTUBE
7.1 // Summary of YouTube platform
7.2 // Company accounts and the CEO
7.3 // What companies communicate on YouTube
SECTION 8.0 | OTHER SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORMS
8.1 // Blogs
8.2 // Instagram
SECTION 9.0 | CONCLUSIONS
PAGE 5
PAGE 7
PAGE 8
PAGE 9
PAGE 11
PAGE 12
PAGE 13
PAGE 14
3. 3 // 15
1.1INTRODUCTION
This report, the first of its kind in Canada, focuses on how
Canadian CEOs are using – or not – social media platforms.
Rankings published by the Canadian Centre for Policy
Alternatives in January 2016 which appeared in Canadian
Business (“Top 100 highest-paid CEOs”1
) served as a starting
point for analysis. While this list was determined by CEO
salaries, the list of companies and CEOs included herein
represents a wide cross-section of the Canadian economy,
fromenergyandmining,tofinanceandtelecommunications.
In the end, the study focused on 98 CEOs from 28 different
sectors of the Canadian economy.
The report is principally concerned with determining the
extent to which CEOs develop their online profiles and
presenceonsocialmediaplatforms,andtowhatendtheyuse
said platforms. The report includes an extensive analysis of
what CEOs post on social media, including LinkedIn, Twitter,
Facebook, and YouTube.
Research for this report was conducted during the month of
May 2016.2
1.2CEOs ONSOCIALMEDIA
Our research determined that 53% of CEOs were on one
or more social media platforms. However, only 16% of all
1.0SUMMARY
OFKEYFINDINGS
“This report, the
first of its kind in
Canada, focuses on
how Canadian CEOs are
using – or not – social
media platforms”
1 <http://www.canadianbusiness.com/lists-and-rankings/richest-people/
canadas-top-100-highest-paid-ceos-2016/>
2 Given the dynamic speed at which changes occur on the web and social
media, some minor changes to our findings may have already occurred.
We discuss future social media adoption in the final section of this report.
3 <http://www.ceo.com/social-ceo-report-2015/>
CEOs held two or more social media accounts, suggesting
that CEOs are making limited use of the variety of platforms
available. Furthermore, 47% of CEOs had no social media
presence whatsoever. This contrasts with a 2015 report
of Fortune 500 CEOs which found that 61% of CEOs had
no social media presence3
, suggesting that Canadian chief
executives may be more socially networked online than their
American counterparts.
1.3CEOsONSOCIALMEDIABYSECTOR
In terms of sectors, this study focuses on the top five in our list
ofCanadianCEOs,representing49CEOs(halfofourentirelist).
1) Energy: 13 CEOs
2) Mining: 13 CEOs
3) Finance: 9 CEOs
4) Banking: 8 CEOs
5) Telecommunications: 6 CEOs
As a sector, mining company CEOs had the highest
participation on social media platforms. Seventy-seven
percent (77%) of mining CEOs had at least one social media
account, and 23% had more than one account.
Sixty-seven percent (67%) of telecommunications CEOs also
had one or more social media accounts.
Conversely, both energy and finance CEOs had much lower
rates of participation on social media. For both sectors, only
36% of CEOs had one or more accounts.
More in-depth findings can be found on page 7.
NONE
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
ONE OR MORE TWO OR MORE THREE OR MORE
40
45
50
NUMBER OF ACCOUNTS
PERCENTAGEOFACCOUNTHOLDERS
CEOS ON
SOCIAL MEDIA
55
47%
53%
16%
1%
4. 4 // 15
LINKEDIN
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
FACEBOOK TWITTER YOUTUBE
40
45
50
45%
SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM
PERCENTAGEOFACCOUNTHOLDERS
CEOS ON
SOCIAL MEDIA
PLATFORMS
17%
7%
1%
CEO posts
by type
31%
20%
13%
11%
13%
8%
2.5%
1%
PHILANTHROPY
MENTORSHIP
GOVERNANCE
EMPLOYEES
CUSTOMERS
PERSONAL
THOUGHT
LEADERSHIP
BUSINESS
PROMOTION
1.4WHICHSOCIALMEDIAPLATFORMS?
Not surprisingly, LinkedIn is the most popular platform for
CEOs, nearly half of whom (45%) have accounts with the
business-focused site. While popular among Canadian CEOs,
our research found that very few of them were utilizing the
social network functions for the site, and that many online
profileswereunderdeveloped.Forfurtheranalysis,seepage8.
