| Adwa Al Dakheel | She’s the face of the new Saudi Arabia. The thirtysomething entrepreneur and social media influencer runs the kingdom’s most promising investment hub, Falak. She’s also a guitarist, writer, amateur pilot, refugee advocate and national champion squash player. Under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia still has a troubling human rights record and is struggling to diversify from oil. Al Dakheel, though, has emerged as a striking role model for change. | |
| | Dajae Williams | With Black women underrepresented in science, technology, engineering and math fields, Williams struggled at times with her identity, and often found herself “code-switching” in a mostly white workplace as a quality engineer at NASA. Now she’s embraced a mission to build pathways for the next generation — through hip-hop. With Listen Up Education, the St. Louis native is using music to engage underprivileged kids in math and science, and is on a mission to become, in her words, “the Black female Bill Nye — where Fresh Prince and Bel-Air meet.” | |
| | Collen Tapfumaneyi | After years of severe inflation and a foreign currency crisis, financial life is far from easy in Zimbabwe. But Collen Tapfumaneyi’s innovations could help lift the country from its economic troubles, and are fast spreading around the region. He started with Zimbabwe’s first alternative trading platform, then launched C-Trade, a first-for-Africa marriage of mobile, online and text message trading. Tapfumaneyi is taking his place among the continent’s innovators with his goal of facilitating a stock market revolution through do-it-yourself public stock offerings. | |
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| | | Teri Williams | Banks are all owned by somebody. Why not you? Teri Williams bought up four — yes, four — banks and rolled them together to create America’s largest Black-owned bank. It’s one of only a few dozen Black-owned banks, out of 5,500 privately owned banks in the country. So how did she do it? Williams lays out the steps for aspiring bankers to join the ranks of owners. | |
| | Shannon McLaughlin | South African mother Shannon McLaughlin became a household name in her country when she turned baby carriers into a successful business. But she raised her profile still further with a battle against retail giant Woolworths when it copied her design. She turned to social media and ultimately won her David and Goliath fight. | |
| | Afsaneh Beschloss | Investment expert Afsaneh Beschloss reached the upper echelon at the World Bank and JPMorgan Chase before starting her own firm. Still, the Iranian-born dynamo said on The Carlos Watson Show that she wishes she had actually worked a little less hard. “If I had done 20% less, it would have been equally good,” she says. “So that extra 20%, that really puts a lot of stress and takes away from love and family and other things that we love doing.” | |
| | Dan Ahrens | For decades, Dan Ahrens has bet big on bad things — like casinos, booze and cigarettes — with great success. It’s almost the inverse of sustainable investing, a deadly honest assessment of human proclivities. His newest venture is the first listed, active American exchange-traded fund expressly focused on making your money grow via investing in cannabis equity securities. And it comes with a catchy name: YOLO. Previously a skeptic, Ahrens has witnessed the legal barriers to marijuana fall — and he sees an enormous market in need of smart financial instruments. | |
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| | | | | Jane Langdale | Carbon dioxide is an enemy of the climate and, therefore, of food sustainability too, right? Langdale, a professor of plant development at the University of Oxford, is flipping that conventional wisdom on its head. She’s leading a global effort to use rising levels of carbon dioxide to our advantage — by creating a variant of rice to efficiently convert CO2 into a nutrient that can help increase yields. | |
| | Aaron T. Walker | A former educator who worked for the New York City public school system, Aaron T. Walker is now aiming to close the opportunity gap in a different way. His New Orleans–based Camelback Ventures invests in diverse and innovative founders, but he’s been continually frustrated by systemic racism within the philanthropic community. So Walker launched racial justice training for white executives at corporations and philanthropies. | |
| | Iseult Conlin | Over the past 30 years, much of Wall Street has shifted away from pen-and-paper trades to embrace digital dealings. But the $50 trillion bond market has been especially resistant to change — in part because purchasers buy through brokers, not public exchanges. However, the move to electronification — the industry buzzword for digital trades — is now happening, whether people like it or not. And Iseult “Izzy” Conlin is at the forefront. Aiding workflow with her millennial tech-savvy, she rose fast at BlackRock and now thrives in her current multifaceted role at trading platform Tradeweb. | |
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Who is an innovator shaking things up in your community? Tell us about it. | |
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