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The 21 books on Big Tech to watch out for in 2021, busting the scandalous inside stories and wild rise of giants like Facebook, SpaceX, and Spotify wide open

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big tech books 2021

Summary List Placement

2021 looks set to be a blockbuster year for books on Big Tech. 

As COVID-19 continues to force millions around the world to stay at home, what better time could there be to brush up on the inside stories, secret scandals, and ingenious innovations from Silicon Valley and beyond?

Highlights include "An Ugly Truth", the latest deep dive into Facebook from New York Times reporters Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang, which reveals how Facebook tried to deny its role in the spread of disinformation worldwide, and "Driven", the new book from Insider's very own Alex Davies, which charts Big Tech's battle to develop autonomous vehicles. 

Check out our 21 books for 2021 below: 

'Saving Social: The Dysfunctional Past and Promising Future of Social Media'

Author: Ryan Holmes

Summary: In "Saving Social", the founder and CEO of Hootsuite takes a hard look at growing concerns around social media building the world over. 

Publisher: Advantage Media Group 

Release date: January 12, 2021

Find it here. 



'The Spotify Play: How CEO and Founder Daniel Ek Beat Apple, Google, and Amazon in the Race for Audio Dominance'

Author: Sven Carlsson and Jonas Leijonhufvud

Summary: Since launching in 2006, Spotify has become synonymous with the global music industry, with hundreds of thousands of songs being streamed on the platform every minute. 

Swedish investigative tech journalists Carlsson and Leijonhufvud lift the lid on the firm's early struggles, and the stories that define the firm today. 

Publisher: Diversion Books 

Release date: January 16, 2021

Find it here. 



'Data: A Guide to Humans'

Author: Phil Harvey and Noelia Jiménez Martínez

Summary: In their crowdfunded new release, the authors of "Data: A Guide to Humans" unveil how to properly exploit data, why it's important, and how companies and governments are using it right now. 

Publisher: Unbound

Release date: January 21, 2021 

Find it here. 



'Driven: The Race to Create the Autonomous Car'

Author: Alex Davies

Summary: This upcoming book from one of Insider's very own senior editors charts the dramatic battle between leading tech firms like Uber and Google to develop revolutionary autonomous vehicle technology. 

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Release date: February 5, 2021

Find it here. 



'This is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyber Weapons Arms Race'

Author: Nicole Perlroth

Summary: In her upcoming book, distinguished New York Times cybersecurity reporter Perlroth goes digging into the cyber-weapons market. 

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Release date: February 9, 2021

Find it here. 



'Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future'

Author: Elizabeth Kolbert

Summary: This book offers a deep insight into the new world being created around us every day, including interviews with biologists trying to preserve the world's rarest fish, engineers turning carbon emissions to stone in Iceland, and physicists who are contemplating shooting tiny diamonds into the stratosphere to cool the earth.

Publisher: Crown

Release date: February 9, 2021 



'Whistleblower: My Unlikely Journey to Silicon Valley and Speaking Out Against Injustice' (Paperback edition)

Author: Susan Fowler

Summary: The paperback edition of Fowler's 2020 bestseller reveals the inside story of her stand against sexual harassment in Silicon Valley, which came just a short time before the downfall of her former boss, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick. 

Publisher: Penguin Books 

Release date: February 16, 2021

Find it here. 



'Liftoff: Elon Musk and the Desperate Early Days That Launched SpaceX'

Author: Eric Berger

Summary: Drawing on unprecedented insider interviews with the people who were there from the beginning, Berger, senior space editor at Arts Technica, tells the story of how SpaceX went from unfathomable to unstoppable.  

Publisher: William Morrow 

Release date: March 2, 2021 

Find it here. 



'Your Computer is On Fire'

Author: Various, edited by Thomas S. Mullaney, Benjamin Peters, Mar Hicks, and Kavita Philip

Summary: This collection of essays from leading academics is a call for radical action, warning society can no longer be "lulled into complacency by narratives of techno-utopianism."

Publisher: The MIT Press 

Release date: March 9, 2021

Find it here. 



'Atlas of AI'

Author: Kate Crawford

Summary: In "Atlas of AI", Crawford, a senior principal researcher at Microsoft and cofounder of the AI Now Institute at New York University, tracks the impact of artificial intelligence on politics, the planet, and people. 

Publisher: Yale University Press

Release date: April 6, 2021

Find it here. 



'Bear Markets and Beyond: A Bestiary of Business Terms'

Author: Dhruti Shah and Dominic Bailey

Summary: From bear hugs to unicorns, the worlds of business and finance are racked with terrifying terminology. As a host of tech companies look set to IPO in 2021, why not brush up on your lingo, with some animal-oriented inspiration? 

Publisher: Portico

Release date: April 6, 2021 

Find it here. 



'Undoing Optimization: Civic Action in Smart Cities'

Author: Alison B. Powell

Summary: In "Undoing Optimization", Powell, an associate professor of media and communication at the LSE and an affiliate of the Ada Lovelace Institute, examines how town planners, politicians, architects, and activists expect new technologies might transform life in the city. 

Publisher: Yale University Press

Release date: April 13, 2021 

Find it here. 



'TikTok Boom: China, the US and the Superpower Race for Social Media'

Author: Chris Stokel-Walker

Summary: What does TikTok mean for the future of technology? In his second book, author and Business Insider contributor Stokel-Walker digs deep into the past, present, and future of the trendiest – and one of the most controversial – social media app of the past few years. 

Publisher: Canbury Press

Release date: April 15, 2021

Find it here. 



'Hacker, Influencer, Faker, Spy: Intelligence Agencies in the Digital Age'

Author: Rob Dover

Summary: In his latest book, Dr Dover, a senior lecturer in Intelligence and International Security at the University of Leicester, uncovers how the shady world of international espionage has been forced to up its game in the age of social media. 

Publisher: C Hurst & Co Publishers 

Release date: May 27, 2021

Find it here. 



'Go Big: How to Fix Our World'

Author: Ed Miliband

Summary: Now back in frontline politics after a sabbatical spent hosting the 'Reasons to be Cheerful' podcast, Miliband's new book promises to be a manifesto for radical innovation, looking at how a combination of technology and new policy ideas could transform our world.  

Publisher: Bodley Head 

Release date: June 3, 2021

Find it here. 



'An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook's Battle for Domination'

Author: Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang

Summary: Two veteran New York Times reporters bring years of experience covering one of the world's biggest tech companies to a head with this in-depth dive into the world of Facebook. 

Publisher: Harper 

Release date: June 15, 2021 

Find it here. 



'The Voice Catchers: How Marketers Listen In to Exploit Your Feelings, Your Privacy, and Your Wallet'

Author: Joseph Turow

Summary:"According to scientists, your weight, height, age, race, and illnesses can also be determined from the sound of your voice," he writes. "Ultimately not only marketers – but also politicians and governments – may use voice profiling to infer characteristics about you to serve their interests, not yours or society's." 

Publisher: Yale University Press 

Release date: June 22, 2021

Find it here. 



'Digital Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Deception, Disinformation and Social Media'

Author: Marc Owen Jones

Summary: In this upcoming book, Jones, an assistant professor of Middle East Studies at Hamad bin Khalifa University in Qatar, uncovers the full range of online tactics deployed by Gulf regimes and their allies to deceive domestic and international audiences.

Publisher: C Hurst & Co Publishers 

Release date: June 24, 2021

Find it here. 



'Mother of Invention: How Good Ideas Get Ignored in An Economy Built for Men'

Author: Katrine Marçal

Summary: In her latest work, Marçal, a Swedish writer, journalist and correspondent for Swedish daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter, lifts the lid on how everyday sexism prevents women from helping to change the world. 

Publisher: William Collins 

Release date: June 24, 2021

Find it here. 



'The Founders: The Story of Paypal and the Entrepreneurs Who Shaped Silicon Valley'

Author: Jimmy Soni

Summary: A long-time contributor to the likes of Slate, The Atlantic, and CNN, Soni's upcoming book delves into the origins of the infamous "PayPal mafia", a motley crew of tech geeks that would change the world of financial technology forever. 

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Release date: August 10, 2021

Find it here. 



'House of Wirecard'

Author: Dan McCrum

Summary: In June 2020, Wirecard, Germany's audacious fintech giant, was forced to file for insolvency after admitted around $2 billion was "missing". 

In "House of Wirecard", McCrum reveals how he and a team of Financial Times colleagues uncovered one of Europe's biggest corporate fraud scandals of all time. 

Publisher: Penguin 

Release date: Unconfirmed 

 




21 rags-to-riches stories that will inspire you

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Dolly Parton

Summary List Placement

Despite being some of the most recognizable names in Silicon Valley, Hollywood, and beyond, these millionaires and billionaires weren't always living the high life.

From the seedy streets of LA to the Bayview projects, these celebrities and entrepreneurs made it big after coming from nothing.

Here are 21 of the most inspiring rags-to-riches stories.

SEE ALSO: 21 billionaires who grew up poor

Halle Berry once slept in a homeless shelter.

Years before Halle Berry won an Oscar, she slept in a homeless shelter. A struggling actress desperately wanting to make it in Hollywood, the star sought out cheaper housing alternatives. She says, however, that her struggles during her early acting career made her stronger in the end. 

In an interview with People, Berry said, "It taught me how to take care of myself and that I could live through any situation, even if it meant going to a shelter for a small stint."

Halle Berry now has a reported net worth of between $70 and $80 million.



Sarah Jessica Parker's family couldn't afford electricity or birthday presents.

Long before Sarah Jessica Parker landed the iconic role of New York writer Carrie Bradshaw on HBO's "Sex and the City," she was just a small-town girl from Nelsonville, Ohio.

According to an article by Finances Online, SJP went through a point in her life where her family rarely celebrated birthdays, holidays, or other family occasions. One of nine children, Parker remembered times when the family couldn't afford to pay for electricity or their phone bill. 

Sarah Jessica Parker landed her first Broadway role at age 11, and soon after moved to Hollywood in 1981 to appear on the TV show "Square Pegs." She also has multiple movie titles under her belt.



Dolly Parton grew up in a poor family in rural Appalachia.

Dolly Parton was born as the fourth of 12 children. Her parents, Robert Lee and Avie Lee Owens, struggled to make ends meet for their large family.

According to a previous article by Insider, Lee was a tobacco farmer and a construction worker who never learned to read or write after leaving school at a young age. Parton's mother was the daughter of a preacher who devoted her life to raising her children.

However, despite her humble origins, Parton grew up surrounded by musicians who encouraged her ambitions. Her uncle, Bill Owens, got 10-year-old Parton her first gig on "The Cas Walker Show" in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Parton has been in show business for six decades, has had numerous No. 1 hit singles, and has won nine Grammy awards. Her net worth is $37 million as of 2017, Forbes reports, but the singer is definitely generous with her money. Parton recently donated $1 million to help fund a potential COVID-19 vaccine.



Ed Sheeran dropped out of school and slept in subway stations.

Ed Sheeran is now one of the biggest names in music, but he started off as a struggling artist in London's bustling music scene.