While popular with celebrities and public figures such as
journalists and politicians, only 7% of CEOs use the Twitter
micro-blogging platform. Our findings show that CEOs
posted on a wide variety of topics and use the platform to
conduct a number of different communications activities.
Twenty-five percent (25%) of Twitter posts – the most
prevalent – were found to promote the business of the CEO’s
company, while only 1% of tweets were of a personal nature.
ForafulsomediscussionofourCEOTwitterfindings,seepage9.
Just 17% of CEOs have accounts on the popular Facebook
social networking site. Our analysis of posts however
revealed that unlike their use of Twitter and LinkedIn, the vast
majority of CEO posts (78%) on Facebook were of a personal
nature. Such findings come just a month after another study
found that 64% of Americans were “not looking for personal
anecdotes” from CEOs on social media.4
For further analysis of Facebook use by CEOs, see page 11.
Given that only 1% of CEOs hold YouTube accounts, this
report conducted an analysis of corporate Youtube accounts.
Almost one in five (18%) of the companies studied for this
report actively used the YouTube platform. Eight accounts
were found to include videos of their CEO.
An analysis of the YouTube accounts and content can be
found on page 12.
Thesefindingsofplatformuseofferanintriguingcomparisonto
results from American ‘social CEO’ studies. A 2014 examination
of the top 50 CEOs in the Fortune Global 500 rankings found
LinkedIn to be the most popular platform at 22%.5
Our study
suggests, however, that two years later, more than double the
percentage(45%)ofCanadianCEOsareonLinkedIn.
AlthoughthereisnoprecedenttomeasureCanadianCEOsocial
media growth, this comparison suggests that Canada’s industry
leadersaredrivingatrendandturningtosocialmediaplatforms,
atleastasmuchastheirAmericancounterparts.
1.5WHATARECEOsPOSTINGONSOCIALMEDIA?
Our research found that CEOs generally post eight different
types of content on social media. The leaders posted images
of themselves and their family members in relatively large
numbers, and overwhelmingly on the Facebook platform (see
page 11 for more on this). About one in five of all posts offered
‘thought leadership’ qualities, such as visions or opinions on the
stateoftheCEO’sindustry.
2014
PERSONAL
thought leadership
business promotion
philanthropy
mentorship
governance
1
2
3
4
5
6 employees
7
8customers
personal interests,
hobbies, no clear links
to core business
opinions on state of
industry/business,
public policies,
business ethics
advertising core
goods, services,
financial numbers,
growth of company
charity campaigns,
service to industry,
public, CSR
advice for young
entrepreneurs, discussion of
skills and aptitude for
business world
communication about
company AGMs,
shareholder meetings,
investor management
promotion of company
teams, employees, and
employee relations
communication with
customers
4<http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160419006049/en/Social-Media-CEO-Public>
5<http://www.webershandwick.com/uploads/news/files/socializing-your-ceo-iii-exec-summary.pdf>
Conversely, only 2.5% of posts promoted or lauded the
employees of a CEO’s company.
Surprisingly less than 1% of tweets were directed at – or
spoketo–theexperienceofindividualconsumersorclients
of a company.
A more extensive content analysis of CEO posts is outlined in
sections4-8onpages8-13.Thediagrambelowrepresentsthe
types of content that CEOs share on social media platforms.
TypesofContentSharedby
CEOsonallplatforms
5. 5 // 15
2.1CONTEXTOFSTUDY
Studies of Internet and social media adoption and use are
hardly a new phenomenon. Much attention has focused
on how particular demographics engage with social media
platforms.6
Due to their unique role in our society, politicians
and to a lesser extent journalists continue to be the focus of
social media research projects worldwide.7
Studies of social media within the corporate sector are by
comparisonrelativelyscarceandunderdeveloped,dueinpart
perhaps to the private and proprietorial nature of corporate
practices, conventions, and communications. Studies of the
PR and marketing departments of companies have however
started to question how social media use has changed the
culture of the contemporary corporation.8
US research companies have also generated a growing body
of studies focused on the use of social media platforms by
American corporate leaders, particularly Chief Executive
Officers (CEOs).9
2.2THESOCIALMEDIACEO
The growth of social media or web 2.0 also roughly coincides
with the presence and penetration of 24 hour financial news
networks. Consequently, never has there been so much
attention paid to the opinions, appearance, and personalities
of Chief Executive Officers. CEOs are actively sought out
by media to comment on the prospects of their company,
their stock performance, or the economic challenges of the
day. Indeed, the world-wide financial crisis of 2008 put even
greateremphasisonthethoughtsandplansoftheleadership
of the largest companies.
