Jamie Dimon is in a world of hurt. JPMorgan just got hit with a $13 billion settlement, which even for America's biggest bank is an unwelcome development. And yet, Dimon seems to be coming out alright -- there's little indication that he'll be forced out for presiding over a company that committed violation after violation. What's more, his employees don't think he's doing too badly either, giving him a 78 percent approval rating on the career Web site Glassdoor.com.
Turns out that's about an average score for most big companies. Browsing through the rest of the Fortune 500 gives us an interesting picture of where CEOs stand: With a few exceptions, the ratings tend to correlate with general consciousness of popular consumer brands like Twitter and Facebook. (Warren Buffett did come out with a 100 percent rating, but with only six reviews, it's probably not statistically significant.) They definitely don't correlate with how much a CEO is paid -- some of the most popular don't draw a salary at all.
Oh, and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is less well liked than most.
Here's a selected list:
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook, 97 percent
Dick Costolo, Twitter, 96 percent
Dominic Barton, McKinsey & Co., 96 percent
Larry Page, Google, 95 percent
John S. Watson, Chevron, 94 percent
Alan Mullaly, Ford Motor Company, 94 percent
Craig Jelinek, Costco, 93 percent
Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman Sachs, 93 percent
Tim Cook, Apple, 92 percent
Louis Camilleri, Philip Morris International, 92 percent
Richard Davis, U.S. Bank, 90 percent
Rex Tillerson, Exxon Mobil, 90 percent
Bob Iger, Disney, 90 percent
Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com, 87 percent
Howard Schultz, Starbucks, 87 percent
Muhtar Kent, Coca Cola, 87 percent
Ralph Lauren, Ralph Lauren, 83 percent
Jeff Immelt, General Electric, 82 percent
Larry Ellison, Oracle, 79 percent
James Gorman, Morgan Stanley, 76 percent
Jamie Dimon, JP Morgan, 78 percent
Jim McInerney, Boeing, 78 percent
Brian Roberts, Comcast, 75 percent
John Stumpf, Wells Fargo, 75 percent
John Chambers, Cisco Systems, 75 percent
Brian Moynihan, Bank of America, 73 percent
Don Thompson, McDonalds, 71 percent
Virginia Rometty, IBM, 71 percent
John Hammergren, McKesson, 70 percent
Michael Corbat, Citigroup, 65 percent
John Donahoe, eBay, 58 percent
Lowell McAdam, Verizon, 58 percent
Randall Stephenson, AT&T, 50 percent
Mike Duke, Wal-Mart, 48 percent
Steve Ballmer, Microsoft, 47 percent
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