The singer would often spend nights sleeping in the London Underground train stations or on top of heating vents.

"There was an arch outside Buckingham Palace that has a heating duct and I spent a couple of nights there. That's where I wrote the song 'Homeless' and the lines 'It's not a homeless night for me, I'm just home less than I'd like to be,'"Sheeran wrote in his book, "A Visual Journey."

Once, while playing a gig at a local homeless shelter, he met a drug-addicted prostitute named Angel. Sheeran was so moved by her story that he dedicated his song "The A Team" to her. This song would become one of Sheeran's first breakout singles, catapulting him into the spotlight.

Sheeran now sells out stadiums across the globe and has a net worth of $64 million



Leonardo DiCaprio comes from a drug-torn town outside of Los Angeles.

Before Leonardo DiCaprio was one of the biggest names in Hollywood, with box-office smashes like "Titanic,""The Revenant," and "The Wolf of Wall Street" under his belt, he was a poor kid growing up on the outskirts of LA.

The actor claims he saw great poverty, drug use, and violence at a young age, which now allows him to portray the darker side of humanity in his films. 

Following backlash for his role in "The Wolf of Wall Street," which critics said glamorized drug use, prostitution, and other "amoral" acts, DiCaprio defended the role by comparing it with his own childhood.

In an interview with The Times, he said, "Who am I to talk about this? It goes back to that neighborhood. It came from the fact that I grew up very poor, and I got to see the other side of the spectrum."

DiCaprio's estimated net worth is approximately $260 million.



Arnold Schwarzenegger experienced hunger riots in post-World War II Austria.

Before he was in "The Terminator" and later became the governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger lived without plumbing or a phone.

Growing up in a post-World War II Austrian town, the actor said there were food shortages and riots occurring outside his door regularly

Now one of the richest action movie stars of all time, Schwarzenegger reportedly has a net worth of $400 million.



Celine Dion grew up in a poor family as one of 14 children.

Celine Dion grew up in Canada as the youngest of 14 siblings. Her family went through hard times trying to support Dion and her siblings.

"We were three, four in the same bed," Dion told CBS News. "I did not have a bedroom. Up the stairs, before going in the bedrooms, there was a little ramp. And my bed was there."

Eventually, Dion realized her musical abilities and began performing at small local events. She went on to climb to the top of the charts with hits like "My Heart Will Go On" and "It's All Coming Back To Me Now."

As her fame rose, so did the star's net worth. As of October 2020, Dion is valued at a whopping $455 million.



J.K. Rowling was a single mom struggling to make ends meet before she wrote the Harry Potter books.

Before the idea for "Harry Potter"famously came to J.K. Rowling in a dream, the writer was a single mother struggling to pay her rent.

Rowling battled depression and other obstacles before becoming one of the most successful female writers in recent history, as well as one of the most beloved British authors of all time — though she has now faced controversy over some "transphobic" statements

The author's net worth stands at $60 million, with seven "Harry Potter"novels and a hugely successful resulting movie franchise to thank for it. 



Roman Abramovich was an orphan — now he owns the world's third-largest yacht.

Roman Abramovich is known across the globe as a multi-billionaire with stakes in Evraz, Norilsk Nickel, and the UK's Chelsea soccer team. He also owns the world's third-largest yacht (which he bought for a cool $400 million in 2010) and has a net worth of $14 billion.

However, before he landed on Forbes' Billionaires List, he was an orphan growing up in Moscow. Always motivated to make something of himself, Abramovich left college to be an entrepreneur.

He flipped multiple investments in companies such as oil industry giant Sibneft, Russian Aluminum, and steelmaker Evraz Group to turn huge profits.



Multi-billionaire Kenny Troutt's racehorse won the Triple Crown — but before that, he was the poor son of a bartender.

Kenny Troutt paid his way through Southern Illinois University by selling insurance on the side while he attended classes. The son of a bartender, Troutt grew up in a poor family.

However, after graduating from college, he would go on to found the long-distance phone company Excel Communications. In 1996, 12 years after he founded the company, he took it public. 

In 1998, Kenny Troutt sold Excel Communications to Teleglobe in a $3.5 billion deal. He took the money he made from the deal and reinvested the profits in stocks, bonds, and racehorses.

He currently owns WinStar Farm in Versailles, Kentucky, which has brought forth a Kentucky Derby winner.

Troutt now has a net worth of $1.5 billion.



Oprah Winfrey grew up poor and went to college on a scholarship.

Oprah Winfrey was born into a poor Mississippi family in 1954, but that didn't stop her from achieving unparalleled success. After a traumatic upbringing in which she was abused and molested by two family members and a family friend, she ran away from home at the age of 13. At 14, she gave birth — the child died shortly after.

Always an intelligent and driven young woman, Winfrey was awarded a scholarship to Tennessee State University. Following an appearance in a local beauty pageant, she went on to become the first African-American TV correspondent in the state at the young age of 19.

The acclaimed talk show host later moved to Chicago, where she began work on her very own morning show. It would later be widely known as "The Oprah Winfrey Show." She was the first woman in history to own and produce her own talk show.

The show aired for 25 seasons, from 1986 to 2011. Since moving on from her talk show, Winfrey has founded OWN, the Oprah Winfrey Network.

Her net worth is calculated to be about $2.6 billion, making her one of the richest black women in the world and the first female black billionaire. 



John Paul DeJoria sold Christmas cards and newspapers to help support his family.

Before he was the mastermind behind shampoo giant John Paul Mitchell Systems and Patron Tequila, John Paul DeJoria was just a first-generation American trying to make it.

After his German and Italian parents divorced when he was 2, he turned to selling Christmas cards and newspapers to help support his family — all before he turned 10 years old. 

"We grew up in downtown LA, in the Echo Park area. We didn't know that we were really going through tough times because everybody was going through the same thing," he told Forbes. "I remember once in junior high school, on a Friday, my mom came home from work and said to my brother and me, 'You know, between us, we have only 27 cents, but we have food in the refrigerator, we have our little garden out back, and we're happy, so we are rich.'"

After taking a job in a Redken factory, DeJoria became intrigued in the shampoo industry. He took a $700 loan from the company and invested it into his own brand, John Paul Mitchell Systems. Going door-to-door selling his product, DeJoria slept in his car, hoping his product would capture buyers' attention.

John Paul DeJoria has a net worth of $2.7 billion.



Starbucks' CEO Howard Schultz grew up in the projects of Canarsie, Brooklyn.

Schultz grew up the son of a truck driver who barely made enough money to make ends meet. Despite growing up in a poor family, he was athletically talented and earned a football scholarship to the University of Northern Michigan. After graduating with a degree in communications, Schultz worked for Xerox.

However, everything changed when he stumbled upon a small coffee shop called Starbucks, which he later joined as an executive.

"[My mother] started crying. She said, 'A coffee company? Are you crazy? Who's going to buy coffee?' But I just felt I had to follow my dreams," Schultz told the Mirror.

He loved the coffee so much that he went on to become its chief executive in 1987 after leaving Xerox. With Schultz's help, Starbucks soon grew from a small coffee company with 60 stores to a money-making giant with over 16,000 outlets worldwide.

In June 2018, Schultz stepped down as executive chairman and as a board member of Starbucks. His title is now chairman emeritus. 

Howard Schultz's current net worth is $4.8 billion.



Forever 21 founder Do Won Chang worked as a janitor before he hit it big.

According to Business Insider, in 1981, Jin Sook and Do Won "Don" Chang emigrated from South Korea to Los Angeles in pursuit of success and new opportunities. Penniless, without formal education, and speaking in broken English, the Changs struggled at first.

Originally going into the coffee business, they soon discovered that it was not going to be their ticket to success. For a few years, Don worked as a janitor, pumped gas, and served coffee to make ends meet for him and his family. Everything changed, however, when he made one crucial observation. 

"I noticed the people who drove the nicest cars were all in the garment business," Don told the LA Times in a 2010 interview.

Soon after, he opened a 900-square-foot clothing store called Fashion 21. It would go on to become the fast-fashion retailer Forever 21. Though the store once brought in billions of dollars per year, the retailer has since filed for bankruptcy.

According to Forbes, Jin Sook and Do Won Chang had a combined net worth of $5.9 billion in 2015. Their combined net worth has since fallen to $1.6 billion, and risen again to $3 billion.



In his high school yearbook, Ralph Lauren answered a question about his future goals with one word: "millionaire."

Ralph Lauren always dreamed of being rich and successful. In his 1957 DeWitt Clinton High School yearbook, Ralph Lauren reportedly wrote "millionaire" as one of his greatest life goals— little did he know that he would come to surpass that figure.

The youngest son of Jewish immigrants living in the Bronx, Lauren escaped his own reality by entering into a new one. Young Ralph Lipschitz (he would later change his surname to Lauren) loved movies, and some say that Old Hollywood stars continue to inspire his designs. 

"He would literally fall into the fantasies of the movies of that era," Michael Gross, author of "Genuine Authentic: The Real Life of Ralph Lauren," told Bloomberg. "He truly did project himself into the scenes in which men like Gary Cooper and Cary Grant were playing. He sees the characters that populate his dreams and visions, and that vision — that ability to step into a fantasy world — Ralph brought to the fashion business."

Ralph Lauren now has a net worth of $6.6 billion.



Steve Jobs was the child of two immigrants and became a millionaire by age 23.

Though Steve Jobs is now exalted as one of the greatest minds in modern history, he came from humble beginnings.

Jobs' young, working-class parents struggled to support him and make ends meet. He was soon taken in by another couple, Paul and Clara Jobs. Jobs was fascinated by computers, even at a young age. However, Jobs never liked formal education.

After dropping out of college after his first semester, he started working at video game manufacturing company Atari. A while later, Jobs created the first-ever Apple machine together with Steve Wozniak. The duo funded their entrepreneurial venture through untraditional avenues at first — Jobs sold his Volkswagen bus and Wozniak sold his beloved scientific calculator.

By age 23, Jobs was worth $1 million. He was the youngest person on Forbes' list of the country's richest people at the time — no small feat without inheriting any family wealth. He made $10 million by age 24 and crossed the $100 million mark by the time he was 25.

Before he passed away at the age of 56 in 2011, he was reportedly worth $10.2 billion.



Lakshmi Mittal grew up in a poor Indian family in Rajasthan.

Steel industry tycoon Lakshmi Mittal wasn't always rolling in dough. Rather, he grew up in a poor Indian family near Rajasthan.

According to BBC News, Mittal "established the foundations of his fortune over two decades by doing much of his business in the steel industry equivalent of a discount warehouse." He bought up parts of other steel companies that were going cheap and transformed them into profitable ventures.

According to Forbes, Mittal is the 10th richest Indian person and has a current net worth of $15.2 billion.



Leonardo Del Vecchio, whose eyeglasses empire makes Ray-Bans and Oakleys, used to be a factory worker.

Now a multi-billionaire, Leonardo Del Vecchio grew up as the child of a widowed mother who struggled to make ends meet, and who eventually sent him to an orphanage.

To earn a living, Del Vecchio went to work in a factory making molds for auto parts and eyeglass frames.