As social media has intersected with traditional or legacy
media outlets, the expectation to be online has grown.
Pundits, politicians, and other public personalities have
subsequently developed PR strategies to promote their
brands and propagate their opinions across old and new
media, including social networks.
2.0INTRODUCTION
“Studies of social media
within the corporate sector
are by comparison relatively
scarce and underdeveloped,
due in part perhaps to the
private and proprietorial
nature of corporate
practices, conventions, and
communications”
For the CEO, such a networked strategy of communication
offers new opportunities to engage in conversations with
different communities online and off. With the help of social
media, CEOs can send out ‘unfiltered’ messages to the public
at large, or intervene in specific debates that concern their
business or sector of the economy.
However, there are obvious risks in CEOs using social media.
A novice and unprepared CEO risks offending communities
by contravening online practices and conventions, or may
simplypostuneditedcommentsbyaccident.Thatsaid,there
is another less tangible – yet equally important – risk for the
CEO: silence. In other words, by not engaging with social
media, CEOs run the risk of being perceived as aloof, out of
touch,oruncaringbytheirownemployees,customers,orthe
public at large.
6TheUS-basedPewResearchCentercontinuestooffercompellingdatasetson
socialmediause.See<http://www.pewinternet.org/>
<http://www.pewinternet.org/data-trend/social-media/social-media-use-by-
age-group/> Globally the World Internet Project has produced annual reports
onnationaltrendsregardingthebroaderuseoftheInternetinvariouscountries,
includingCanada.<http://www.worldinternetproject.net/>
7 For an introduction to research on Canadian politics and elections see Elmer,
G.G.Langlois&F.McKelvey.(2012).ThePermanentCampaign:NewMedia,New
Politics,NewYork:PeterLang.
8 See the work of NYU business professor Sinan Aral <http://pubsonline.
informs.org/doi/abs/10.1287/isre.1120.0470>
9 CEO.com. (2015). Social CEO Report old guard vs new guard: CEOs and
companies new to the Fortune 500 list leading social media charge. <http://
www.ceo.com/wp-content/themes/ceov2/assets/CEOcom-Social-CEO-
Report-2015.pdf>.; G&S Business Communications. (2016). Social Media
and the CEO: What does the public really want?; Information Age. (2015). Too
busy to tweet? Only seven FTSE 100 CEOs are active on Twitter and none get
close to Richard Branson for social power. <http://www.information- age.com/
it-management/skills-training-and-leadership/123458791/too-busy-tweet-
only-seven-ftse-100-ceos-are-active-twitter-and-none-get-close-richard-
branson-social>.; Nanos. (2016). Social media seen as the top threat to one’s
public image.; Weber Shandwick. (2014). Socializing your CEO II. <http://
www.webershandwick.com/uploads/news/files/WS_SYCEO_ExecSummary.
pdf>; Weber Shandwick. (2015). Socializing your CEO III: From marginal
to mainstream. <http://www.webershandwick.com/uploads/news/files/
socializing-your-ceo-iii-exec-summary.pdf>.
