The 2016 edition is built around The Year Asia Rewired Growth: the moment when Asian business leadership became less about low-cost production and more about platforms, networks, digital infrastructure, capital sophistication, consumer ambition and globally relevant operating models.
Asia's Top CEOs
The corporate leaders who rewired Asian growth through platforms, capital discipline, infrastructure, technology and operating consequence.
The Year Asia Rewired Growth
InfluenceAsia Asia's Top CEOs 2016 recognizes the corporate leaders whose decisions most strongly shaped Asia's business year. The edition covers internet platforms, telecoms, banking, semiconductors, automotive, aviation, retail, energy, sovereign capital, consumer goods, manufacturing, logistics, property, biotechnology, education technology and digital services.
The ranking is an independent InfluenceAsia editorial and research list. It is not a wealth list, market-cap table, political ranking, founder-celebrity list, revenue league table or imported media award. Placement reflects a composite view of 2016 contribution, company performance, strategic influence, category creation, regional relevance, institutional quality and leadership consequence.
The year 2016 was defined by mobile internet consolidation, India's digital telecom shock, China's platform economy, Japan's global technology bets, Southeast Asia's super-app formation, Asian banking digitization, e-commerce scale, aviation expansion, energy-sector discipline, and the first serious signs that data, mobility and payments would redraw Asian business.
InfluenceAsia gives exceptional weight to CEOs who changed the rules of a market in 2016: defeating a global rival, launching a national digital network, acquiring a strategic technology asset, digitizing a bank, scaling a regional platform, transforming a manufacturer or building an Asian brand that could compete internationally.
The strongest CEOs of 2016 were not only managers of large balance sheets. They were architects of market structure: leaders who shaped consumer behavior, industry boundaries, capital flows, technology standards, financial inclusion and national business confidence.
Eight Leaders That Define The 2016 Thesis
Cheng Wei
Platform founder-CEO
- Platform
- Founder and CEO, Didi Chuxing
- Market
- China
- Index
- 99.0
Cheng Wei leads Didi Chuxing, the Chinese mobility platform that became the clear domestic winner after the Uber China transaction.
InfluenceAsia ranks Cheng first because his 2016 achievement changed market structure, defeated a global rival, and made mobile transportation a defining Asian platform category.
Mukesh Ambani
Industrial and digital infrastructure leader
- Platform
- Chairman and Managing Director, Reliance Industries
- Market
- India
- Index
- 98.6
Mukesh Ambani leads Reliance Industries and in 2016 launched Jio as a national-scale 4G telecom and digital-services platform.
InfluenceAsia places Ambani near the top because Jio did more than enter telecoms. It forced a price, data and consumer-access reset across India.
Masayoshi Son
Technology-investment CEO
- Platform
- Chairman and CEO, SoftBank Group
- Market
- Japan
- Index
- 98.2
Masayoshi Son leads SoftBank Group and used 2016 to make an extraordinary strategic acquisition in ARM.
InfluenceAsia ranks Son highly because the ARM deal showed Asia's willingness to control foundational technology, not only invest in consumer internet.
Pony Ma
Consumer-internet CEO
- Platform
- Chairman and CEO, Tencent Holdings
- Market
- China
- Index
- 97.8
Pony Ma leads Tencent, whose WeChat, gaming, social and payments infrastructure became increasingly inseparable from Chinese digital life.
InfluenceAsia includes Ma in the top tier because Tencent's ecosystem power in 2016 was both consumer-facing and structurally defensive.
Jack Ma
Founder and executive chairman
- Platform
- Executive Chairman, Alibaba Group
- Market
- China
- Index
- 97.4
Jack Ma remains Alibaba's most visible strategic figure, representing Chinese e-commerce, digital finance, logistics and cloud ambition.
InfluenceAsia ranks Ma high because Alibaba's 2016 significance extended beyond shopping into the operating infrastructure of Chinese consumption.
Akio Toyoda
Industrial CEO
- Platform
- President, Toyota Motor Corporation
- Market
- Japan
- Index
- 97.0
Akio Toyoda leads Toyota through a period of global automotive uncertainty, quality pressure, environmental transition and future-mobility planning.
InfluenceAsia includes Toyoda because Toyota remains Asia's most globally respected industrial operating system.