At the young age of 23, he opened his very own molding shop. That eyeglass frame shop would become Luxottica, which now manufactures brands like Ray-Ban and Oakley.

Leonardo Del Vecchio's current net worth is $25.1 billion.



Francois Pinault was teased in school for being poor — now he's the leader behind luxury goods group PPR, which sells brands Gucci and Stella McCartney.

One noteworthy rags-to-riches tale is that of Francois Pinault. According to Inc, Pinault dropped out of high school in 1947 after he was teased by his classmates for being poor. He then started working at his family's timber trading business.

Soon, he was buying up smaller firms and flipping them for large payouts, causing others to criticize his "ruthless" work ethic. He went on to start PPR, a luxury goods group.

Pinault's son, Francois-Henri Pinault, is the honorary chairman and CEO of luxury group Kering, which owns the fashion brands Saint Laurent, Alexander McQueen, and Gucci.

Once the richest man in France, Francois Pinault and his family's current net worth is undeniably impressive. They are calculated to be worth $47 billion.



Sheldon Adelson delivered newspapers before he became a multi-billionaire.

Though Sheldon Adelson now has a net worth of a whopping $35.7 billion, he came from humble beginnings.

According to Inc, Adelson grew up the son of a cab driver in Dorchester, Massachusetts. At the young age of 12, Adelson got his first taste of making money by delivering newspapers around his neighborhood. 

Forbes profile of the billionaire claims that after dropping out of the City College of New York, Adelson "built a fortune running vending machines, selling newspaper ads, helping small businesses go public, developing condos, and hosting trade shows."

After losing a majority of his money in the recession, Adelson earned most of it back and now owns Las Vegas Sands, the largest casino company in the world. 



Larry Ellison worked odd jobs in California before founding Oracle.

As the cofounder of Oracle, Larry Ellison holds an impressive net worth of $88 billion. Ellison was born in Brooklyn, New York, to a single mother.

However, according to Inc, he was raised by his aunt and uncle. After his aunt passed away, the future mogul moved to California and made a living by working odd jobs here and there.

Eventually, he founded a small software development company called Oracle in 1977. It is now one of the largest technology companies in the world.



Food52 hit 16 million readers in 10 years. The founders walked us through a $100 million growth strategy that goes way beyond content.

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Amanda Hesser (left) and Merrill Stubbs (right)

Summary List Placement

In a competitive marketplace that sees more than 500 million blogs and 12 to 24 million ecommerce sites worldwide, Food52 stands out with its terrific content, effective community engagement, and ability to monetize both, according to Mike Kerns, cofounder and partner at TCG Capital.

Mike Kerns

Founded by former New York Times food writer Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs in 2009, the site initially focused on weekly recipe contests that would generate content for several cookbooks. 

Over 10 years and 16 million followers later, the blog has become a company valued at more than $100 million— having generated approximately $30 million in revenue in 2018 and sold for $83 million in majority stake to TCG Capital in September. In a relatively short time, Hesser and Stubbs built a brand valued on par with New York Magazine, which was acquired by Vox Media at a $105 million valuation.

Turning a blog into a lucrative business involved a measured approach from Hesser and Stubbs. Since the company "never had a lot of funding," Hesser said,  "any aggressive expansion we've had was the result of proving out a concept and expanding organically."

The story of Food52 began 10 years ago when the cofounders funded the site with an advance from a multi-cookbook deal. Before its launch, they collected email addresses through a splash page for the beta site. Thousands signed up, so Hesser and Stubbs knew they had generated some buzz. 

As readership grew, here's how they tweaked their business and content strategy.

SEE ALSO: A college dropout who started her own healthy candy company at age 21 shares how she grew it into a multimillion-dollar company within 6 months of launching

READ MORE: We asked top founders, CEOs, and executives to highlight the women 30 and under to watch

Zero

Producing regular content and communicating with readers have been top priorities for Food52 from day one. The cofounders focused on organizing weekly contests, which involved testing recipes, styling and taking food photos, creating as much content as possible, and answering every reader's feedback, according to Stubbs.

"It was about giving people a reason to visit us every day, and building trust and a sense of us all being in this together," Stubbs said.



1,000

In 2010, the cofounders poured more effort into communication outside the site. However, there was no Instagram and Twitter was relatively new, so they went for email instead.

Hesser described their email format to First Round Review as "very magazine-like"— first by catching readers' attention with a solid headline, then by engaging with terrific photos and diverse content. Till this day, email remains the "most effective means of communication," the cofounders remarked.



10,000

When readership grew to around 10,000 within the same year, Hesser and Stubbs started recommending products and included links without affiliate fees. 

They also started accepting article submissions from community members, which allowed early members — with great writing and home-cooking skills — to contribute to the website differently.  

As a result, "we were able to give people a voice beyond participating in our recipe contests or in the comments section," Stubbs said.



100,000

At this point, Food52 had raised its seed round — a feat that's particularly impressive in 2010. 

Never mind that the site had a sizeable audience; investors were not interested in media companies back then, the cofounders noted.

To make matters worse, Food52 was mostly a blog with no plans of becoming a media company, so it made for a tough sell. This explains why Stubbs thought raising $750,000 was "a long, hard road." 



1 million

Around when readership reached one million in 2013, Hesser and Stubbs were ready to expand their business. "We felt that our content production had become a well-run operation, and this allowed us to experiment with some other areas we wanted to get into, like commerce," they said in an email. 

To make sure the new plan was viable, the company had already started doing a trial run on a third-party platform in 2012. 

The company tested products ranging from imported sardines to handcrafted ceramics — and everything sold out.

"The success of this pretty clunky commerce offering gave us the proof and the confidence we needed to raise a round of funding to build out our own native, fully integrated shop platform. Now, commerce represents 75% of our business," Hesser said.



10 million and beyond

With more than 10 million monthly visitors, community engagement and insight are some of Food52's most powerful resources. By 2018, the company launched its branded products, Five Two, after studying its members' comments. 



Expand carefully

Having experienced "very scrappy" days, Hesser and Stubbs know the importance of growing a company carefully. Beyond abundant testing and research, here are their tips for effective expansion: 

  • Don't over-hire or recruit someone too senior for the job. Hesser and Stubbs "learned [this] the hard way.""In reality, no one person can transform your business on their own, and if they're not cut out for being in the weeds at least some of the time, they're probably not a fit in the early stages," they noted in an email.
  • Don't follow trends just for the sake of it. At one point, the cofounders were seriously pressured to add videos onto the site. It was trendy, and everyone splurged on it, but they resisted. "We felt it wasn't yet clear how to monetize video, and we hadn't figured out how to do it efficiently," they said. Thankfully, the business partners waited. "This approach saved us a lot of money and angst."
  • Think of your consumers first. Make your consumers the top priority. Each major business decision should prioritize the needs and preferences of your consumers. "If not, go back to the drawing board," they said. In Food52's case, the cofounders told First Round Review they got to know their users through personal engagement in the comments section and the site's hotline. 

This article was originally published on Business Insider November 26, 2019.



Consider the human factor

For a company that works hard at making informed decisions, one of the toughest challenges was dealing with personnel changes.

"We put a lot of thought into how we handle these difficult situations, but there's no playbook because you're dealing with people and everyone needs to be treated individually. Sometimes we get it right, sometimes we don't," Hesser said. "Once you get above 50 people, managing a team can become consuming and distract you from looking ahead."

The cofounders added that the human element is just as important internally as it is in the office. "Data is important, but so is gut. It's critical to find a balance between the two when building a consumer-facing business," Stubbs said.



BANK OF AMERICA: Buy these 10 Dow stocks to take advantage of rich dividends and a long-term strategy primed for a comeback in 2021

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Dogged persistence has a way of paying dividends, and Bank of America says that should hold true over the next few years.

One of the simplest high-income plays investors can make is buying the "dogs of the Dow:" the ten highest-yielding components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. It's a bet on blue-chip stocks that can pay investors steadily and even handsomely.

But not in the last two years: Stephen Suttmeier, technical research strategist for Bank of America, acknowledged in a recent research note that this traditional approach just endured its roughest stretch in the 21st century.

"After solid returns from 2010-2018, the Dogs of the Dow got fleas," he said. "2019 and 2020 marked the two worst years for the Dogs relative to the S&P 500 (SPX) going back to 2001."

But Suttmeier says things have changed in a way that could help the dogs get back on the right foot. He notes that they've had some of their strongest runs coming out of recessions, and even with the recent wave of COVID-19 cases, it looks like the economy is heading in the right direction.

After the last two recessions, the dogs went on long runs of outperformance compared to the S&P 500.

"If 2020 did indeed mark a big recessionary low like 2002 and 2009, the Dogs of the Dow could once again have their day," Suttmeier said. "The average annual total returns for the 5-year periods after these big lows were stronger for the Dogs of the Dow."

He backs up that contention with this chart. In blue is the Dow Jones High Yield Select 10 Index, a proxy for the dogs. The red line is the S&P 500 Total Return Index, which has lagged the high-yielding Dow stocks since the market's low in late 2002.

Dogs of the Dow

The list of "dogs of the Dow" is updated annually as the index's components change. In 2021, Amgen and Merck replace former Dow constituents ExxonMobil and Pfizer.

The 2021 edition of the dogs are ranked below from lowest to highest based on the upside that is implied by Bank of America's current price targets. That upside was calculated based on Thursday's closing prices, and at that time, five of the stocks had double-digit upside in addition to the group's average dividend yield of 4.1%.

SEE ALSO: $138 billion megafund AQR shares a step-by-step guide for investors who want to reduce their portfolios' carbon footprints — and explains why this move could propel returns in the long run

10. Walgreens Boots Alliance

Ticker: WBA

Sector: Consumer staples

Dividend yield: 4.69%

Price target: $37

Upside to target: -18.3%

Source: Bank of America



9. Dow

Ticker: DOW

Sector: Materials

Dividend yield: 5.05%

Price target: $54

Upside to target: -7.7%

Source: Bank of America



8. 3M

Ticker: MMM

Sector: Industrials

Dividend yield: 3.36%

Price target: $170

Upside to target: +0.2%

Source: Bank of America



7. Merck

Ticker: MRK

Sector: Healthcare

Dividend yield: 3.18%

Price target: $88

Upside to target: 4.7%

Source: Bank of America



6. Verizon Communications

Ticker: VZ

Sector: Communication services

Dividend yield: 4.28%

Price target: $64

Upside to target: +9.3%

Source: Bank of America



5. Cisco Systems

Ticker: CSCO

Sector: Information technology

Dividend yield: 3.22%

Price target: $50

Upside to target: +11.2%

Source: Bank of America



4. Coca-Cola

Ticker: KO

Sector: Consumer staples

Dividend yield: 2.99%

Price target: $56

Upside to target: +12.1%

Source: Bank of America



3. Amgen

Ticker: AMGN

Sector: Healthcare

Dividend yield: 3.1%

Price target: $275

Upside to target: +17.5%

Source: Bank of America



2. IBM

Ticker: IBM

Sector: Information technology

Dividend yield: 5.18%

Price target: $153

Upside to target: +18.6%

Source: Bank of America



1. Chevron

Ticker: CVX

Sector: Energy

Dividend yield: 6.11%

Price target: $116

Upside to target: +28.6%

Source: Bank of America



A family of 8 is traveling through Australia's most remote regions in a fully customized, 2-story motorhome. Here's a look inside.

