With 3,500 female participants across six continents, Susan Carpenter takes a trip along the Women Riders World Relay through deserts, monsoons, with a community that transcends languages and stereotypes
The ability to start a business and grow it into a success embodies the American Dream. Increasingly, it is Black women who are grasping the brass ring. They are embracing entrepreneurship at an unprecedented rate.
About a year ago, Sarah Kauss, the founder of S'well, decided she really couldn't do it all. At least not well. S'well had grown to more than 100 employees and more than $100 million in sales, and its signature water bottles had been joined by product lines such as snack containers and cutlery. Meanwhile, sustainability--the passion that got S'well started in the first place--was becoming an ever-greater concern to customers.
Erika H. James has made history at the prestigious business school founded nearly 140 years ago.
School money educator Kendall Flutey is on the seven-strong Digital Council to advise the Government on technological change.
The startup and innovation ecosystem has offered what more and more highly qualified people are looking for: self-determination, meaningful work, steep learning curves, and crazy adventures. We have talked with Sandra Tobler, CEO of the Swiss cybersecurity startup Futurae about life as an entrepreneur.