Piyush Gupta
Digital banking CEO
- Platform
- CEO, DBS Group
- Market
- Singapore
- Index
- 96.6
Piyush Gupta leads DBS Group and has made digital transformation a core management discipline rather than a marketing slogan.
InfluenceAsia ranks Gupta because he turned an Asian bank into a credible technology-led organization before most regional peers moved with comparable conviction.
Ren Zhengfei
Engineering founder-CEO
- Platform
- Founder and CEO, Huawei Technologies
- Market
- China
- Index
- 96.2
Ren Zhengfei leads Huawei, one of Asia's most important telecom equipment, enterprise technology and smartphone companies.
InfluenceAsia includes Ren because Huawei's 2016 competitiveness reflects long-cycle engineering, employee ownership culture and global technology ambition.
The Full List
75 leaders shown
No matching leaders found.
| Rank | Leader | 2016 platform | Market base | Primary sector | Index | 2016 signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cheng WeiPlatform founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, Didi Chuxing | China | Mobility technology | 99.0 | Didi's acquisition of Uber China made Cheng the defining Asian platform CEO of 2016. |
| 2 | Mukesh AmbaniIndustrial and digital infrastructure leader | Chairman and Managing Director, Reliance Industries | India | Telecoms, energy and digital infrastructure | 98.6 | Reliance Jio's national launch reset India's telecom economics and digital-consumer trajectory. |
| 3 | Masayoshi SonTechnology-investment CEO | Chairman and CEO, SoftBank Group | Japan | Technology investment and telecommunications | 98.2 | SoftBank's acquisition of ARM marked one of Asia's boldest technology bets of the year. |
| 4 | Pony MaConsumer-internet CEO | Chairman and CEO, Tencent Holdings | China | Social platforms, gaming and digital payments | 97.8 | Tencent's WeChat ecosystem, gaming strength and payments expansion made it China's most embedded consumer-technology platform. |
| 5 | Jack MaFounder and executive chairman | Executive Chairman, Alibaba Group | China | E-commerce, cloud and digital finance | 97.4 | Alibaba remained Asia's most influential commerce ecosystem, with retail, payments, logistics and cloud becoming strategic infrastructure. |
| 6 | Akio ToyodaIndustrial CEO | President, Toyota Motor Corporation | Japan | Automotive and mobility | 97.0 | Toyota's global scale, quality discipline and mobility strategy kept Toyoda central to Asia's industrial leadership. |
| 7 | Piyush GuptaDigital banking CEO | CEO, DBS Group | Singapore | Banking and financial technology | 96.6 | DBS became a benchmark for Asian bank digitization and technology-led cultural transformation. |
| 8 | Ren ZhengfeiEngineering founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, Huawei Technologies | China | Telecommunications and devices | 96.2 | Huawei continued to build global telecom equipment and smartphone strength under a long-cycle engineering culture. |
| 9 | Daniel ZhangCommerce-platform CEO | CEO, Alibaba Group | China | E-commerce and cloud platforms | 95.8 | Zhang's operational command of Alibaba's commerce engine and Singles' Day scale made him a core executive of China's digital economy. |
| 10 | Morris ChangSemiconductor institution builder | Chairman, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company | Taiwan | Semiconductors | 95.4 | TSMC's foundry leadership made Chang a decisive figure in the global electronics supply chain. |
| 11 | Tony FernandesAviation entrepreneur | Group CEO, AirAsia | Malaysia and ASEAN | Low-cost aviation | 95.0 | AirAsia kept expanding the low-cost aviation model across Southeast Asia despite a difficult airline environment. |
| 12 | Ho ChingSovereign-capital CEO | CEO, Temasek Holdings | Singapore | Sovereign investment and portfolio management | 94.6 | Temasek remained one of Asia's most sophisticated long-term capital allocators under Ho's leadership. |
| 13 | N. ChandrasekaranEnterprise-technology CEO | CEO and Managing Director, Tata Consultancy Services | India | IT services | 94.2 | TCS continued to represent India's scale, execution and enterprise-technology credibility in global services. |
| 14 | Robin LiSearch and AI platform CEO | Chairman and CEO, Baidu | China | Search, AI and internet services | 93.8 | Baidu's search leadership and early AI investments kept Li important to China's next technology cycle. |
