The Best-Performing CEOs in the World!!
Lars Rebien
The world’s top-performing CEO isn’t a household name. In fact, Lars Rebien Sørensen
doesn’t even look like a big-time global executive. We recently
traveled to the quiet town of Ridgefield, Connecticut, to meet with the
CEO of the Danish pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk at his lakefront
summer home. He met us in shorts, sandals, and a polo shirt, dressed for
a bike ride later that day.
How
did this mild-mannered, bespectacled executive land in the #1 spot on
our list? It’s partly due to his company’s (darkly) fortuitous decision
years ago to focus almost exclusively on diabetes treatment. The runaway
global growth of the disease has driven up the company’s sales and
stock price.
But
his standing also reflects Novo Nordisk’s deep engagement with social
and environmental issues, which now factor in to our calculations.
“Corporate social responsibility is nothing but maximizing the value of
your company over a long period,” says Sørensen, who has been with the
company for 33 years. “In the long term, social and environmental issues
become financial issues.”
HBR’s ranking of CEOs is meant
to be a measure of enduring success. We track and analyze each CEO’s
performance starting from day one of his or her tenure. Our goal is to
create a list that gets beyond the most recent quarterly or even annual
results and truly evaluates long-term performance.
In the past, our ranking was
based exclusively on hard stock market numbers. We looked at total
shareholder return, as well as the change in each company’s market
capitalization.
We liked the fact that the
ranking was based solidly on data and not on reputation or anecdote. Yet
it also felt incomplete, because it failed to account for the many
aspects of leadership that go beyond mere market performance.
And so this year we’ve tweaked things.
We’ve added to the mix a measurement of each company’s environmental,
social, and governance (ESG) performance. For this we relied on the
calculations of the investment research firm Sustainalytics. We now weight long-term financial results at 80% and ESG performance at 20%.