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An Australian family of eight is traveling around the wilds of Australia in a veritable mansion on wheels.

The family, who prefers to remain anonymous, contacted Australia's leading luxury expedition vehicle manufacturer, SLRV, in 2017 about designing a camper that would allow them explore the country's most remote regions for months on end, SLRV cofounder Warwick Boswerger told Business Insider.

This was no small feat: Australia is home to some of the world's last true wilderness and is the driest inhabited continent on Earth, consisting of 70% arid or semi-arid land.

But SLRV was up to the challenge. Boswerger and his team designed a two-story, 40-foot long camper van that New Atlas describes as "apocalypse-grade" and ranks among the largest expedition vehicles in the world. 

As of January 2021, the family is still traveling in the RV, though their travels are subject to restrictions due to COVID-19. Currently, each of Australia's states and territories has its own set of regulations for interstate travelers including closing borders and imposing mandatory quaratines.

Take a look inside.

SEE ALSO: A husband and wife in the Hudson Valley convert vintage Airstreams into tiny homes that they sell for $100,000 and name after famous women

NOW READ: Inside 'Underground House Plan B,' a socially distanced, survivalist bunker home that you'd want to live in even if the world doesn't come to an end

An Australian family of 8 commissioned an 8-wheel, double-decker luxury camper to explore Australia's most remote regions.

SLRV, the country's leading expedition vehicle producer, designed the vehicle. 

The family wanted to be able to travel around Australia for months on end, SLRV cofounder Warwick Boswerger told Business Insider.



Dubbed the Commander 8x8, the vehicle is built on a military-grade MAN TGS truck base.

The Commander 8x8 is SLRV's largest build to date, and one of the largest expedition RVs in the world. SLRV also produces an array of 4-wheeler expedition vehicles. 

"People want to take the road less traveled; they want to see real natural beauty," Boswerger told Business Insider. "You can't see that by driving around on sealed roads. People want to do this in a degree of comfort — and that's what vehicles like ours provide."



The camper's defining feature is its 6.5-foot roof lift. Activated with the push of a button on an LCD screen, it transforms the RV from one story to two.



The camper also boasts a state-of-the-art electric system comprised of lithium batteries charged by a solar panel system as well as a diesel backup generator and alternator.

The 9.5kVA alternator is a "world first" in an RV, according to Boswerger.

"We had to design an electrical system that not only powered all the appliances — it had to recharge and keep powering over and over out in the remote wilderness," he said in a release.

The camper's walls are close to 5 inches thick in sections, providing "fantastic insulation," Boswerger told Business Insider. "All this allows you to stay out in Australia's remote."



No inch of space is underutilized. Case in point: A washer unit and sink are accessed from the camper's exterior.

SLRV did not disclose the price of the camper, but previously estimated that the price would fall between $1 and $2 million Australian, or between $670,000 and $1.37 million US, Caravan Camping Sales reported.



SLRV designed the camper to have all of the comforts of home, including ducted air conditioning and heating.



The first floor includes a lounge area that can seat up to 10 people ...



... as well as a fully functional kitchen with a double burner stovetop, two microwave ovens, and two fridges.



Past the kitchen is the master bedroom ...



... as well as the bathroom and shower. The camper can hold up to 264 gallons of water for travel to remote areas.



To accommodate additional guests, the lounge can also be converted into a bedroom.



Between the dinette and kitchen, floating stairs lead up to the second level ...



... which has a TV and six single beds with reading lights and individual windows.



And there's plenty of storage for life on the road.

 



Today's travelers are increasingly seeking meaningful, transformational experiences, and luxury RVs help them achieve that in style and comfort.

"Australians are quickly figuring out that these vehicles are the best way to spend an extended amount of time exploring remote Australia — and the rest of the world," Boswerger told Business Insider. "You can travel without a timeline — go see all the places you don't get to see on a fly in fly out holiday or organized tour. It's a personalized experience where you, the traveler, take control of where you want to go."

Travelers have transitioned from seeking simply "authentic" experiences to seeking truly meaningful experiences, Business Insider's Katie Warren previously reported. According to the 2018 Global Wellness Summit's 2018 trends report, this new type of travel "doesn't discard the focus on authentic experiences, but takes it to a deeper emotional level."

Business Insider's Taylor Borden similarly reported that millionaires and billionaires are increasingly eschewing "cookie cutter" trips. Instead, they're favoring "transformational" and unexpected, never-been-done-before experiences, Borden found, citing the observations of luxury lifestyle management company Insignia President Richard Lewis. "Our clients like their stable hotels, like the Four Seasons and Ritz Carlton, but what we're starting to see is that desire for an immersive experience," Lewis said.



The 11 crucial books that explain modern capitalism

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Fifty years ago, capitalism in the West was based on manufacturing which provided well-paid, lifelong jobs and close to full employment. By the 1970s and 1980s that system was carrying a layer of credit and debt that made it more lucrative for banks to extract profits from deals and transactions than to provide finance for the creation of actual products.

Then, in the 1990s, the burgeoning tech industry made physical products even less relevant — and even more lucrative for investors and speculators.

These classic non-fiction books tell the story of how modern capitalism in the West changed from a system that made actual things into a trading desk for bonds, credit derivatives, and leverage ... and created modern inequality along the way.

We've arranged the books chronologically according to the period of history they cover. If you read them in this order you'll see how one segues into the next, and how dramatically capitalism has changed in the last 50 years.

LORDS OF FINANCE: 1929, The Great Depression, and the Bankers who Broke the World

Writer Liaquat Ahamed tells the story of the crash of 1929 told from the point of view of the central bank chiefs of the US, Britain, France, and Germany.

It's a fantastically detailed personal account — based on letters and diaries — of the men who controlled the world's currencies during the historic financial crisis that continues to dominate how we think about economics today.

The power of the drama lies in the book's gradually unfolding revelation that those in charge of the great banks of the day did not themselves truly understand how capitalism worked (even though many of their colleagues had personal fortunes at stake) as they made error after error after error ...



RANK AND FILE (1973): The brutal, forgotten history of ordinary people who faced down death threats to get decent pay and safety standards at work.

"Rank and File" is an oral history of the lives of a dozen workers' rights activists during the six decades to the end of the 1960s, a period in which Americans went from being little more than slaves to the best-paid employees on the planet.

Pursuing the American Dream in the mines, steelworks, and meat yards sometimes meant risking your life, as authors Alice and Staughton Lynd recount in this often overlooked book.

Jock Yablonski, for instance, was shot to death in his Clarksville, Pennsylvania, home, along with his wife and daughter, on New Year's Eve, 1967. Their bodies were discovered six days later. They were murdered because Yablonski stood in a union election against the president of the United Mine Workers, whom Yablonski believed was more concerned with mine owners' interests than that of miners.

It's grueling stuff — but required reading if you want to know what "blue-collar" really meant in the days when work was done in factories rather than offices.



BARBARIANS AT THE GATE (1989): An epic thriller about '80s excess, a time when debt financing replaced manufacturing as capitalism's main focus.

"Barbarians" is regarded by many as the greatest business book ever written. In 1988, the flamboyant CEO of RJR Nabisco, F. Ross Johnson, decided he could buy his company outright, take it private, and then sell it again later at a profit. The deal would use a "leveraged buyout"— a transaction that would let Johnson use junk bonds (risky corporate debt)  to pay for the deal. He offered $17 billion, or $75 a share, for a stock that had been trading at $55.

The flaw in Johnson's plan was immediately obvious to Wall Street: Once the board agreed to consider the deal, it was required to consider competing bids too — and they flooded in. Anarchy ensued. Bryan Burrough and John Helyar had sources inside every office, enabling them to eavesdrop on every conversation, every plot, every betrayal.

Ultimately, the LBO specialist firm Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts triumphed in a frenzied auction, with a $25 billion ($109 per share) offer — the largest corporate takeover in history.

KKR then stripped its assets as it struggled to pay the debt that financed the deal, turning a once-great consumer product empire into a husk of its former self. 



LIAR'S POKER (1989): The classic tale of life inside Salomon Brothers that defined how stories about Wall Street are told.

This was Michael Lewis's first book, and it covers the three years he spent as a bond trader at Salomon Brothers in the 1980s. It set the tone for everything we understand about Wall Street today and much of what we remember about the money-hungry 1980s.

Lewis's tale focuses on the bond trading desks' hyper-macho culture of practical jokes and prideful greed. "Big swinging dicks" and "feeding frenzy" are among two of the phrases the book popularised. In a climactic scene, CEO John Gutfreund proposes playing a hand of Liar's Poker — a guessing game based on the serial numbers printed on dollar bills — for $1 million.

The book also describes Lewis's experience selling junk bonds before Black Monday in October 1987, when the market crashed, and thus provides an anxious appetizer for what happened next ...



DEN OF THIEVES (1991): An account of the heydey of insider trading that shows how easily debt financing can be manipulated.

"Den of Thieves" is the book that inspired the movie "Wall Street," in which Michael Douglas announces, "greed is good!" It's the story of junk bond king Michael Milken and arbitrage investor Ivan Boesky, who made vast fortunes in the '80s betting on debt-fueled mergers and acquisitions.

Their investments were based on secret tips from insiders working on the impending corporate buyouts. Their web extended through several banks and law firms, and Milken's junk bonds supplied numerous firms (such as KKR) with the liquidity they needed to stage their debt-based deals.

Milken's firm also threw a legendary annual party in Beverly Hills called "The Predator's Ball," at which stars like Frank Sinatra, Diana Ross, and Kenny Rogers performed. The guests — mostly male investors — were also entertained by dozens of female "models" paid to be there.

Milken went to prison for two years and paid a total of $1.1 billion in fines and settlements; Boesky was sentenced to 3.5 years and $100 million in settlements.



THE NEW NEW THING (1999): The *ne plus ultra* tale of dot-com bubble excess, set aboard the yacht of a Silicon Valley millionaire who may not know exactly what he is doing.

Jim Clark was the founder of Silicon Graphics Inc. and Netscape. He is perhaps better remembered for the latter, which spawned the Firefox web browser we know today. But SGI was his real triumph: Clark realized early on that colorful, 3D animated graphics would be the future of computing and that he needed to sell them to the entertainment and gaming industries. At the time, the thinking in Silicon Valley was that graphics were for kids and the real action was in lines of typed code.

As the action in the book opens, Clark is already a billionaire and has plowed his money into a new venture: the world's biggest single-masted yacht, the Hyperion. Clark believes he can sail the boat across the Atlantic entirely from his desktop computer. 

Needless to say, the journey is terrifying, and it functions as the narrative of Lewis's account of the revenue-free madness that gripped the tech world in the late 1990s.



WHEN GENIUS FAILED (2000): Roger Lowenstein's awesomely sourced account of the rise and fall of Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund that placed disastrous leveraged bets on the bond markets.