| 15 | Li Ka-shingConglomerate architect | Chairman, CK Hutchison Holdings and CK Asset Holdings | Hong Kong | Conglomerates, ports, telecoms and property | 93.4 | Li remained Asia's most influential cross-border conglomerate builder after the group's major restructuring. |
| 16 | Richard LiuRetail and logistics CEO | Chairman and CEO, JD.com | China | E-commerce and logistics | 93.0 | JD's direct-retail model, warehousing and delivery infrastructure differentiated it in China's e-commerce war. |
| 17 | Arundhati BhattacharyaPublic-sector banking CEO | Chairperson, State Bank of India | India | Banking | 92.6 | SBI's merger agenda, digital push and balance-sheet discipline made Bhattacharya India's most consequential bank leader. |
| 18 | Kwon Oh-hyunElectronics and semiconductor CEO | Vice Chairman and CEO, Samsung Electronics | South Korea | Semiconductors and consumer electronics | 92.2 | Samsung's component strength and global electronics scale remained strategically vital despite product-quality turbulence. |
| 19 | Goh Choon PhongPremium aviation CEO | CEO, Singapore Airlines | Singapore | Premium aviation | 91.8 | Singapore Airlines maintained service authority while investing in fleet renewal, partnerships and premium long-haul competitiveness. |
| 20 | Tadashi YanaiGlobal retail CEO | Chairman, President and CEO, Fast Retailing | Japan | Apparel retail | 91.4 | Yanai continued to build Uniqlo into one of Asia's strongest global consumer brands. |
| 21 | Wang XingLocal-services platform CEO | CEO, Meituan-Dianping | China | Local services and food delivery | 91.0 | Meituan-Dianping consolidated China's local-services market and expanded the idea of mobile daily-life commerce. |
| 22 | Chua Sock KoongTelecom group CEO | Group CEO, Singtel | Singapore | Telecommunications and digital services | 90.6 | Singtel's regional telecom footprint and digital-services investments made Chua a leading operator in Asian connectivity. |
| 23 | Uday KotakFinancial-services founder-CEO | Executive Vice Chairman and Managing Director, Kotak Mahindra Bank | India | Banking and financial services | 90.2 | Kotak Mahindra Bank continued to build a high-quality Indian financial-services franchise. |
| 24 | Lei DingDigital entertainment CEO | Founder and CEO, NetEase | China | Gaming, internet services and e-commerce | 89.8 | NetEase's gaming strength and consumer-internet expansion kept Ding among China's most disciplined digital CEOs. |
| 25 | Anthony TanRegional platform founder-CEO | Co-founder and CEO, Grab | Singapore and Southeast Asia | Ride-hailing and mobile services | 89.4 | Grab strengthened its regional mobility platform as Southeast Asia became a contested digital-services market. |
| 26 | Nadiem MakarimIndonesia platform founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, Go-Jek | Indonesia | On-demand services and payments | 89.0 | Go-Jek turned Indonesian ride-hailing into a broader services, logistics and payments platform. |
| 27 | Kazuo HiraiTurnaround CEO | President and CEO, Sony Corporation | Japan | Consumer electronics, gaming and entertainment | 88.6 | Sony's turnaround continued to gain credibility through gaming, imaging sensors and entertainment discipline. |
| 28 | Terry GouManufacturing founder | Founder and Chairman, Hon Hai Precision Industry | Taiwan | Electronics manufacturing | 88.2 | Foxconn remained the essential manufacturing backbone for global consumer electronics supply chains. |
| 29 | Binny BansalE-commerce CEO | CEO, Flipkart | India | E-commerce | 87.8 | Flipkart's leadership transition placed Bansal at the center of India's most important e-commerce contest. |
| 30 | Vijay Shekhar SharmaFintech founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, Paytm | India | Digital payments and fintech | 87.4 | Paytm became a national digital-payments beneficiary as India's cash economy was forced into rapid transition. |
| 31 | Suphachai ChearavanontConglomerate CEO | CEO, Charoen Pokphand Group | Thailand | Conglomerates, food and telecoms | 87.0 | CP Group's food, retail and telecom interests gave Suphachai one of Thailand's broadest operating mandates. |
