Indian immigrants Gurmer and Dashmeet Chopra started their careers reselling phone cases on eBay. Today, their fitness-inspired streetwear brand sells out every two weeks online—and is about to launch its first store. (Photo: Ethan Pines for Forbes) https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.plnkd.in/ezQ8_Ydi
Forbes
Book and Periodical Publishing
Jersey City, NJ 18,072,398 followers
Official page of Forbes, the world’s leading voice for entrepreneurial success and free enterprise.
About us
Forbes Media is a global media, branding and technology company, with a focus on news and information about business, investing, technology, entrepreneurship, leadership and affluent lifestyles. The company publishes Forbes, Forbes Asia, and Forbes Europe magazines as well as Forbes.com. The Forbes brand today reaches more than 94 million people worldwide with its business message each month through its magazines and 37 licensed local editions around the globe, Forbes.com, TV, conferences, research, social and mobile platforms. Forbes Media’s brand extensions include conferences, real estate, education, financial services, and technology license agreements. Forbes is an equal opportunity employer.
- Website
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http://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.pwww.forbes.com
External link for Forbes
- Industry
- Book and Periodical Publishing
- Company size
- 201-500 employees
- Headquarters
- Jersey City, NJ
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1917
- Specialties
- Business, Finance, Investing, Technology, Politics, Leadership, Entrepreneurship, Small Business, Cloud Computing, Security, and Management
Locations
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Primary
Jersey City, NJ, US
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499 Washington Blvd
Jersey City, NJ 07310, US
Employees at Forbes
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Josh Wolfe
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John Chisholm
CEO, John Chisholm Ventures; Serial Entrepreneur & Angel Investor; Trustee, Santa Fe Institute; Former trustee, MIT
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Toby Shapshak
TED Global | Forbes contributor | Business Day columnist | Stuff editor-in-chief
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William Arruda
Motivational Speaker and Virtual Keynote Speaker, Bestselling Author, Personal Branding Pioneer, CEO (Chief Encouragement Officer) at Reach…
Updates
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“I’m baffled by people who reach their 60s and only think about retirement. You might like to play golf, and now there’s pickleball, but then what?” Kelly Bishop, 81, says. “No, I’m working until the day I die.” Read more about what's next for the star. #ForbesOver50 https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.ptrib.al/Z4I4g0v
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After years of booming entrepreneurship, the market is softening for celebrity-backed companies. But eye-watering earnings continue to roll in for the biggest female movie, TV and pop stars in the country. (Photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage for Parkwood via Getty Images) Read more: https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.ptrib.al/JvEpmoI
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Forbes reposted this
When OpenAI announced GPT-4o was being discontinued (before reversing course today) power users were devastated. “It was very sudden. I cried,” a user who created a Change.org petition told me. https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.plnkd.in/gSDmEhPH
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Gail Federici sold her first company, John Frieda Hair Care, in 2002. She’s more than doubled her fortune building a second brand, Color Wow, which is now eyeing a $1 billion sale. Full story: https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.ptrib.al/x0Ox0Gw (Photo: Jamel Toppin for Forbes)
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Between the Trump Administration declaring private accounts a red flag for foreign students and prospective employers using AI to find fake applicants, the old rules are becoming obsolete. Read more: https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.ptrib.al/KskXpWC (Illustration: Samantha Lee for Forbes)
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Kayvon Sarmadi launched his career as a solo advisor at just 23 years old—an unusually young age in a post-financial crisis industry. “I had to beg the firm for an exception,” he says. “I didn’t want to be on a team—I wanted to do this myself.” Raised in Roanoke, Virginia, Sarmadi grew up in his family’s car dealership business, attending sales meetings as a kid and developing a strong foundation in sales and client service. He started trading stocks at age 9 and was hooked.
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Meet Philippines’ 50 Richest: Buoyed by domestic demand and an uptick in infrastructure investments, the Philippine economy expanded by 5.4% in the first quarter of 2025, but U.S. tariffs proved to be a spoiler. The country’s benchmark stock market index dipped 7% since we last measured fortunes, though that was partially offset by a firmer peso. As a result, the collective wealth of the country’s 50 richest was up over 6% to $86 billion from $80.8 billion last year. SEE LIST: https://xmrrwallet.com/cmx.ptrib.al/Beui3td
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