
These are the 100 Most Creative People in business
Nothing gets Fast Company‘s editorial staff more excited than hearing about someone who’s having a genuine, positive effect on the world by doing something no one’s ever done before. All year long, through our reporting, research, and conversations, we encounter dynamic individuals like this, and once a year we celebrate 100 of them in our Most Creative People in Business issue. This year marks the project’s 10h anniversary.
Unlike similarly titled lists compiled by other media brands, ours is comprised of 100 people who have never before been profiled in our pages. And the bar is high. Each accomplishment must be wholly unprecedented, yielding a demonstrable impact. These visionaries work in every industry imaginable, from AI to fashion to primatology. More than half of them are women. Nearly a third are of color. And more than a quarter hail from outside the U.S. Together, they reveal where global business is headed.
We are delighted to share their stories with you.
Contributors: Eillie Anzilotti, Jeff Beer, Laura Bell, Jill Bernstein, Adam Bluestein, Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan, Sean Captain, Amy Farley, Yasmin Gagne, Amanda Grooms, Ainsley Harris, Burt Helm, Anisa Purbasari Horton, KC Ifeanyi, Beth Johnson, Suzanne LaBarre, Nicole LaPorte, David Lidsky, J.J. McCorvey, Harry McCracken, Stephanie Mehta, Anna Meyer, Ben Paynter, Adele Peters, Ruth Reader, Jonathan Ringen, Mary Kaye Schilling, Erin Schulte, Katharine Schwab, Elizabeth Segran, Lara Sorokanich, Cale Guthrie Weissman, Mark Wilson, Jay Woodruff, Christopher Zara
Meet 2019’s Most Creative People
You won’t find another list like this one in all of media. Our writers and editors spent months searching for groundbreakers across every sector of business whose work over the past year is yielding a measurable impact on the world. Their accomplishments are staggering—and inspiring.
Here are just a few, to give you a taste:
- White Ops’s CEO Tamer Hassan (No. 1 on the list) recently led the FBI to its largest-ever ad-fraud bust.
- Late Night host Seth Meyers (the issue’s cover subject) is transforming the daily firehose of news into shrewd comedy with command and speed.
- Michelle Pfeiffer has created the first luxury fragrance line with clearly labeled ingredients that are both safe and sustainable.
- Diet Prada’s Tony Liu and Lindsey Schuyler are holding luxury fashion accountable by exposing designers’ copycat work.
- Peyer Moss designer Kerby-Jean Raymond is finding novel ways to use the runway as a platform for activism.
Together, the 100 leaders featured on this list represent the forefront of change—meaningful advancement that we can all feel good about. We hope you enjoy reading about them.—Jill Bernstein
Πηγή: www.fastcompany.com