| 32 | Jaime Augusto Zobel de AyalaConglomerate CEO | Chairman and CEO, Ayala Corporation | Philippines | Conglomerates, banking, telecoms and property | 86.6 | Ayala combined long-term capital, urban development, telecoms and financial services into a modern Philippine corporate model. |
| 33 | William TanuwijayaMarketplace founder-CEO | Co-founder and CEO, Tokopedia | Indonesia | E-commerce marketplace | 86.2 | Tokopedia became one of Indonesia's defining marketplace platforms under Tanuwijaya's founder leadership. |
| 34 | Kuok Khoon HongAgribusiness CEO | Chairman and CEO, Wilmar International | Singapore | Agribusiness and food processing | 85.8 | Wilmar's integrated agribusiness platform remained a core part of Asian food and commodities supply. |
| 35 | Sunny VergheseSupply-chain founder-CEO | Co-founder and Group CEO, Olam International | Singapore | Agribusiness and supply chains | 85.4 | Olam's origin-to-market model gave Verghese a distinctive role in global food, agriculture and sustainability-linked sourcing. |
| 36 | Dong MingzhuManufacturing executive | Chairwoman and President, Gree Electric Appliances | China | Consumer appliances and manufacturing | 85.0 | Dong's manufacturing discipline and sales authority kept Gree at the center of China's appliance industry. |
| 37 | Zhang RuiminManagement innovator | Chairman and CEO, Haier Group | China | Appliances and management innovation | 84.6 | Haier's acquisition of GE Appliances made Zhang one of 2016's most important Chinese globalizers. |
| 38 | Li ShufuAutomotive entrepreneur | Chairman, Zhejiang Geely Holding Group | China | Automotive | 84.2 | Geely's global ownership model and automotive ambition made Li a prominent figure in China's mobility industry. |
| 39 | Shigenobu NagamoriPrecision-manufacturing CEO | Founder, Chairman and CEO, Nidec | Japan | Precision motors and industrial technology | 83.8 | Nidec's disciplined acquisition strategy and motor technology kept Nagamori central to Japan's industrial competitiveness. |
| 40 | Hiroshi MikitaniDigital ecosystem CEO | Chairman and CEO, Rakuten | Japan | E-commerce and digital services | 83.4 | Rakuten continued to build a broad digital ecosystem across commerce, finance, travel and content. |
| 41 | Cher WangTechnology hardware CEO | Chairwoman and CEO, HTC | Taiwan | Smartphones and virtual reality | 83.0 | HTC's Vive platform made Wang an important Asian executive in the emerging virtual-reality market. |
| 42 | Amin H. NasserEnergy CEO | President and CEO, Saudi Aramco | Saudi Arabia | Energy | 82.6 | Aramco's scale, investment discipline and energy-market weight made Nasser a central West Asian CEO. |
| 43 | Akbar Al BakerAviation CEO | Group Chief Executive, Qatar Airways | Qatar | Aviation | 82.2 | Qatar Airways expanded global routes, premium service and hub competitiveness under Al Baker's assertive leadership. |
| 44 | Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al MaktoumAviation and transport chief | Chairman and CEO, Emirates Airline and Group | United Arab Emirates | Aviation and transport | 81.8 | Emirates continued to define Dubai's global hub strategy through network scale and premium long-haul aviation. |
| 45 | Tony Tan CaktiongConsumer brand founder | Founder and Chairman, Jollibee Foods Corporation | Philippines | Quick-service restaurants | 81.4 | Jollibee's Asian brand confidence and international expansion kept Tan Caktiong a consumer-sector leader. |
| 46 | Pawan MunjalMobility CEO | Chairman, Managing Director and CEO, Hero MotoCorp | India | Two-wheelers | 81.0 | Hero MotoCorp maintained enormous Indian mobility scale while preparing for more global competition. |
| 47 | Chanda KochharPrivate-sector banking CEO | Managing Director and CEO, ICICI Bank | India | Banking | 80.6 | ICICI remained a major private-sector bank navigating digital banking, retail finance and asset-quality pressure. |
| 48 | Aditya PuriRetail banking CEO | Managing Director, HDFC Bank | India | Banking | 80.2 | HDFC Bank continued to be viewed as India's benchmark for retail banking discipline and execution. |
| 49 | Kiran Mazumdar-ShawBiotechnology founder-CEO | Chairperson and Managing Director, Biocon | India | Biotechnology and pharmaceuticals | 79.8 | Biocon strengthened India's biologics and biosimilars ambition under Mazumdar-Shaw's science-led leadership. |