6. 6 // 15
rank sector f
1
energy
Canadian Natural Resources; Cenovus Energy;
Crescent Point Energy Corp; Emera; Encana
Corp; Husky Energy; Imperial Oil; Methanex
Corp; Pacific Rubiales Energy Corp; Paramount
Resources; Precision Drilling Corp; Suncor Energy;
Transalta Corp
13
2
mining
Agnico Eagle Mines; Barrick Gold Corp; Cameco
Corp; Dominion Diamond Corp; Eldorado Gold
Corp; Goldcorp; Kinross Gold Corp; Lundin Mining
Corp; Nevsun Resources; Novagold Resources;
SilverWheatonCorp;TeckResources;YamanaGold
13
3
finance
BrookfieldAssetManagement;CanaccordGenuity
Group; CI Financial Corp; Great-West Lifeco; Onex
Corp; Power Corp (2)*; Power Financial Corp; Sun
Life Financial
9
4
banking
Bank of Montreal; Bank of Nova Scotia; Canadian
Imperial Bank of Commerce (2)*; Laurentian Bank
of Canada; National Bank of Canada; Royal Bank of
Canada; Toronto Dominion Bank
8
5
telecommunications
BCE; Manitoba Telecom Services; Quebecor;
Rogers Communications; Shaw Communications;
Telus Corp
6
6
food
Cott Corp; Empire Co; Maple Leaf Foods;
Restaurant Brands International; Weston (George)
5
7
transport
Air Canada; Canadian National Railway; Canadian
Pacific Railway; Transcanada Corp; Transforce
5
8
retail
Alimentation Couche-Tard; Agrium; Canadian Tire
Corp; Loblaw Companies
4
9 auto
BRP; Magna International; Martinrea International
3
10
heavy equipment
Finning International; Linamar Corp; Ritchie Bros
Auctioneers
3
11
media
Corus Entertainment; Thomson Reuters Corp;
Transcontinental
3
12 insurance
Intact Financial Corp; Manulife Financial Corp
2
13 Information Management
Catamaran Corp; CGI Group
2
14 pharmaceuticals
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International (2)
2
15 real estate
FirstServiceCorp;RioCanRealEstateInvestmentTrust
2
16 utility
Fortis; Enbridge
2
17 telecommunications equipment
Mitel Networks Corp; Blackberry
2
18 aerospace
Bombardier
1
19 agricultural products
Potash Corp Of Saskatchewan
1
20 aviation & defence
CAE
1
21 clothing
Gildan Activewear
1
22 electronics
Celestica
1
23 engineering
SNC-Lavalin Group
1
24 entertainment
Cineplex
1
25 industrial chemicals
Chemtrade Logistics Income Fund
1
26 marketing
Aimia
1
27 packaging
CCL Industries
1
28 retail management
First Capital Realty
1
*Power Corp Of Canada and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
have two co-CEOs in our list
2.3LISTOFCEOs
This study examines the online presence of the country’s most
highly paid chief executives. As noted in the summary, this
reportstudies98CEOsfromanupdatedindexinitiallypublished
inCanadianBusinessmagazine.Whilesuchanindexcomeswith
its biases, the resulting list of economic sectors nonetheless
providesacross-sectionthatisreasonablyrepresentativeofthe
Canadianeconomy.Thefollowingchartoutlinesthenumberof
industriesrepresentedbyCEOsinourindex.
7. 7 // 15
3.1MININGCEOs
The report found mining sector CEOs as a group to be the
most active on social media in Canada. Seventy-seven
percent (77%) of these CEOs had at least one social media
account. Many CEOs used social media to highlight charity
and philanthropic campaigns of their companies, while also
actively seeking to address concerns over the environmental
impact of their core business.
3.2TELECOMMUNICATIONSCEOs
A relatively high 67% of telecommunications CEOs were
also on social media platforms. But only 17% of these CEOs
had more than one social media account.
3.0HOWSOCIALMEDIAISUSED
BYCEOs INTOP5SECTORS
23%
23%
54%
mining
MORE THAN
ONE ACCOUNT
NO ACCOUNT
ONE ACCOUNT
50%
telecom
MORE THAN
ONE ACCOUNT
NO ACCOUNT
ONE ACCOUNT
33%
17%
3.3BANKINGCEOs
Banking CEOs were also relatively active on social media.
Sixty-three percent (63%) of banking CEOs were on at
least one social media platform, while 25% had more than
one social media account.
3.4&3.5ENERGY&FINANCECEOs
CEOs from the energy and finance sectors were much less
engaged with social media than their telecommunications,
bankingandminingsectorcounterparts.Only36%ofenergy
and finance CEOs had one or more social media accounts.
38%
BANKING
MORE THAN
ONE ACCOUNT
NO ACCOUNT
ONE ACCOUNT
37%
25%
64%
energy
MORE THAN
ONE ACCOUNT
NO ACCOUNT
ONE ACCOUNT
22%
14%
64%
finance MORE THAN
ONE ACCOUNT
NO ACCOUNT
ONE ACCOUNT
9%
27%
ceo social media use
8. 8 // 15
4.1SUMMARYOFLINKEDINPLATFORM
LinkedInistheworld’slargestprofessionalnetworkingplatform.
Officially launched in May 2003, the social networking site
operates in 200 countries and hosts over 433 million members.
The platform is largely comprised of individuals aged 30 to 49.
