Hillary Clinton rolled out the second phase of her plan to depress Donald Trump's appeal as a businessman this morning.

Clinton released a long list of prominent business leaders that are backing her over the billionaire real estate tycoon.

Among them, Warren Buffet, who endorsed her at an event in his home state of Nebraska in December, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, also the author of women's empowerment book Lean In, Basektball Hall of Famer Magic Johnson, and the founders of Netflix, Dropbox, Tumblr, BET and Airbnb.

Hillary Clinton rolled out the second phase of her plan to depress Donald Trump's appeal as a businessman this morning. Clinton released a long list of prominent business leaders that are backing her over the real estate tycoon, including Warren Buffet, pictured

Also on the list of titans: the senior executive vice president of AT&T, the chairman of Expedia, the executive chairman of Delta Air Lines, the chairman of Choice Hotels International, the chairman of MGM, co-founders of Costco and YELP, Laura M. Ricketts, a co-owner of the Chicago Cubs, and Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Alphabet.

Alphabet is the parent company of Google, and Forbes estimates that Schmidt has a net worth of $10.3 billion. He's no. 40 on the business magazine's list of most wealthy Americans.

By comparison, Trump's net worth is placed at $4.5 billion. He did not crack the top 100 this year within in the United States, clocking in at #113.

In endorsing Clinton, Schmidt said he has worked with her for two decades, 'and she is uniquely qualified to be President.

'She has the experience, the insight, the policies and the strength to lead our great country.'

Trump's promise to Americans is that he would 'make America great again' as president - but Reed Hastings, the CEO of Netflix and co-founder of the video service, said in statement in support of Clinton, 'Trump would destroy much of what is great about America.'

'Hillary Clinton is the strong leader we need, and it's important that Trump lose by a landslide to reject what he stands for,' said Hastings, who is also on the board of Facebook.

Clinton made Trump's lack of foreign policy experience her first target as she turned her gaze toward the general election, and this week tried to demolish his real estate career.

Trump says he'd make better deals for America, but his own casino companies have ended up with unsustainable debt four times over the last 25 years and had to take advantage of bankruptcy laws, she said.

'Donald Trump offers no real solutions for the economic challenges we face,' she said Wednesday in Raleigh. 'He just continues to spout reckless ideas that will run up our debt and cause another economic crash.'

Clinton made Trump's lack of foreign policy experience her first target as she turned her gaze toward the general election, and this week tried to demolish his real estate career

Johnson hugs Clinton during a rally in Los Angeles, California, during her 2008 run. He endorsed Clinton the day she launched her second campaign in April of 2015

Trump's promise to Americans is that he would 'make America great again' as president - but Reed Hastings, the CEO of Netflix and co-founder of the video service, said in statement in support of Clinton, 'Trump would destroy much of what is great about America'

Trump said in a rival speech she'd use the White House as a jumping off point to expand her own personal wealth while he'd make America 'rich again' and put people to work, namely by renegotiating the president's Pacific Rim trade pact he says will ship jobs overseas.

Mark Pincus, a co-founder of Zynga, said Thursday he's with Clinton because Trump 'has failed to put forth concrete and realistic policies to help the American people and grow the economy.'

'Our President must care about the success of the country as a whole - not just himself. Hillary Clinton has a proven record of fighting for the American people.'

In his statement former LA Lakers star Johnson said he trusts Clinton to 'effectively run every aspect of the position' as both president and the nation's commander in chief.'

'Her decisiveness, pragmatism and calm demeanor stand in absolute contrast to Trump,' he said, and 'will continue to advance this country and implement effective policies to grow the economy.'

Johnson endorsed Clinton the day she launched her campaign in April of 2015 and was celebrity supporter of hers in 2008, as well.

He appeared with her on the trail, in Iowa, that year and campaigned alongside her husband, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, in Nevada in addition to shooting an ad for the former first lady that aired in California.

He was a powerful surrogate - characterizing Barack Obama on the stump as a 'rookie' who was preaching hope instead of solutions - but he's been riding the bench in 2016 as Clinton makes her second attempt at the Oval.

Perhaps it's because he's not looking to make an enemy out of a fellow businessman.

He told TMZ this May, after the conclusion of the Republican primary, that he'd be open to working with Trump after the election 'if Hillary is the president.'

'I would just be a friend, we all have to work, together,' Johnson said, 'but Hillary's gotta be the president. That's the best choice of America.'

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, also the author of women's empowerment book Lean In, is backing Clinton, as well. They're seen here together at a gala in New York City in 2013

In an interview out this morning, President Barack Obama attempted to further diminish Trump's allure by telling Bloomberg Businessweek that the mogul is not America’s most successful businessman.

'There’s no successful businessman in America who actually thinks the most successful businessman in the country is Donald Trump,' he said. 'I know those guys, and so do you, and I guarantee you, that’s not their view.'

Obama admitted that free trade policies, like the one he and Clinton helped to craft and Trump is against, 'have a tendency to create vast wealth and opportunity for a very small, highly skilled set of people and have a tendency to create a larger and larger group of folks who feel redundant in the economy.'

'And if you don’t pay attention to that, then people will rightly resist. They will understandably say, “I am not getting a good deal here.” '

Explaining Trump's rise, the Democratic president said, 'I think that the temptation in that circumstance is to resort to nativism and nostalgia and the sense that these are things that are now out of control and I want to take control back.

'But I continue to believe that the majority of people....recognize that the world has shrunk, and that if the rules are structured properly, this gives them more opportunity, not less, to succeed.'

He compared the current battle over the direction of the economy to the fights of the 1930s and 1960s.

Decisions made back then 'were fiercely resisted by business but essentially created a social compact and a social welfare state where people said, “OK, I’m seeing the benefits of innovation. I’m seeing the benefits of capitalism. I’m seeing the benefits of trade.” '

Obama said business owners and shareholders must take the initiative to pay their workers a 'decent wage.'