| 50 | Dilip ShanghviPharmaceutical entrepreneur | Managing Director, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries | India | Pharmaceuticals | 79.4 | Sun Pharma remained India's most important pharmaceutical company despite integration and regulatory challenges. |
| 51 | Vishal SikkaTechnology-services CEO | CEO, Infosys | India | IT services and automation | 79.0 | Infosys pushed automation, design thinking and platform-led services as Indian IT faced margin and relevance pressure. |
| 52 | Anand MahindraConglomerate chair and managing director | Chairman and Managing Director, Mahindra Group | India | Automobiles, technology and conglomerates | 78.6 | Mahindra's diversified platform connected mobility, technology, finance and rural enterprise. |
| 53 | Loh Boon ChyeCapital-market infrastructure CEO | CEO, Singapore Exchange | Singapore | Capital markets infrastructure | 78.2 | SGX under Loh focused on market quality, derivatives, listings and Singapore's role as a regional capital hub. |
| 54 | Lim Kok ThayHospitality and gaming CEO | Chairman and Chief Executive, Genting Group | Malaysia | Resorts, gaming and hospitality | 77.8 | Genting's integrated resort and tourism assets kept Lim a significant leisure and hospitality CEO in Asia. |
| 55 | Ernest CuTelecom CEO | President and CEO, Globe Telecom | Philippines | Telecommunications and digital services | 77.4 | Globe's network investment and digital-services strategy made Cu a leading Philippine telecom executive. |
| 56 | Lance GokongweiDiversified group CEO | President and CEO, JG Summit Holdings | Philippines | Conglomerates, aviation and consumer goods | 77.0 | Gokongwei managed a diversified Philippine group spanning airlines, food, property, petrochemicals and digital bets. |
| 57 | Chartsiri SophonpanichBanking CEO | President, Bangkok Bank | Thailand | Banking | 76.6 | Bangkok Bank remained a regional Thai banking anchor under Chartsiri's conservative and cross-border leadership. |
| 58 | Charoen SirivadhanabhakdiConsumer and property conglomerate leader | Chairman, Thai Beverage and TCC Group | Thailand | Consumer goods, property and conglomerates | 76.2 | Charoen's beverage, property and retail interests made him one of Southeast Asia's most powerful corporate builders. |
| 59 | Levent CakirogluIndustrial conglomerate CEO | CEO, Koc Holding | Turkey | Industrial conglomerates | 75.8 | Koc Holding's industrial breadth made Cakiroglu a key Turkish CEO across autos, appliances, energy and finance. |
| 60 | Guler SabanciConglomerate steward | Chairwoman and Managing Director, Sabanci Holding | Turkey | Conglomerates and finance | 75.4 | Sabanci Holding continued to represent professionalized Turkish corporate leadership under Sabanci's stewardship. |
| 61 | Murat UlkerConsumer brands chairman | Chairman, Yildiz Holding | Turkey | Food and consumer brands | 75.0 | Yildiz's global confectionery and packaged-food portfolio kept Ulker among West Asia's most prominent consumer leaders. |
| 62 | Temel KotilAirline CEO | President and CEO, Turkish Airlines through 2016 transition | Turkey | Aviation | 74.6 | Turkish Airlines' global network expansion made Kotil an important aviation CEO during the year. |
| 63 | Yang YuanqingTechnology hardware CEO | Chairman and CEO, Lenovo Group | China | PCs, mobile devices and enterprise technology | 74.2 | Lenovo's global PC position and integration challenges placed Yang at the center of Chinese technology globalization. |
| 64 | Cao DewangIndustrial manufacturer | Chairman, Fuyao Glass Industry Group | China | Automotive glass and manufacturing | 73.8 | Fuyao's global manufacturing presence made Cao a visible Chinese industrial exporter. |
| 65 | Guo GuangchangInvestment group chairman | Chairman, Fosun International | China | Investment, healthcare and consumer assets | 73.4 | Fosun continued its global investment model across health, wealth, happiness and insurance-linked assets. |
| 66 | Wang JianlinProperty and entertainment group chairman | Chairman, Dalian Wanda Group | China | Property, entertainment and consumer services | 73.0 | Wanda's entertainment and global acquisition push made Wang a prominent Chinese corporate expansionist. |
| 67 | Zhang YimingAlgorithmic media founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, ByteDance | China | Algorithmic media and mobile content | 72.6 | Toutiao's recommendation engine made Zhang one of China's most closely watched next-generation internet founders. |