"Barbarians" might get all the headlines, but for hardcore business book junkies, "Genius" wears the crown. 

Admittedly, "leveraged bets on interest rate spreads in the bond market" doesn't sound like it might be a thrill ride. But Lowenstein patiently explains how LTCM unknowingly began playing dice with the devil. Two of the firm's principals were Nobel-winning economists. And yet, no one aboard fully grasped the risks they were taking.

Ultimately, in 1998, the New York Fed was forced to host a meeting of major Wall Street banks that led to a $3.6 billion bailout of LTCM. The alternative was the potential collapse of global capital markets.

For that reason, "Genius" remains prescient. Everything in it predicts what happens next. It's required reading for anyone who wants to understand the great financial crisis of 2008.



NICKEL AND DIMED (2001): A rare, detailed look at the real lives of the modern poor.

In the late 1990s, author Barbara Ehrenreich tried an experiment: She would leave her comfortable life as an academic and live entirely on low-wage jobs as a waitress, chambermaid, cleaner, and nursing-home help, for six or seven dollars an hour.

She describes a gray, anonymous existence punctuated by urine tests, hardscrabble apartments, where multiple people share single rooms, exhausting work, and no medical care. At one point she runs out of money and realizes she will have no food for an entire weekend. She survives when a charity gives her a food voucher worth $7.02. 

The book is a heartbreaking contrast to "Rank and File," in that it shows what happens when a nation abandons manufacturing and the high-paid union jobs in favor of a low-wage service economy. 



THE BIG SHORT (2010): The scale of the 2008 financial crisis was unseen since the depression of 1929. Only a handful of people saw it coming ...

Easily Michael Lewis's best book. It describes how the US real estate market ballooned, harmlessly at first and then with increasing intensity. Mortgages were bundled into bond-like asset-backed securities. Those assets were used as the basis of credit-default swaps, which were, in turn, leveraged throughout the global capital markets. 

The entire system was based on the assumption that property prices would never go down, and people would never stop paying their mortgages. Lewis takes the point of view of four oddballs who realize months before everybody else that it's a house of cards. They only have one problem: They can't convince anyone else that it's all about to come crashing down.

The book gives personality and drama to the arcana of debt finance and interest rates. It is impossible to understand modern economics without this book.  



CAPITAL IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY (2013): Thomas Piketty's masterpiece on the roots of modern inequality.

The sly reference in the title to Marx's classic treatise "Capital" seems like hubris. But "epic" doesn't begin to describe the scale of Piketty's work. It's a dense trek through tax and financial records going back hundreds of years, from several countries, with a few diverting spinoffs through Balzac and Jane Austen. (Most readers begin the book but don't finish.)

The gist is simple: There are two types of wealth: Income, earned as wages, and the capital built from assets and land. If your wealth comes only from income, you're the loser. The ruling class, by contrast, makes sure its wealth comes from assets and land. In Piketty's telling, that division is almost the entirety of the basis of inequality in the 21st Century.



THE SPIDER NETWORK (2017): The grueling account of how Tom Hayes, a banker with Asperger's Syndrome, came to be at the center of the LIBOR interest-rate rigging scandal.

In the mid-2000s a small group of bankers discovered they had the ability to manipulate the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) of interest simply by calling each other on the phone. They made millions on trades linked to the rate, which is used by other banks to set the price of mortgages, bonds, and other products.

Tom Hayes was the only banker to go to prison for the scheme, even though it involved dozens of people acting in concert over a period of years. He is currently serving an 11-year sentence. Writer David Enrich had virtually unfettered access to Hayes, his wife, and thousands of documents describing the case. It's a fascinating look at how one very ordinary man, single-mindedly pursuing a goal he thought his employer wanted, can go so wrong.



These are the 6 women leading Big Auto into a highly competitive and uncertain future (GM, F, FCAU)

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It often thought that the Detroit auto industry is a man's world, but that actually isn't true.

Sure, it's been mostly men running the Big Three automakers — General Motors, Ford, and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles — and serving in high-powered executive roles. But from the CEO's office down through the executive ranks, many women have risen to hold influential roles.

General Motors named Mary Barra is CEO in 2014, making her the first woman to hold the job at the largest car company in the US by annual sales. Until recently, GM had two women at the top — Dhivya Suryadevara was CFO until she left in August 2020 to join finance startup Stripe.

Barra continues to have several high-powered women on her team. And at crosstown rival Ford, a female descendant of founder Henry Ford holds an important executive position, joined by several other women with major responsibilities. 

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles has more men at the top than its Big Three competitors, but Marissa Hunter looks after the lucrative and ultra-competitive US market and steers the company's most important brands.

Here's a rundown of the most powerful women in the US auto industry:

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Mary Barra, CEO, GM

In her years as General Motors' CEO, Mary Barra has seen plenty of things: a massive strike, a huge recall, a pandemic, a shift toward an electric future, tussles with President Donald Trump, and more. It's been a period not only of challenges at the automaker but of an industry-wide shift to electric and autonomous vehicles.

As soon as Barra became CEO — the first woman to lead a major car company — GM was embroiled in a massive recall caused by a single, innocuous yet ubiquitous part: an ignition switch whose malfunction led to 124 deaths and 275 injuries and cost the company more than $2 billion. 

The problems didn't let up even as Barra consolidated her team and established her leadership style. Trump's election threw GM for a loop, as it contended with potential border taxes on vehicles and parts it produced in Mexico. Later, GM and Trump tangled over the closure of a factory in Ohio.

Then in late 2019, as the United Auto Workers undertook a new contract with the Detroit Big Three, the embattled union decided to strike GM, sending almost 50,000 workers to the picket lines for more than a month — the longest strike at GM in 50 years.

One might have thought that GM would get a breather, but in early 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced the factory to idle all Chinese, US, and European production. GM responded deftly, shifting some manufacturing to making ventilators, but again tangled with Trump, who used the Defense Production Act to compel GM to make more.

Through all this chaos, Barra had to concentrate on her overarching strategies: optimizing GM to create a positive return on invested capital; reversing a pre-bankruptcy trend of wasting money in the interest of maintaining scale and market share; and transforming GM into an electric carmaker.

"We are disrupting ourselves, we're not trying to preserve a model of yesterday," she told Insider in a 2015 interview.

The electrified future kicked off in earnest at the beginning of 2020 when GM unveiled its Ultium battery technology, facilitated by a deal with LG Chem to build a battery factory in the Midwest. GM's ambitions also have big money behind them: the carmaker will spend $27 billion to launch 30 electric vehicles by 2025.



Kim Brycz, Senior Vice-President, Global Human Resources, GM

As GM manages a transition from being one of the world's largest purveyors of gas-powered mobility to becoming an electrified automaker, Brycz needs to support the hundreds of thousands of employees the company currently has and prepare it to hire the talent that it will require in the decades ahead.

Brycz joined GM in 1983 working for Cadillac, and prior to taking a job that CEO Mary Barra once held heading up global HR, she supervised the $80 billion that GM spends each year to develop competitive new products and maintain existing ones.

"Kim brings to the job a strong set of leadership and organizational skills that will help lead our ongoing efforts to transform the company through our people and culture," Barra said when Brycz was promoted in 2018. "Kim exemplifies the leadership behaviors that are critical to the collective success of the company."



Deborah Wahl, Global Chief Marketing Officer, GM

Wahl had been in charge of marketing for Cadillac when in 2019 GM tapped her to become the carmaker's Global Chief Marketing Officer, a role that it hadn't filled under CEO Mary Barra's tenure.

Wahl came to GM from McDonald's in 2018, but prior to her stint under the golden arches, she'd worked for other big carmakers, including Chrysler and Toyota.

Insider had the opportunity to speak with Wahl in Detroit at the beginning of 2020 when GM unveiled its Ultium battery technology. She was an enthusiastic proponent of the all-electric platform, which she and her team had worked on naming. 

"There are moments in history when everything changes," Wahl said when GM more recently unveiled a campaign to promote its electric technologies and showcased a new corporate logo.

"We believe such a point is upon us for the mass adoption of electric vehicles. Unlike ever before, we have the solutions, capability, technology, and scale to put everyone in an EV. Our new brand identity and campaign are designed to reflect this."



Elena Ford, Chief Customer Experience Officer, Ford

The great-great-granddaughter of Henry Ford has found herself working for the daily business, and her role is hardly ceremonial. She oversees what might be the most important responsibility the 117-year-old automaker has: ensuring that its customers are respected and listened to, and that owning one Ford vehicle makes them want to own more.

"We know that an exceptional experience is what today's customers want and expect and we are focused on understanding those expectations so deeply and so continuously that our customers feel that we care at each and every touchpoint, regardless of where they meet us," she said in a statement.

Ford joined the company in 1995 and has served in a range of roles. She also participates in extensive charity and foundation activities.

 

 

 



Suzy Deering, Global Chief Marketing Officer, Ford

Ford named Deering, a veteran of eBay and Verizon, as its new top marketer in November 2020. She took the top job in January of 2021.

Automakers spend billions on marketing their vehicles and services, so Deering's role is critical. But Ford is also rebranding itself as a technology and mobility provider, and the 117-year-old company looked to the new economy when it chose Deering as CMO.

"Technology will be a powerful part of Ford's transformation and how we enhance and release the huge value of our iconic brands," she said in a statement when her hire was announced.

"My team will be involved from end-to-end on behalf of customers — better connecting with them, using data to foresee and deliver what they need, and earning and keeping their trust."



Joy Falotico, President, Lincoln

Until November 2020, Falotico was heading up Lincoln and serving as Ford's Chief Marketing Officer — following in the footsteps of Kumar Galhotra, who had also run the luxury brand while filling the CMO's role.

Falotico worked at Ford's credit arm from 1989 until she became a group vice-president in 2016 and took over Lincoln while the brand was in the process of a reinvention. 

With Ford hiring Suzy Deering as its new CMO, Falotico is free to take Lincoln to the next level, expanding its manufacturing and sales operations in China while launching new SUVs in the US. She has to take on crosstown rival Cadillac, as well as worry about Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Audi, Lexus, Acura, Infiniti, and Jaguar Land Rover.

China, in particular, has been on her mind for a while. "China is going to be the largest market, for certain," she told Insider in 2018.



Lynn Antipas Tyson, Executive Director, Investor Relations, Ford

Tyson's 25-year career has showcased her ability to represent large companies to the investment community and other critical constituencies. Before Ford, she worked for Dell and PepsiCo.

The City College of New York grad also holds an MBA from New York University's Stern School of Business.

Her challenge at Ford is significant, as the carmaker's stock has failed to impress Wall Street, lagging the broader markets since the financial crisis and underperforming its peers in the auto industry. Ford has also seen its investment-grade credit rating cut, raising its borrowing costs.

"Lynn brings a wealth of investor relations and communications experience at companies that were facing profound change," Bob Shanks, then Ford's CFO, said in 2017 when Tyson joined Ford.



