Under the new Forbes Premium umbrella, pretty much all our beat reporters’ content now has a clearly denoted digital home, including scoops, analysis, profiles.
During The Forbes 400 Summit on Philanthropy, roughly 100 people from the list of America’s wealthiest people gather each year to learn and teach, inspire and collaborate.
Alphabet’s Sundar Pichai, Accenture’s Julie Sweet and more than 30 others are bringing private-sector muscle to a very American (yet controversial) cause.
I’d put the 150-strong Forbes newsroom up against any in journalism. As you can
see throughout this issue, we encourage our reporters to pursue impact, whether
as investigative watchdogs, savvy storytellers or definitive Forbes list
creators.
In an extensive interview, the philanthropist expanded on the state of the
couple’s partnership—and how this will now boost their foundation’s annual spend
by 50% to $9 billion a year.
This is a perfect moment, as the world pivots, to try to ensure that everyone
has an equal shot at the American Dream. For capitalism to continue to thrive in
the 21st century, equality of opportunity is paramount.
The amazing young innovators on this list can expect to be around for the next
seven decades or so. We’re here to help empower them to make the world they
shape even better than the one they inherited.
Twenty years ago, the doomed tenants of the One World Trade Center’s 87th Floor
embarked on one of the greatest challenges in American business history: how to
continue when you’ve lost literally everything. Their day-to-day saga had
vanished from history – until now.
Like magazine cover subject Michael Dell, the writer of the cover story, Antoine Gara, shows that, in a world that typically rewards the loudest voices in the short term, long-term success—and real impact—comes instead through understated excellence.
We’re in a moment of profound change, in part revolving around companies recognizing their role as a positive influence, including a commitment to look more like the world around them.