Time magazine has named President-elect Donald Trump its person of the year.

"It's a great honour. It means a lot," Trump said in a telephone interview on NBC's Today show.

President-elect Donald Trump, who won upset nomination and electoral victories in 2016, is named as Time's person of the year. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Time editor Nancy Gibbs said on the program that Democrat Hillary Clinton was the No. 2 finalist. Gibbs said the choice of Trump this year was "straightforward."

"When have we ever seen a single individual who has so defied expectations, broken the rules, violated norms, beaten not one but two political parties on the way to winning an election that he entered with 100-to-1 odds against him?" Gibbs said.

The Time cover reads, "Donald Trump: President of the Divided States of America" and the cover image features a photograph of the president-elect sitting in his private residence at Trump Tower.

In the NBC interview, Trump took issue with the "Divided States of America" description: "I didn't divide 'em," he said. "We're going to put it back together and we're going to have a country that's very well healed."

Gibbs said Time gives the title to the person who has had the greatest influence on events "for better or worse."

Trump went from fiery underdog in the race for the GOP presidential nomination to defeating Clinton in the Nov. 8 election. Trump won 306 electoral votes, easily enough to make him president when the electors meet on Dec. 19. Clinton won the popular vote.

Hackers came 3rd

Gibbs said Clinton "came closer than any woman ever has to winning the White House, and in the process revealed, I think, both the opportunities and the obstacles that women face in the public square."

The No. 3 finalist for the person of the year was "The Hackers," which Gibbs said referred to "a new cyber security threat we saw this year of state-sponsored hackers looking to delegitimize an American election."

She said this was "something new this year and something very disturbing."

At a rally Tuesday night in Fayetteville, N.C., Trump promised to "heal our divisions and unify our country."

He told the crowd: "When Americans are unified there is nothing we cannot do — nothing!"

'Dream big again'

The Republican businessman largely stuck to the script — even stopped the crowd when it started to boo the media — and avoided some of the score-settling and scorched-earth rhetoric that defined his campaign and was present last week in Cincinnati.

"I'm asking you to dream big again as Americans,: he said. "I'm asking you to believe in yourselves."

Trump was expected to visit Columbus, Ohio, on Thursday, according to a person familiar with the plans but not authorized to discuss them before they are announced.