Conceived as a professional tool and social networking site,
LinkedIn offers its users access to companies, jobs and news
updates. The platform’s default privacy setting enables users
to view other member profiles with few restrictions.10
Users
can adjust account privacy settings to restrict profile visibility,
accountactivity,contactoptions,anddatause.
4.2CEOs’LINKEDINACCOUNTPROFILES
Nearly 45% of CEOs were found to have LinkedIn accounts;
however, only half of these accounts included a profile
picture,oneofthefirststepsinvolvedincreatinganactivesocial
mediapresence.Eightaccountsnotincludedinthispercentage
could not be verified because they included no posts, friends,
or profiles. Furthermore, of those CEOs with ‘active’ LinkedIn
accounts, only one-third included a biography, again further
callingintoquestiontheactualuseofsuchaccounts.
Only two CEO accounts on LinkedIn (5%) were identified as
‘LinkedIninfluencers,’adesignationbestowedbytheplatform
toindicateeliteindustryleaders.Bothoftheseaccountsincluded
profilepictures,aswellassummariesand/orbiographies.11
Our research shows that several CEOs have only a
‘placeholder’ presence on LinkedIn. The findings also suggest
that busy CEOs may not have an ample knowledge of social
mediaplatformsandpreferencesettingsinordertorapidlyand
confidently address them properly. It is clear that CEOs’ online
presenceonLinkedIncouldbesubstantiallyexpanded.
4.3whatceos postonlinkedin
Another strong indicator of underdeveloped and underused
LinkedIn accounts is the low number of posts, comments or
4.0CEOs ONLINKEDIN
other shared content on the platform. Of all CEOs, only three
(two of whom are ‘Influencers’) posted content.
use of linkedin by ceos
Percentage of all CEOs on platform 45%
CEOs who included a profile picture 50%
CEOswhocompletedauserprofilesummaryand/orbiography 33%
10 Some profile details such as contact information, connections, and
posts are limited to 1st
-degree connections only.
11 TheLinkedIninfluencersareJohnChen(BlackBerry)andDavidMcKay(RBC).
62%
what ceoS
communicate
THOUGHT LEADERSHIP
MENTORSHIP
38%
Of the comments posted, 62% offered advice or mentoring
to junior colleagues and business students, while the
remaining 38% offered broader insights into the challenges
faced by their industry. Such findings are in stark contrast to
amuch greaterdiversity ofcomments andposts on theother
platforms studied, particularly Twitter.
9. 9 // 15
5.1SUMMARYOFTWITTERPLATFORM
Created in March 2006 by Jack Dorsey, Twitter is a social
networking platform that allows users to send and receive
short messages – tweets – confined to a 140-character limit.
Inadditiontotweeting,theplatformenablesuserstoproduce
and engage with content through @replies, @mentions, and
hashtag functions. The platform hosts 310 million12
active
monthlyusersandissupportedinover40languages.InNorth
America, the majority of Twitter users are individuals aged
18 to 49, with males slightly more likely to use the platform
than females. Registered users can opt between ‘public’ and
‘protected’ privacy options. The default setting enables all
tweeted content to be publically visible (including to those
who are not registered users), while the protected setting
restricts content access to an account’s approved followers
alone.Twitteralsooffers‘key’individualsandbrandstheability
to authenticate identities by verifying accounts (indicated by
a blue verified checkmark on a Twitter profile). All verified
accounts meet specific criteria established by Twitter.
5.2CEOs’TWITTERACCOUNTPROFILES
Only 7% of CEOs used the Twitter micro-blogging
platform. Of these accounts, only two accounts were
‘verified’.13
SuchfindingssuggestthatCEOsmaybeunaware
of the dangers posed by fake, false and parody accounts
that may call into question the identity of the CEOs and her/
his reputation and opinions on important issues, including
proprietorial and brand related matters.
Interestingly,allTwitterCEOaccountswereopenedwithinalmost
ayear-longperiod,startingDecember1,2013-January6,2015.
The number of followers a user has is often held up as an
indicatorofinfluenceoratleastreachonTwitter.Ifweremove
BlackBerryCEOJohnChen(whohasover18,000followersat
last count) the remainder of the CEOs only averaged 316
followers. Conversely, we found that on average (including
Chen), CEOs showed little interest in following other Twitter
accounts.Onaverage,CEOsfollowedonly65Twitterusers.