Marissa Hunter, Head of Marketing, FCA North America

Hunter came to FCA, then a newly formed corporate entity after Chrysler's takeover by Fiat, in 2009. The former BBDO advertising executive was immediately tasked with selling one of the automaker's most important vehicles: the RAM pickup truck.

A series of assignments, ascending in influence, followed, and in 2019 FCA named her head of marketing for North America, the company's most profitable region. She supervises all brands sold in the US and Canada.

FCA is in the process of merging with France's PSA Group. And although it remains to be seen how the new corporation, dubbed "Stellantis," will manage the North American business, current FCA CEO Mike Manley will likely take over and Hunter's responsibilities will become ever more vital to the financial health of the US-Italian-French giant, the world's fourth-largest automaker.



Chipotle is investing in online-only drive-thru 'Chipotlanes' to compete with fast-food giants — here's what it's like to use one

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FILE PHOTO: The logo of Chipotle Mexican Grill is seen at the Chipotle Next Kitchen in Manhattan, New York, U.S., June 28, 2018.  REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

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Chipotle joined other fast food brands investing in drive-thru technology and online ordering with Chipotlanes. I visited one in Canandaigua, New York to document the experience.

By early 2019, Chipotle had 10 US Chipotlanes, and executives told Insider that they planned to open dozens more, while also investing in digital ordering. Chipotle's digital sales exploded during the COVID-19 pandemic, making up more than half of sales in 2020. Now, the brand is investing in building more online-order only "Chipotlanes" and opening new locations. CEO Brian Niccol said in an earnings call that Chipotle plans to more than double its locations.

Read more: Shake Shack, Panera, and Chipotle open drive-thrus to keep up with fast-food rivals like McDonald's and Taco Bell

The expansion comes as fast-food and fast-casual brands across the country are optimizing drive-thrus. Drive-thru orders have grown across the fast-food industry since the pandemic closed many dining rooms. McDonald's, already a drive-thru heavy hitter with 25,000 worldwide, says that 70% of sales in top markets are drive-thru orders. Even salad chain Sweetgreen is jumping on the trend.

Chipotle works on an assembly line type model, where customers move down the line of ingredients to choose what they want in a burrito or bowl. Chipotle locations also run a second assembly line behind the scenes dubbed the "digital make line" in 2019. That section is focused on making mobile and delivery orders, the kind that would make up business at a Chipotlane. With digital sales exploding, Chipotle announced plans to hire 10,000 new employees to handle digital sales this summer.

Here's what it's like to order from a Chipotlane. 

SEE ALSO: Burger King is changing its logo after 20 years in a massive rebrand — see what the new packaging and employee uniforms will look like

Downloading the Chipotle app is necessary for all mobile orders. When the app is open, it shows nearby Chipotle locations, and specifically marks Chipotlane locations.



Select a particular restaurant to get the exact address, phone number, and hours. From there, you can choose to order from that location or favorite it.



From there, the entire menu is on the app. I actually prefer digital ordering at Chipotle in particular because the line doesn't get held up by one person looking at the options.



It's also easy to duplicate orders and add on sides like chips and guac before checkout.



You can choose to either pickup in the drive-thru or inside when you place your order.



You also choose a pickup time so your food is ready when you get there.



Pay with Apple Pay or another credit card by entering information into the app.



The actual Chipotle, which opened in December, was not very busy. It was in a strip mall-like plaza with a few other stores and an urgent care center.



The doors advertised contactless pickup and delivery, although you could also go inside and order at the counter.



For online orderers who opted not to use the drive-thru, a pickup counter had orders set out by last name.



But we weren't here for that. Outside, signs directed drivers to the drive-thru.



The drive-thru is fairly standard, without the multiple lanes or interactive boards some brands are adding. It only has one window though, because it is only for picking up food; all ordering and payment is already done by the time you get there.



The food comes in a large paper bag with a receipt stapled on it.



Each individual order, like my burrito bowl, also has a sticker with the name and ingredients, so you can immediately see that you got the right order.

Drive-thrus and mobile ordering are the future and we're only going to see more of it. Also it's ideal for a place like Chipotle with a lot of customization




Take a look inside 'Game of Thrones' star Emilia Clarke's California house, which sold for $4.4 million

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Actor Emilia Clarke, who has starred in "Game of Thrones" as well as films from the "Terminator" and "Star Wars" franchises, has sold her house in Venice, California for $4.4 million.

Despite the price tag, the property only has two bedrooms and three bathrooms.

Realtors Douglas Elliman describe the 11-year-old property as a "breathtaking architectural home."

The gated property was designed with privacy in mind, the realtors added, and described it is a "secluded escape located on one of the best streets in Venice," close to the beach and the Marina Del Rey.

Fox Business first reported on the property's sale. Juliette Hohnen from Douglas Elliman and Ruby Fay of Pinnacle Estate Properties held the listing.

Clarke paid $4.64 million for the property back in August 2016, Realtor.com reported, citing property records. She listed it for sale for just under $5 million in August 2020, but cut its price by $250,000 in both September and November. The property sold for $4.4 million in late December.

The median price for properties in the neighborhood is $1.6 million, according to Realtor.com.

The property is 2,817 square ft in total.



The house is dominated by a large living room with 15ft ceilings and built-in bookshelves that surround a fireplace.



The living room has floor-to-ceiling windows and doors on two sides, with one leading to a courtyard ...



... and the other taking you to a front patio with 80-year-old olive trees.



As well as the living room, the ground floor has a long, thin "den" with custom wood cabinets that also looks out over the courtyard.



The courtyard features a 30ft pool ...



... and a covered veranda.



The ground floor also has a large kitchen with soapstone counters and a breakfast bar.



Apart from the bathroom, the ground floor is entirely open-plan.



The master bedroom has stunning views of the surroundings ...



... a huge walk-in closet ...



... and a bathroom that the realtors described as "spa-like."



The property has a second en-suite bedroom, too.



The top 9 shows on Netflix this week, from 'Bridgerton' to 'Cobra Kai'

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"Bridgerton" is projected to be watched by 63 million households in its first month, Netflix said on Monday. But it wasn't Netflix's most popular series this week. 

That honor goes to "Cobra Kai," which debuted its third season on January 1, its first true Netflix original season after moving from YouTube.

Netflix introduced daily top 10 lists of its most viewed movies and TV shows in February (it counts a view if an account watches at least two minutes of a title).

Every week, the streaming search engine Reelgood compiles for Business Insider a list of which TV shows have been most prominent on Netflix's daily lists that week.

Below are Netflix's 9 most popular TV shows of the week in the US:

SEE ALSO: The top 9 movies on Netflix this week, from 'The Midnight Sky' to 'We Can Be Heroes'

9. "Gabby's Dollhouse" (Netflix original, 2021-present)

Description: "Cute cats, quirky crafts and colorful magic! Join kitty enthusiast Gabby and her sidekick Pandy Paws as they team up for a series of animated adventures."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A

What critics said: N/A



8. "Virgin River" (Netflix original, 2019-present)

Description: "Searching for a fresh start, a nurse practitioner moves from LA to a remote northern California town and is surprised by what — and who — she finds." 

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A

What critics said: N/A



7. "History of Swear Words" (Netflix original, 2021-present)

Description: "Nicolas Cage hosts this proudly profane, funny and engagingly educational series about the history and impact of the most notorious English swear words."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 67%

What critics said: "The contributing comedians, among them Nick Offerman, Nikki Glaser, and Sarah Silverman, have their share of fun with the subject matter. But it's the linguists who really give the series its transgressive heft."— Boston Globe (season one)



6. "Dare Me" (USA Network, 2019-present)

Description: "Relationships topple and loyalties flip when an icy new cheerleading coach takes over the high school squad ruled by Beth and her devoted BFF, Addy."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 85%

What critics said: "Such plotting -- of teenage girls being pitted against each other and drifting apart — could come off cliche, but Dare Me does more than incorporate the trope. It examines the way conflict warps the girls' perception of each other, giving it more nuance."— The Atlantic (season one)



5. "The Queen's Gambit" (Netflix original, 2020)

Description: "In a 1950s orphanage, a young girl reveals an astonishing talent for chess and begins an unlikely journey to stardom while grappling with addiction."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 97%

What critics said: "Anchored by a magnetic lead performance and bolstered by world-class acting, marvelous visual language, a teleplay that's never less than gripping, and an admirable willingness to embrace contradiction and ambiguity, it's one of the year's best series."— RogerEbert.com



4. "Cocomelon" (Netflix original, 2020-present)

Description: "Learn letters, numbers, animal sounds and more with J.J. in this musical series that brings fun times with nursery rhymes for the whole family!"

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A

What critics said: N/A



3. "Chilling Adventures of Sabrina" (Netflix original, 2018-2021)

Description: "Magic and mischief collide as half-human, half-witch Sabrina navigates between two worlds: mortal teen life and her family's legacy, the Church of Night."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 81%

What critics said: "This is spirited, gory, teenage supernatural fun, with a tidy-ish ending —  and it has been a pleasure to hang out with Sabrina again."— Guardian (season four)



2. "Bridgerton" (Netflix original, 2020-present)

Description: "The eight close-knit siblings of the Bridgerton family look for love and happiness in London high society. Inspired by Julia Quinn's bestselling novels."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 93%

What critics said: "A sexy, joyous, colorful update of the classic will-they-or-won't-they Regency-era courting tale."— Indiewire (season one)



1. "Cobra Kai" (Netflix original, 2018-present)

Description: "Decades after the tournament that changed their lives, the rivalry between Johnny and Daniel reignites in this sequel to the 'Karate Kid' films."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 94%

What critics said: "With hard hits, cool kicks, and an absolute mastery of tone (which is that of an evolved, self-aware '80s blow out), Cobra Kai balances valiant drama with (sometimes) utter ridiculousness."— IGN (season three)



Elon Musk made a jab at Facebook, linking the rampage at the Capitol to the social network. It's the latest insult in a years-long feud between Musk and Mark Zuckerberg. (TSLA, FB)

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For over four years, Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg have clashed over everything from artificial intelligence to rockets. 

The two moguls — who helm Tesla and SpaceX, and Facebook, respectively — haven't exactly kept their rivalry a secret. When a SpaceX rocket explosion destroyed a Facebook satellite in 2016, Zuckerberg issued a heated statement saying he was "deeply disappointed" about SpaceX's failure. And when Facebook became embroiled in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Musk publicly deleted his companies' Facebook pages, tweeting that the company gives him "the willies." 

Read more:Tesla bounced back better than ever after the worst mistake Elon Musk ever made

The two billionaires are among the richest people on the planet, placing them in an elite circle, even by Silicon Valley standards. Despite the fact that they both dabble in artificial intelligence and their companies have partnered in the past, it seems that there's no love lost between Musk and Zuckerberg. 

Here's where their feud began and everything that's happened since. 

The Musk-Zuckerberg feud dates back to at least 2016, when a SpaceX rocket explosion destroyed a Facebook satellite.

In September 2016, SpaceX was testing its Falcon 9 rocket at a launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Shortly after 9 a.m. the rocket exploded, destroying Facebook's AMOS-6 satellite, which was supposed to ride the rocket into space.