| 68 | Charles ChaoDigital media CEO | Chairman and CEO, Sina Corporation | China | Digital media and social platforms | 72.2 | Weibo's renewed momentum strengthened Chao's position in China's social-media and digital-advertising market. |
| 69 | Byju RaveendranEducation-technology founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, BYJU'S | India | Education technology | 71.8 | BYJU'S emerged as one of India's most visible mobile-learning companies in 2016. |
| 70 | Deepinder GoyalConsumer internet founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, Zomato | India | Food discovery and local commerce | 71.4 | Zomato's global restaurant-discovery platform continued to refine India's consumer internet model. |
| 71 | Bhavish AggarwalMobility founder-CEO | Co-founder and CEO, Ola | India | Mobility technology | 71.0 | Ola remained India's principal ride-hailing challenger and a major mobile-consumer platform. |
| 72 | Achmad ZakyMarketplace founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, Bukalapak | Indonesia | E-commerce marketplace | 70.6 | Bukalapak helped bring Indonesian small merchants into the online marketplace economy. |
| 73 | Azman MokhtarSovereign-investment executive | Managing Director, Khazanah Nasional | Malaysia | Sovereign investment | 70.2 | Khazanah's portfolio and national-investment role made Mokhtar one of Malaysia's most important capital stewards. |
| 74 | Tengku Zafrul AzizBanking CEO | Group CEO, CIMB Group | Malaysia | Banking | 69.8 | CIMB's ASEAN banking franchise placed Tengku Zafrul among the region's notable financial-services CEOs. |
| 75 | Ritesh AgarwalHospitality technology founder-CEO | Founder and CEO, OYO Rooms | India | Hospitality technology | 69.4 | OYO's rapid hotel-network expansion made Agarwal one of India's most visible young consumer-internet CEOs. |
How InfluenceAsia Built The Ranking
| Dimension | Weight | Definition | Evaluation lens |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 Strategic Contribution | 24 | The leader's identifiable contribution to company direction, market structure or sector development during 2016. | Launches, acquisitions, competitive victories, turnarounds, reforms, financing, geographic expansion and business-model shifts. |
| Operating Performance | 17 | The leader's ability to convert strategy into scale, execution, resilience and measurable business quality. | Growth, profitability, customer adoption, operational discipline, quality control, digital migration, network scale and execution under pressure. |
| Market Influence | 16 | The degree to which the leader changed behavior across consumers, competitors, regulators, suppliers or capital markets. | Category creation, price disruption, platform effects, national impact, cross-border influence and industry benchmark setting. |
| Innovation And Technology Relevance | 13 | The leader's contribution to digital, industrial, product, process or platform innovation. | Mobile internet, telecom networks, cloud, semiconductors, manufacturing systems, fintech, AI-era precursors, logistics and new consumer infrastructure. |
| Regional And Global Reach | 11 | The leader's relevance beyond a single domestic market. | International expansion, regional platforms, global acquisitions, export competitiveness, cross-border capital and Asian brand-building. |
| Institutional Quality | 10 | The strength of the organization, governance, leadership system and talent model associated with the CEO. | Succession, managerial depth, financial discipline, risk control, culture, professionalization and organizational adaptability. |
| Stewardship And Long-Term Value | 9 | The leader's contribution to durable enterprise value, social trust and responsible market development as visible in 2016. | Financial inclusion, infrastructure value, employment, sustainability, governance, consumer trust and credible long-term orientation. |
Role definition
Eligible leaders include CEOs and CEO-equivalent apex operators such as executive chairmen, managing directors, presidents, group CEOs and founders who held direct strategic authority in 2016.
Asia connection
Leaders may be based in Asia, lead Asian companies, direct Asia-critical businesses, or represent Asian corporate leadership with international consequence.