5.0CEOs ONTWITTER
5.3WHATCEOs POSTONTWITTER
Intermsofusage,ourstudyfoundthatCEOspostedrelatively
few tweets. Since joining the platform, the overall average
total of CEO tweets was only 188. When CEOs did tweet,
it was primarily to promote business ventures (25%),
express philanthropic undertakings or campaigns (22%),
or act as a vehicle for thought leadership (22%). Broadly
speaking, the content of Twitter posts or ‘tweets’ were the
most diverse of all platforms, encompassing all eight content
types used for our study (see page 4) .
GiventheinteractivefunctionsonTwitterthatencouragedialogue
amongaccountholdersthrough@commandsandreplies,itwas
surprising to find a paltry 2% of all CEO tweets engaging other
Twitter users. Such a stark finding leads us to conclude that
TwitterisbeingusedoverwhelminglybytheseselectfewCEOs
asabroadcastmediumforone-way‘push’communication.
AsopposedtoourfindingsontheFacebooksocialnetworking
platform, only 1% of tweets were found to be of a personal
12 As of March 2016.
13TheverifiedTwitteraccountsareheldbyJohnChen(BlackBerry)andMichael
McCain(MapleLeafFoods).
14Note:oneprotectedaccountincludedinsample.Asaresultoftheseprivacy
settings,coderswereunabletoidentifyaccountfeaturesandcontents.
use of twitter by ceos
Percentage of all CEOs on platform 7%
Percentage of verified accounts 29%
Average number of accounts followed by CEOs14
65
Range of accounts followed by CEOs 3 – 183
Average number of CEO tweets 188
10. 10 // 15
nature. CEOs were conspicuously not posting in great
numbers about their own employees (5%).
These findings support the conclusions drawn by a 2015
study examining the use of Twitter by the top 100 FTSE
CEOs. Replicating almost the exact same results, only seven
FTSE CEOs held active Twitter accounts, all of whom did not
utilize the full potential of the platform.15
15 Information Age. (2015). Too busy to tweet? Only seven FTSE 100
CEOs are active on Twitter and none get close to Richard Branson for
social power. <http://www.information-age.com/it-management/
skills-training-and-leadership/123458791/too-busy- tweet-only-seven-
ftse-100-ceos-are-active-twitter-and-none-get-close-richard-branson-
social>.
25%
what ceoS
post
PHILANTHROPY
22%
22%
16%
7%
5%
2%
1%
GOVERNANCE
MENTORSHIP
EMPLOYEES
CUSTOMERS
PERSONAL
BUSINESS PROMOTION
THOUGHT LEADERSHIP
11. 11 // 15
6.1SUMMARYOFFACEBOOKPLATFORM
Facebookistheworld’slargestsocialnetwork.Foundedin2004as
an online networking platform for Harvard University students,
Facebook currently hosts over one billion active daily registered
users.16
Userswhocreateapersonalprofileareabletoperforma
varietyoffunctions,fromconnectingwithotherFacebookusers,
to sharing personal information, and customizing platform
notifications. The platform’s privacy settings offer its users
more customizable options. Users can select from ‘basic’ and
‘advanced’ menus to restrict or allow search functions, as well
as control visibility of personal information, account activity and
associated groups/friends. Facebook also allows select users to
authenticate identities through verifying profiles and platform
pages. Public figures, businesses and brands can request a
blue verified badge that confirms ownership of the account.
At present, Facebook only supports select verification requests
shouldtheymeetitsspecificrequirements.17
6.2CEOs’FACEBOOKPROFILES
Seventeen percent of CEOs studied have a Facebook
account, making it the second most popular social media
platform(afterLinkedIn).Oftheseaccounts,almosthalf(47%)
restrictedpublicaccesstoaccountinformation.
Onlynineoutof17accounts(53%)couldbeviewedpublicly,
and had an average total of 79 friends. No CEO accounts
wereofficiallyverified.
These findings suggest that CEOs have a more advanced
knowledge of settings and privacy protocols on Facebook than
on any other platform and/or it could also be the case that
Facebook does a better job of making these options available
to its user base. That being said, of those accounts that were
set to private, profile pictures – often personal in nature – were
regularly updated and made available for public viewing on
Facebook,afactthatsomeCEOsmightnotknow.
TheaversiontowardspublicFacebookprofilesmayreflectsome
awareness of the platform being understood as a place more
suitableforpersonalposts.