The satellite was part of Facebook's Internet.org project to deliver internet connectivity to the developing world and would have been Facebook's first satellite in orbit. 

Zuckerberg seemed openly frustrated that the launch failed, writing on Facebook that he was "deeply disappointed to hear that SpaceX's launch failure destroyed our satellite that would have provided connectivity to so many entrepreneurs and everyone else across the continent."

Two years later, Musk addressed the failed launch in a tweet to reporter Kerry Flynn.

"Yeah, my fault for being an idiot," Musk said. "We did give them a free launch to make up for it and I think they had some insurance."



In 2017, Zuckerberg criticized Musk's feelings about artificial intelligence, comments that seemed to get a rise out of Musk.

During a Facebook Live broadcast, a viewer asked Zuckerberg for his thoughts on Musk's anxieties around AI. 

"I have pretty strong opinions on this,"Zuckerberg said. "With AI especially, I'm really optimistic, and I think that people who are naysayers and try to drum up these doomsday scenarios ... I don't understand it. It's really negative, and in some ways, I actually think it's pretty irresponsible."

Musk, who has repeatedly called for regulation and caution when it comes to new AI technology, shot back on Twitter.

"I've talked to Mark about this," he said in response to a tweet about Zuckerberg's comments. "His understanding of the subject is limited." 

 



In 2018, following Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal, Musk made a public show of deleting SpaceX and Tesla's Facebook pages.

After WhatsApp cofounder Brian Acton tweeted, "It is time. #deletefacebook," Musk responded, "What's Facebook?"

A fan responded to Musk's tweet asking if he would delete the SpaceX Facebook page, to which Musk responded, "I didn't realize there was one. Will do." 

After another fan pointed out that Tesla had a Facebook page too, Musk tweeted that it "looks lame anyway."

Soon after, both the SpaceX and Tesla pages disappeared from Facebook, but Musk said it wasn't a "political statement," he just finds Facebook unsettling.

 



Musk continued his campaign against Facebook in early 2020.

In response to a tweet from the actor Sacha Baron Cohen, which called for more regulation of Facebook, Musk urged people once again to delete the app

 



Following the riots at the US Capitol, Musk took to Twitter to share memes linking the riots to Facebook.

On the evening of the rampage in Washington, Musk tweeted"This is called the domino effect" along with an image of dominoes, with the first one labeled "a website to rate women on campus," a reference to Facebook's inception at Harvard University. The last domino was about the rioters. 

Musk also criticized Facebook's data-sharing practices, tweeting another meme about Facebook that mentioned the company "spying" on users following the announcement by Facebook-owned WhatsApp that it would start forcing users to share their personal data with Facebook.

Musk tweeted that people should "use Signal," an encrypted messaging app. His tweet was retweeted by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, another tech executive who has sparred with Zuckerberg



These are the Republican lawmakers facing calls for resignation after they attended the Trump rally ahead of the Capitol riot

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The riot on the US Capitol was preceded by a rally in support of President Donald Trump's efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. 

That rally was attended by Republican lawmakers at the state and federal levels. 

Emboldened by Trump's urges and pleas to protest the results with him, rioters who attended the rally organized an attempted coup. They stormed the Capitol building as lawmakers were meeting inside to certify the election results.

Days after the event, investigations remain ongoing and lawmakers at-large have been standing against the acts of violence demonstrated by the rioters.

At least five people, including one police officer, died. Members of the Proud Boys, which is classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, were reportedly present

Upon news that the riot breached the Capitol building, lawmakers began to shelter in place and many evacuated. One quick-thinking Senate aide secured the boxes containing the electoral votes, rescuing them from possible damage. 

The vote to certify President-elect Joe Biden went on as planned hours after the riot began. And a day later, Trump said there would be "an orderly transition" on January 20, Inauguration Day.

The riot spurred calls to once again impeach Trump, this time on a charge for "incitement of an insurrection." Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell circulated a memo to Republicans saying Trump cannot logistically be removed from office before Inauguration Day.

Trump, however, is not the only Republican facing a swift backlash. Republican lawmakers, who were present at either the rally or riot, are being accused by their own colleagues of having "galvanized domestic terrorists." 

Here are the Republican lawmakers across state and federal levels who were present at Trump's rally that led to the Capitol siege. 

West Virginia State Delegate Derrick Evans

Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker Derrick Evans streamed a video of himself storming the Capitol building with a mass of rioters. 

"We're in, baby!" he shouted in the video. He also repeatedly shouted Trump's name and warned others not to destroy property. 

After the riot, he said he participated as an "independent member of the media to film history."

Evans' participation was condemned by Roger Henshaw, speaker of the West Virginia House of Delegates. "Participating in a violent intentional disruption of one of our nation's most fundamental political institutions is a crime that should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," Henshaw told WV Metro News.

Evans resigned from his role on Saturday, days after previously promising that he would not

"I take full responsibility for my actions, and deeply regret any hurt, pain or embarrassment I may have caused my family, friends, constituents and fellow West Virginians," Evans said in his resignation letter.



Virginia State Senator Amanda Chase

Virginia state Sen. Amanda Chase attended the pro-Trump rally on Wednesday ahead of the riot. She said she left "just in time" before the rioters arrived. But Chase is still facing calls for her resignation for participating in the rally. 

"She galvanized domestic terrorists who violated the United States Capitol on Wednesday afternoon through riots, destruction, and desecration, joining them on their march to Capitol Hill," a statement from the Virginia Democratic Senate caucus said.

After the riot, Chase referred to the Trump extremists as "patriots."



Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley

Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley was photographed raising a fist in solidarity with the rioters outside the US Capitol. 

Hawley was the first senator to announce his plans to object to the certification of the Electoral College results in favor of President-elect Joe Biden.

During the riot, Hawley was sheltering in place with his Senate colleagues, who shunned him and left him "in a corner of the room by himself with no one talking to him or acknowledging him," a source told the Wall Street Journal.

Senate colleague Sherrod Brown has called on Hawley to resign for his opposition to certifying the results. 

Hawley "betrayed" his oath of office and "abetted a violent insurrection on our democracy," Brown wrote on Twitter.



Tennessee State Rep. Terri Lynn Weaver

Tennessee State Rep. Terri Lee Weaver posted on Twitter a photo of the riot outside the Capitol building. 

"Epic and historic day gathering with fellow Patriots from all over the nation DC," Weaver tweeted on Wednesday.

It's unclear whether Weaver entered the Capitol building along with the other rioters. But she told the Tennessean that she was "in the thick of it" and hadn't seen any violence. 

A petition for her resignation is circulating on MoveOn.org.



Former candidate for Pennsylvania Congressional representative Rick Saccone

Rick Saccone, a former Pennsylvania congressional candidate, was a participant in the riot. 

"We are storming the capitol," Saccone posted online to Facebook. "Our vanguard has broken thru the barricades. We will save this nation. Are u with me?"

The posts were deleted but are still available online.

Saccone also posted a video in which he said he and the other rioters would "run out all the evil people in there, and all the RINOs that have betrayed our president."

In the days after the riot, Saccone announced his resignation from his adjunct teaching role at Saint Vincent College.

"I decided to resign for the betterment of the school," Saccone told local outlets. "I've been there 21 years. I didn't want all this terrible media kerfuffle to tarnish the school. I decided it would be better if I just resigned."



Pennsylvania State Senator Doug Mastriano

Pennsylvania State Senator Doug Mastriano was photographed with Saccone at the riot. 

Mastriano is widely seen as a potential candidate for the state's 2022 gubernatorial race, according to WESA, an NPR affiliate.

State Senate Democrats are urging Mastriano to resign, according to KDKA, a CBS News affiliate.



Illinois State Rep. Chris Miller

Illinois state Rep. Chris Miller was present at the rally that preceded the riot. 

"We're engaged in a great cultural war to see which world view will survive, whether we will remain a free people, a free market capitalism, or whether they will put us into the tyranny of socialism and communism and the dangerous Democrat terrorists that are trying to destroy our country," Miller said in a video of him in the crowd at the rally against the 2020 election results.



Arizona State Rep. Anthony Kern

Arizona state Rep. Anthony Kern was in Washington, DC, for the Trump rally just ahead of the riot on Wednesday.

"In DC supporting @realDonaldTrump and @CNN @FoxNews @MSNBC are spewing lies again," he wrote on Twitter. 

 

 



Georgia State Rep. Vernon Jones

Georgia State Rep. Vernon Jones warmed up the rally crowd ahead of the riot, according to local news reports.

"To the peaceful Patriots who came to our nation's Capitol today, we can not drown out our message with violence," he wrote on Twitter, adding a photo of himself before a crowd. 

"We are Americans who believe in the rule law [sic] and follow the principles of our constitution."

Jones was a lifelong Democrat until Wednesday when he said he was joining the Republican Party.

"They don't know they have awakened a sleeping giant," he told the crowd.



See the pitch deck that landed startup Lacework $525 million in the largest investment round for a cybersecurity company in the last year

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Dan Hubbard CEO of Lacework

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How do you convince investors to give a startup $525 million? 

"You have to have a lot of proof points," Lacework CEO Dan Hubbard told Insider, after his Silicon Valley startup raked in a half-billion-dollar round after previously raising a total of $74.4 million. 

The six-year-old Silicon Valley company addresses the booming area of providing cybersecurity to companies growing and moving their operations to public cloud providers like Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure.

Perhaps the most important proof point is the total addressable market (TAM) that Lacework is tackling – a figure that gauges revenue opportunity – is climbing 20% year over year and reaching $13 billion in 2024. Analysts back that up.

Analyst Daniel Ives, managing director of equity research at Wall Street analyst firm Wedbush Securities, told Insider on Friday that "there's $200 billion up for grabs in the next five years in cloud security."

"We have the right product in the right market at the right time," Hubbard told Insider last week. "The problem has come to us." 

The company says it has seen revenue triple each of the past two years as more businesses build and run applications on the major cloud platforms. The company did not disclose revenue or specific valuation, but says the latter is above $1 billion. 

PitchBook shows the funding round was the largest in the cybersecurity industry for the past year, and the 22nd largest in all US industries over that span. 

It could have been even larger, Hubbard said. "There was an incredible amount of interest. There are going to be some people who feel left out." 

Mike Speiser, managing director at Sutter Hill Ventures, compared the startup to his firm's runaway success investment Snowflake, which has rocketed to a market cap of some $76 billion after its September IPO. 

Here's the pitch deck Lacework used to land the mammoth funding round. Some slides with customer and competitive data have been removed by the company to protect proprietary information.

























Here are the most prominent people who got banned from social media platforms after the Capitol riots

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Almost immediately after the attack on the Capitol building last Wednesday, social media platforms began suspending and permanently disabling accounts they say disseminate violent rhetoric.  

The most prominent ban was Twitter's permanent suspension of President Donald Trump's account Friday night. 

After his account got disabled, top conservatives began sharing their Parler accounts on the platform, encouraging their followers to gravitate there. Parler has become a mainstay in alt-right communication, advertising itself as a platform for unregulated language and "free speech."

