Moguls

Profiles of the world's most powerful entrepreneurs, billionaires, and empire builders.

Adam Neumann

Adam Neumann

Former CEO of WeWork

Israeli-born entrepreneur who built WeWork to a $47B valuation before a spectacular collapse. A cautionary tale of charisma over fundamentals.

Real Estate, Tech
Bill Gates

Bill Gates

Co-founder of Microsoft & Co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

From writing code in a high school computer lab to building the software that runs the world — Bill Gates co-founded Microsoft, became the world's richest person, then pivoted to spending his fortune trying to eradicate disease and reshape global education.

$130B+ Software, Technology, Philanthropy
Elon Musk

Elon Musk

CEO of Tesla & SpaceX

Born in South Africa, co-founded PayPal, then bet his fortune on electric cars and rockets. Now the world's richest person.

$340B+ Tech, Automotive, Aerospace
Jeff Bezos

Jeff Bezos

Founder of Amazon, Blue Origin & Owner of The Washington Post

From a garage bookstore to the everything store — Jeff Bezos built Amazon into the most dominant company in modern commerce, accidentally invented cloud computing with AWS, bought The Washington Post, and is racing to make humanity a spacefaring civilization.

$200B+ E-commerce, Cloud Computing, Space, Media
John D. Rockefeller

John D. Rockefeller

Founder of Standard Oil

America's first billionaire. Built Standard Oil into a monopoly controlling 90% of US oil refining. His inflation-adjusted wealth remains unmatched.

$400B (adjusted) Oil & Energy
Lee Byung-chul

Lee Byung-chul

Founder of Samsung Group

Started with a noodle trading company in 1938. Built Samsung into South Korea's largest conglomerate, spanning electronics, ships, and skyscrapers.

Tech, Conglomerate
Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs

Co-founder of Apple

Fired from Apple at 30, returned at 42 to save it from bankruptcy. Built it into the world's most valuable company before his death in 2011.

Tech, Entertainment
Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett

Chairman & CEO of Berkshire Hathaway

The Oracle of Omaha — Warren Buffett turned a failing textile company into a $900 billion conglomerate through value investing, compound interest, and an almost supernatural ability to see what others couldn't. He still lives in the same house he bought in 1958 for $31,500.

$130B+ Investing, Finance, Insurance

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