6.0CEOs ONFACEBOOK
6.3whatCEOs postonFacebook
The public CEO Facebook accounts overwhelmingly served a
personalfunctionandrarelyactedasplatformsforprofessional
publicity. This distinguished Facebook from all other social
mediaplatforms.
16AsofMarch2016
17 As of June 6, 2016 Facebook is only accepting verification requests from select
people,sports,media,entertainmentandgovernmentpages.
18 Figure representative of public accounts only. Account information is restricted
onprivateaccounts.
use of FACEBOOK by ceos
Percentage of all CEOs on platform 17%
Percentage of private CEO accounts 47%
Average number of account friends18
79
Verified pages 0%
78%
what ceoS
post
PERSONAL
13%
THOUGHT
LEADERSHIP
2% MENTORSHIP
5%
2% BUSINESS
PROMOTION
PHILANTHROPY
Seventy-eight percent (78%) of posts were personal in
nature,whileonly2%promotedbusinessoperations.
The relatively low number of friends on Facebook also suggests
that the platform is being used for purposes other than large-
scale business networking. Such findings raise significant
privacyrelatedissuesforCEOswhomadetheiraccountspublic.
12. 12 // 15
7.1SUMMARYOFYOUTUBEPLATFORM
Launched in May 2005, YouTube operates as a video
distribution platform for user-generated media content.
Hosting over one billion users, it operates in 76 different
languages and has introduced localized versions in over 88
countries. Users can produce, consume and/or engage with
content that abides by YouTube’s terms and conditions. The
platform’s default privacy setting is set to ‘public’ which
allows anyone (including non-users) to view uploaded
content. Contributors can restrict public access by selecting
between ‘private’ and ‘unlisted’19
privacy options. Private
videoscannotbesearched,willnotappearonauser’sYouTube
channel, and may only be viewed by users authorized by the
creator. Likewise, ‘unlisted’ videos cannot be searched and
will not appear on its associated channel. Content of this
nature, however, can be viewed by anyone with access to the
video URL. High-profile individuals, businesses and brands
can also authenticate identities through obtaining a blue
verification badge displayed on the confirmed channels. All
verified accounts meet qualifications stipulated by YouTube;
the platform does not accept general verification requests.
7.2COMPANYACCOUNTSANDTHECEO
Individual CEO accounts were noticeably absent from the
YouTube platform. However, this study also includes a brief
analysis of the companies that use YouTube for corporate
marketing and other purposes.
Almost one in five (18%) of the companies represented in
our list actively use the video hosting platform.
ReasonsfortheabsenceofCEOsonYouTubecouldrangefrom
the advanced technical skills required for video production,
to potential conflicts with company branding guidelines and
corporate communication policies.
7.0CEOs ONYOUTUBE
7.3WHATCOMPANIESCOMMUNICATEONYOUTUBE
ThisisnottosuggestthatCEOswereabsentfromYouTube.Eight
companyaccountswerefoundtoincludevideosoftheirCEOs,
typicallygivingspeechestobusinessgroups(thoughtleadership)
orannualgeneralmeetings(governance).
The majority of videos studied were found to include
messages and campaigns designed to promote the core
business of the company (57%). A sizeable (19%) number
of videos also highlighted the companies support of various
charities and causes, many highlighting the contributions
and campaigns supported by their employees. Twenty-one
percent (21%) of videos highlighted the governance and
thought leadership contributions of their CEO.
Overall, the findings highlight a significant absence in the
personal use of YouTube by CEOs to visually introduce
themselvestotheirclients,employees,andothercommunities.
19 Note: only accounts with “good standing” (a status afforded through
compliance with YouTube content guidelines and copyright policies) are
able to post unlisted videos.
57%
whatceo
companies
communicate
THOUGHT
LEADERSHIP19%
17%
4% GOVERNANCE
EMPLOYEES
MENTORSHIP
2%
1%
PHILANTHROPY
BUSINESS
PROMOTION
13. 13 // 15
8.1Blogs
The emergence of the online weblog, known as the blog, can
be traced back to the early 1990s, although the blogging
phenomena really took off starting a decade later. Initially
serving as individual online journals, blogs now take multiple
digital forms, cover limitless topics, and may be co-authored
by multiple contributors. Blogs are characterized by their
form and function: all posts are time-stamped and display
the most recent content first in reverse-chronological order.
Blogs can also act as powerful marketing tools for brands
and businesses. Businesses who blog receive an increase of
inbound links to their websites by an estimated 97%20
. All
blog privacy settings vary and are dependent on the content
management system hosting the online content.
