It really depends on the company, their duties and what your qualifications of "higher" are. If you mean higher as in pay then usually the VP. If you mean higher as in responsibilties and decision making then it's usually the director.
A Vice-President is higher than a director.
Yes VP is higher than director
The answer is Yes. Based on British commercial law, an executive director is a person who is employed by a corporation and at the same time is tasked to sit in the company's board of director representing the senior management in company usually to explain about the performance of a company. An executive director is usually a person with a senior ranking in the organization like the CEO, COO, and CFO of the company. A VP is usually sits in a middle management of a company.
Shareholders President / CEO Board of Directors Executive/ Senior VP VP Comptroller/ General Manager Regional Manager/ Director Branch Manager/ Manager Coordinator Supervisor Assistant Clerk (lowest staffing position) Additionally, after any of there there may be an "assistant" which is one below the rank.
I would think that 97% of the VP's fall somewhere in between $50,000 and $3,000,000 a year. Maybe 1.5% fall below $50,000 and 1.5% are above $3,000,000. This is a total guess. Depends what company, industry, city, how well the company is doing, how unique the VP's skillset is, how difficult the VP is to replace, how much money VP brings in to the company and well the VP did in the salary negotiation. Go read any 10K Annual Report and read about the compensation of the top officers of the company.. some of those guys are VP's.. others are C Suite (CFO, CEO...)
A Vice-President is higher than a director.
Yes VP is higher than director
Director is generally equivalent to AVP. Next is VP and 1st VP is higher than VP but lower than SVP. Strangely enough for companies that have 2nd VP, it is generally lower than VP.
Executive VP.
The answer is Yes. Based on British commercial law, an executive director is a person who is employed by a corporation and at the same time is tasked to sit in the company's board of director representing the senior management in company usually to explain about the performance of a company. An executive director is usually a person with a senior ranking in the organization like the CEO, COO, and CFO of the company. A VP is usually sits in a middle management of a company.
1968-1979, vice president and director of operations
Cheryl Catton is VP of Marketing for Chevrolet.
Human Resources person, Director of relations, CEO, VP of affairs
The VP is Angela Pascucci-Brown.
George H. W. Bush had been Director of the C.I.A. before he ran for VP and President.
Mid Marketing roles (manager to Director) are a plenty in the Toronto Market. Roles fulfillment at one recruiting agency was up this past quarter 40% VYA. Senior level roles, VP and Higher, continue to be scare and highly competitive.
Fred Rockelman; Tucker VP and Sales Director (Formerly president of Plymouth)Hanson Brown; Executive VP (Formerly VP for General Motors)KE Lyman; Development engineer (Formerly of Bendix Corporation and Borg-Warner)Ben Parsons; Tucker engineering VP and chief engineer (International fuel injection expert)Lee S. Treese; VP of manufacturing (Formerly a Ford executive)Herbert Morley; arner plant manager)Robert Pierce; VP and Treasurer (Formerly secretary of Briggs Manufacturing)