Forbes 30 Under 30 list celebrates youthful innovators

Business publisher Forbes has released its latest roll call of innovators and disruptors under the age of 30.

 

The new Forbes 30 Under 30 list spotlights young people from a variety of vertical sectors, with technology featuring heavily. Forbes has calculated that its latest list of game changers has so far raised more than $1bn in capital between them.

 

Although the listing’s name suggests that 30 people are chosen each year, for this, the 10th anniversary of the first Forbes 30 Under 30 list, 600 people are nominated in fields from AI, fintech and crypto to sports, fashion and media.

 

Forbes notes that all those on this latest list have ‘defied the odds’, navigating their way through a global pandemic complete with supply chain shortages and periods of enforced isolation. All have been chosen and vetted by veteran Forbes editors and a panel of industry-leading judges.

 

Some of the notable names from the world of tech include:

  • Dan Fischetti who left a job as a high-frequency trading consultant with the Securities & Exchange Commission to help start Standard AI in 2017. The company makes automated checkout technology using cameras in the ceiling and computer vision to track the items a shopper picks up so that they can be charged automatically.
  • Dane Baker and Peter Twomey who started EcoCart to provide shoppers with information on the carbon footprint of their online purchases at checkout, along with ways for them to offset it. It has partnerships with 2,000 retailers, and calculates that it has offset over 30 million pounds of carbon dioxide so far.
  • Tsion Behailu, Aparna Dhinakaran and Manisha Sharma who are part of the Arize AI founding team. The startup enables customers to monitor the performance of AI models using software that looks for things such as unforeseen biases in algorithms.
  • Parker Ballner and Nik Kotov who set up Atomized which connects code repositories with cloud platforms, enabling developers to deploy applications within minutes instead of weeks.
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Book of the Month*

The Serendipity Mindset: The Art and Science of Creating Good Luck

By Dr Christian Busch
Serendipity is an aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident. To other people it looks like “good luck”, but it is more the ability to recognise and seize an opportunity, rather than have good fortune thrust upon one. Finding a wallet stuffed with money on the conference room floor is good luck, whereas holding it up and asking if anyone has lost their wallet might be the beginning of a valuable friendship – that would be serendipity.

Chance encounters, or strokes of fortune, feature in countless stories of business success. This book looks beneath the surface, reveals and teaches the mindset that can transform pure chance into opportunity. The author is director of the Global Economy Program at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs, and a lecturer at the London School of Economics.

Serendipity is an aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident. To other people it looks like “good luck”, but it is more the ability to recognise and seize an opportunity, rather than have good fortune thrust upon one. Finding a wallet stuffed with money on the conference room floor is good luck, whereas holding it up and asking if anyone has lost their wallet might be the beginning of a valuable friendship – that would be serendipity.

The author says “This is a book about the interactions of coincidence, human ambition and imagination”. In the above example: finding the wallet is the coincidence; ambition is the desire to make something of the discovery; add imagination and you open up a whole menu of possibilities: from spending spree to earning a reputation for honesty – or even making a wealthy friend.

Business is typically forged on human ambition and imagination, but early success often feeds an appetite for control – and “control freaks” can be blind to the opportunities thrown up by the unexpected. They only see chance events as distractions. If plans go awry, they may blame the failure on “bad luck” rather than admit their own inflexible attitude.

The author himself admits to being “a German who is used to planning” and prone to feel anxious when something unexpected happens. That makes him an ideal teacher, because he has worked hard to discover and analyse the mindset that enables one to “connect the dots” and cultivate serendipity. He presents a goldmine of examples from science, business and life where an apparent mishap or failure lead to a breakthrough.

Indeed, studies suggest that around 50% of major scientific breakthroughs emerge as the result of accidents or coincidences. A well-known example is Alexander Fleming’s discovery of penicillin, launching the whole field of antibiotics. Other examples include X-rays, nylon, microwave ovens, rubber, Velcro, Viagra and Post-it Notes – where would we be without these!

The book goes beyond the ability to recognise and respond to opportunities in chaos, but the subtitle – The Art and Science of Creating Good Luck – is actually a bit misleading. True, he does show ways to develop better fortune, but it would be better to call it “inviting” or “encouraging” good luck. For example, he suggests better ways to start a conversation with a stranger – ways that will make it more likely to lead to chance connections or shared interests.

The publishers may have chosen the word “creating” to make the book appeal to the human desire to control – for control freaks are exactly the readership that would benefit the most from this book’s wisdom and practical advice.

For the rest of us, it offers a great way to rediscover the sense of play that is so important in life – and too often lost in business.

 

“Following the success of The Serendipity Mindset hardback, a paperback edition has also now been launched under the title “Connect the Dots”.

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