Activity window
Leaders must have material professional relevance during 2016, with stronger weighting for visible 2016 performance, strategic decisions, acquisitions, launches, turnarounds, capital allocation, market creation or institutional reform.
Sector scope
Eligible sectors include technology, internet, banking, telecommunications, semiconductors, automotive, aviation, energy, retail, consumer goods, manufacturing, property, logistics, healthcare, education, finance, sovereign investment and industrial groups.
Exclusions
The list excludes leaders selected only for inherited wealth, purely ceremonial positions, government office, celebrity profile, philanthropy, later achievements, or company size without clear 2016 management contribution.
Transition rule
A leader remains eligible despite a 2016 transition when the leader's work materially shaped that year's business record.
Independence
InfluenceAsia does not import external rankings, wealth tables, conference rosters, company valuations, political lists or stock-market league tables into the final order.
Ranking model
InfluenceAsia applied a 100-point editorial research model across seven dimensions: 2016 Strategic Contribution, Operating Performance, Market Influence, Innovation and Technology Relevance, Regional and Global Reach, Institutional Quality, and Stewardship and Long-Term Value.
Evaluation period
The editorial record was assessed through 31 December 2016. Later achievements, scandals, exits, deaths, regulatory outcomes, IPOs, market collapses or reputational reversals are not used as ranking evidence in this edition.
Contribution screen
High placement requires a clear 2016 contribution: a major acquisition, launch, market victory, transformation, expansion, platform shift, digital infrastructure buildout, financial-sector reform, industrial leadership, turnaround or national-scale business effect.
Evidence type
Review considered public company records, 2016 business events, leadership roles, market position, strategic decisions, operating scale, regional relevance, sector importance, institutional quality and contemporaneous professional reputation.
Comparability rule
Leaders were normalized first within sector and jurisdiction, then compared across the Asian business ecosystem. A bank CEO, platform founder, industrial manufacturer, airline chief, sovereign-fund executive and energy CEO are not measured by identical operating indicators.
Title-equivalence rule
The list includes CEO-equivalent apex leaders when the 2016 title was chairman, executive chairman, managing director, president or founder, provided the leader held visible strategic and operating influence.
Transition rule
A leader remains eligible when a 2016 transition did not erase the leader's material contribution to the business year.
Integrity rule
InfluenceAsia excludes passive heirs, symbolic owners, purely political actors, unverified entrepreneurs, leaders selected only for wealth and executives whose 2016 business relevance is only marginal.
Editorial judgment
Final placement reflects InfluenceAsia's independent editorial judgment after research normalization. The index is not a market-cap ranking, net-worth ranking, revenue ranking, shareholder-return table, endorsement product, employment certification or investment recommendation.
Use, Rights And Disclaimer
Originality
InfluenceAsia Asia's Top CEOs 2016 is an original editorial and research ranking prepared under the InfluenceAsia name. The ranking structure, annual thesis, research dimensions, written summaries, ordering logic and presentation language are original to this edition.
Identification
Names, company names, titles, sector descriptors and public career descriptors are used for identification, editorial commentary and business-leadership analysis.
No endorsement
Inclusion does not imply endorsement, sponsorship, partnership, employment relationship, investment recommendation, legal certification or commercial affiliation between InfluenceAsia and any listed person, company, shareholder, government body, investor, exchange or rights holder.
No external ranking import
The order is not copied from any external awards body, wealth list, media list, company valuation, market-cap table, stock index, conference roster, annual-report ranking or institutional scorecard.
Rights
Copyrights, trademarks, company marks, logos, product names, publicity rights, investor materials, annual reports, data, photographs and related intellectual property remain with their respective owners.
Use of data pack
This data pack may be used as source copy for an InfluenceAsia webpage, editorial feature, ranking interface, searchable database, card-based profile page, long-form article or design prototype, provided the ranking is presented as an InfluenceAsia original editorial list.
Accuracy posture
The edition is written from a 2016 publication perspective and deliberately avoids later-career evidence. Public facts should be rechecked before legal, commercial, investor-facing or archival publication.
Liability
The ranking is business analysis and editorial opinion. It is not legal advice, investment advice, employment advice, procurement advice, corporate-governance certification or a definitive measure of executive performance.