This study found insignificant uptake of blogs. Only four (4)
CEO blogs were found. This is lower than we expected, given
thatCEOblogsaretypicallyhostedoncorporatewebsiteswhich
are owned by the companies themselves (and often controlled
by their communications and/or marketing departments).
However, there is no master directory or central platform for
blogs,andtheirlocationcanbeanywhereontheweb.
8.0OTHERSOCIALMEDIA
PLATFORMS
8.2INSTAGRAM
Facebook-owned Instagram, in contrast to blogs, represents
something of a next wave of social media platforms. For
example, Canada’s new Prime Minister’s Instagram account
was fodder for significant discussion during the last federal
election. The platform served as a dynamic visual space to
frame a particular image of Justin Trudeau. CEOs conscious
of their image might consider the upside of such platforms.
Only three CEO Instagram accounts could be verified. A
combination of privacy settings and sparse profile details
make Instagram a largely personal photo-sharing platform
for those few CEOs who have opened accounts.
Instagram, YouTube and other platforms should also not be
considered in isolation from Facebook, blogs, and Twitter.
Most platforms now enable the embedding of their images,
text and other content across a number of web and Internet
based properties and formats, enabling CEOs and their
companies the opportunity to project their presence across
the Internet and beyond.
20 HubSpot. (2015). 6 Stats you should know about business blogging
in 2015. <http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/business-blogging-in-
2015#sm.000015rz09l3rtdc1vamc5t1da2jk>.
14. 14 // 15
9.0FINALTHOUGHTS
Overall, the report found that uptake, use, and knowledge
of social media platforms in Canada is slightly higher than
in the US, but still remains relatively low when compared to
other online communities. That said, a large proportion of
CEO social media accounts were found to be underutilized or
altogether dormant.
There was little evidence of strategic social media or
leadership communication campaigns designed and
implemented for, or by, CEOs.
CEOs’ knowledge of the privacy settings of social media
platforms is underdeveloped and presents a potential risk
to matters of property, security, and branding for their
companies plus personal reputation and image.
Generally speaking, CEOs are not directly engaging with
other users, customers, clients, investors or employees on
social media platforms. The relative absence of CEOs on
social media may raise questions about CEO engagement
in the day-to-day affairs of the company or long range and
strategic design of a company’s future digital business.
9.0CONCLUSIONS
“The relative absence of
CEOs on social media may
raise questions about CEO
engagement in the day-to-day
affairs of the company or long
range and strategic design of
a company’s future business”
Even on the most used and business-friendly social media
platform, LinkedIn, it was found that CEOs were not making
use of networking functions or even basic profile functions
suchaspicturesandbiographies.GiventheroleofLinkedInfor
recruitment, this platform seems underutilized as a resource
for the CEO to support their organization’s talent strategy.
Platformsthatfocusonvisualimages(YouTubeandInstagram)
are particularly underused by corporate CEOs, though the
small percentage of CEOs on Twitter were making good use
of images on that particular platform.
While there remain tremendous opportunities for CEOs
to better engage on social media, there were significant
differences in use across sectors. Interestingly, mining CEOs
showed the most participation on social media, while energy
and finance had significantly less uptake.
15. PREPARED BY:
THE INFOSCAPE RESEARCH LAB,
RYERSON UNIVERSITY
Greg Elmer // gelmer@ryerson.ca
Alexandra DiGioseffo
Ana Rita Morais
infoscapelab.ca
Founded in 2005 at Ryerson University, the Infoscape
Research Lab hosts research projects that focus on the
cultural and political impact of digital code, particularly
with regards to social media. The lab develops software
basedresearchtools,interfacedesigns,andexperimental
research methods that seek to analyze content and use
of new media platforms.
For:
SIGNAL LEADERSHIP COMMUNICATION,
TORONTO
Bob Pickard // bob.pickard@signaleadership.com
signaleadership.com
Signal Leadership Communication Inc. is a social public
relations firm for executives and organizations with images
to create, issues to manage, relationships to build, and
reputations to protect in a digitally disrupted era. It is the
one communications consultancy expressly dedicated to
serving senior leaders with PR counsel that is both strategic
and social by design, informed by a deep understanding of
analytics, content, communities, media, sustainability and
technology.
SIGNAL SOCIAL CEO INDEX
WWW.SIGNALEADERSHIP.COM