Days after the presidential election, Parler download counts surged, signaling that the platform was at the time seeing an influx of new users. 

After Twitter banned Trump, Gab another far-right website that bills itself as a "free speech" platform, reported massive growth. About 10,000 new users signed up every hour on Saturday, according to Gab, signaling the gravitation from mainstream social media accounts to less-popular ones like Gab known for the circulation of alt-right speech.

Alt-right content is still available on mainstream social media accounts like Twitter. But after the Capitol riots, social media platforms have begun removing accounts they suspect will incite violence. Some users whose accounts have been removed have previously spread misinformation related to the 2020 election results and QAnon content. 

These accounts, social media platforms said, violate their rules of engagement and pose a risk to the public. 

Here are the people who've been banned since the Capitol riot attacks: 

Donald Trump

Trump has been suspended from accessing multiple social media platforms almost immediately after the Capitol riots.

He was permanently suspended from Twitter on Friday "due to the risk of further incitement of violence," the company said in a tweet. 

Facebook blocked Trump "indefinitely" a day earlier, saying the ban will last at least until President-elect Joe Biden gets sworn into office on January 20. 

Snapchat also banned Trump's account for concerns about his rhetoric.

Reddit banned r/DonaldTrump, a popular subreddit that violated the platforms "rules against inciting violence," a spokesperson said to Insider.



Sidney Powell

Twitter on Friday said it suspended the account of Sidney Powell, the lawyer Trump tasked with proving his baseless claims of election fraud. 

Powell, in her attempt to alter the results of the 2020 presidential election, has been accused of spreading misinformation about Dominion Voting Systems, an electronic voting supplier.

She was sued for $1.3 billion on claims that she facilitated the spread of misinformation. 

 



Steve Bannon

YouTube removed Steve Bannon's "War Room" podcast Friday night for "violation of YouTube's Terms of Service."

Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani had appeared on the podcast hours before the ban. During his appearance, he blamed Democrats for the Capitol riots. 

Twitter banned Bannon, a former White House strategist, in November after he posted a tweet calling for the decapitation of Dr. Anthony Fauci.



Michael Flynn

Former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn was booted off Twitter earlier this week.

Flynn partially used Twitter to urge Trump to use martial law to overturn the results of the presidential election.

He's also been one of most visible backers of QAnon. In 2019, Flynn was scheduled to speak at a QAnon-organized conference.



Ron Watkins

That same day, Twitter banned the account of Ron Watkins, a crucial QAnon figure who ran the alt-right platform 8kun.

Watkins' misinformation posts have frequently often been amplified by Trump himself. When his account was active, Trump retweeted posts from Watkins. 

Other QAnon accounts were also suspended on Friday, and Twitter has been taking steps to reduce the influence and misinformation that comes out of the group. The same day, for example, Twitter removed thousands of QAnon-affiliated accounts

Still, there are several other QAnon accounts that continue to thrive on the platform. 



The 8 top media bankers from firms like LionTree and Goldman Sachs

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It's been a stomach-churning year in media, with the pandemic providing a black swan event that has challenged even the smartest players.

Pivoting is the business plan du jour, and the telecom, media and tech sector bankers have been busy coming up with ways to seize the day for some and rescue plans for others.

In TMT, which refers to the telecom, media and tech sectors, merger and acquisition sector activity swelled to $387 billion in 2020, up 77% versus the prior year, according to Refinitiv. 

Some players, like Jeffrey Katzenberg's Quibi, were dead on arrival after soliciting a huge amount of investment from banks. Others like cinema chain AMC Entertainment had to borrow money to stay alive. Univision and Verizon decided it was the right time to put assets on the block. Special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, will bring many smaller media players to the public markets with bankers playing Pied Piper.

Investment bankers are used to working around-the-clock hours at breakneck speed, but this past year has put best-in-class financial engineers to the test, and the pace of dealmaking won't be slowing down anytime soon.

Business Insider talked to senior executives across the spectrum to identify the go-to media bankers in the sector to watch.

LionTree's Aryeh Bourkoff

They say all roads lead to Rome, and the same could be said of Aryeh Bourkoff, who sits at the nexus of the most headline-grabbing media transactions (and a lot more that happens behind closed doors).

Bourkoff, who built his own investment bank LionTree after years at UBS, is fond of quoting big thinkers in his annual looking-ahead letter.

Bourkoff's company was behind deals such as ViacomCBS' sale of book publisher Simon & Schuster to Bertelsmann's Penguin Random House; and audio firm Wondery's sale to Amazon

LionTree advised on other agreements in the audio space with E.W. Scripps' sale of Stitcher to SiriusXM. 

And in Spanish-language media, Bourkoff helped crunch the numbers on the Univision sale of a majority stake to ForgeLight, Searchlight, and Televisa. He also helped Jeffrey Katzenberg sell the Quibi library, which was picked up by Roku.

In his most recent year-end letter, Bourkoff shared Marcus Aurelius' observation that "Most of what we say and do is not essential," adding that media players must make decisions that are essential. Bourkoff, who is both down-to-earth and cerebral, told readers that if there's a wave, it's time to grab the surfboard.



Goldman Sachs' Kurt Simon

If there have been seismic, landscape altering deals then Goldman Sach's Kurt Simon was part of the conversations that created them.

Simon advised on AT&T's acquisition of Time Warner and its subsequent defense against activist investor Elliott Management at the beginning of 2020. He also advised Disney on its acquisition of Fox.

Goldman was also involved in some huge deals in 2020, including acting as lead advisor to S&P in its purchase of IHS Markit, information provider. The all-stock deal was valued at $44 billion. 

Simon is vice chairman of the Investment Banking Division and co-chairman of the global Technology, Media and Telecom (TMT) Group. He also serves as a member of the Investment Banking Senior Leadership Council.

Simon joined the firm as a partner in 2018 after 16 years at JP Morgan, most recently as global chairman of mergers and acquisitions. Before that, he was head of the TMT investment banking practice.

He earned a BA from Duke University in 1987 and an MBA from the Wharton School of Business of the University of Pennsylvania in 1991.



Goldman Sachs' Sam Britton

Sam Britton has been busy the past 12 months with a lot of tech and media deals such as the sale of eBay's StubHub to Viagogo for $4 billion and the $7.5 billion sale of videogame company ZeniMax to Microsoft.

He's had some activism business to attend to as well. Britton was key to Twitter's activism advisory and investment by Silver Lake and also was part of eBay's activism advisory with Elliott and Starboard. 

The San Francisco-based Britton, who's been in the business for 25 years, described tech M&A as being "on fire" in 2020.

"This is a business where experience begets more activity, and there's a virtuous circle there," he said of Goldman's ability to attract significant business. 

He noted that companies are looking at both an IPO track as well as strategic acquirers as they turn to 2021.

"We've seen either the inclination to make those phone calls go down a little bit, or the success rate of those phone calls go down a little bit, in part because the IPO — the public alternative — is very, very attractive, whether through a SPAC or whether through a conventional IPO."



Allen & Co.'s Nancy Peretsman

Nancy Peretsman has been a fixture of the media deals for decades, but she's still close to the grassroots when it comes to spotting what's around the corner.

Peretsman is one of the most prominent women in finance, with decades of experience at boutique firm Allen & Co., where she is a managing director. Over the years, she's worked on Google's IPO, was a banker for AOL, and advised News Corp. in its purchase of Dow Jones.

In the past 12 months, Peretsman has advised on Fox's acquisition of Tubi, a $500 million deal; Twitter on its agreement with activist investor Elliott Management; Magic Leap on its private placement; and News Corp.'s sale of News America Marketing to Charlesbank Capital Partners.

Outside of media, Peretsman advised Deliveroo on its private placement financed mostly by Amazon.

"2020 was a year of extraordinary activity raising capital for a whole group of exciting companies. It's a new form of online media business," she said of the new crop of direct-to-consumer companies. 

Peretsman also advised Graham Holdings on the sale of an audio venture to Spotify and Vimeo spinout from IAC. "It makes more sense to spin it off into the capital markets than to sell it," she said, of what will likely be a common theme this year. 



Max Herrnstein, Morgan Stanley

Max Herrnstein has been in the media business for over 30 years as an investment banker, venture capitalist and strategy consultant. He currently chairs the Global Media & Communications Group at Morgan Stanley, having worked on a range of deals in digital media, advertising agencies, sports, music and broadcast and satellite communications. 

In 2020, he worked on Disney's $11 billion bond offering in May, followed by Warner Music Group's $2.2 billion initial public offering in July. Herrnstein closed out the year as an advisor to Spanish-language media giant Univision, which sold a majority stake to Searchlight Capital Partners and Forgelight. The deal closed in December. 

He has an A.B. and MBA from Harvard University.



Moelis & Company's Navid Mahmoodzadegan

Navid Mahmoodzadegan is always in the midst of multi-billion dollar media M&A activity. As co-president and a founding partner of Moelis & Company, he's worked on a host of deals this past year, from Univision's stake sale to AMC Entertainment's exchange offer and capital raise to ION's sale to E.W. Scripps.

Among other deals, he was a financial adviser to Expedia on its $1.2 billion PIPE (private investment in public equity) and related financings, worth $4 billion.

Mahmoodzadegan's expertise crosses broadcasting, cable, publishing, entertainment, satellite and digital media sectors. He spent six years at UBS, most recently as the global head of media investment banking, and was a member of its Investment Banking Department Americas Executive Committee. He began his investment banking career at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.

Mahmoodzadegan holds an A.B. from the University of Michigan (Phi Beta Kappa) and a J.D. from Harvard Law School (magna cum laude). 



Evercore's Jason Sobol and Nathan Graf

Evercore duo Jason Sobol and Nathan Graf had a busy year advising Red Ventures on its acquisition of CNET, which ViacomCBS sold for $500 million after buying it for $1.8 billion in 2008. 

Among other deals, the two advised on the Scripps family's interest in E.W. Scripps' acquisition of ION Media for $2.65 billion in September. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway made a rare media deal, agreeing to pour $600 million into the mix to help the purchase along. 

On a smaller scale, Evercore also advised Edmunds, which received an equity investment from Carmax in January 2020. Sobol also advised on McClatchy's sale out of bankruptcy court to Chatham Asset Management.




The best computer monitors

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Summary List Placement
  • Picking up one of the best computer monitors is at least as important as a fast desktop or laptop. You'll be staring at the monitor you pick for hours every day, so it's important that it deliver a bright, clear, colorful image.
  • These recommendations come from in-depth testing of dozens of monitors with a professional calibration device and were further informed by a decade of monitor review experience. 
  • The Dell S2721QS is an outstanding 4K monitor that delivers everything most people need in a monitor and much more, making it our top pick for best monitor.

The Dell S2721QS is the best computer monitor overall in 2021. It's a bright, brilliant, sharp 4K monitor with outstanding image quality by any measure, but its mid-range pricing makes it more approachable than most monitors with similar performance. It even has a high adjustable stand and an attractive, modern design.

I considered dozens of monitors for the top spot, comparing them to a database of monitor testing results I've compiled since 2012. While the Dell S2721QS is clearly the best value among the monitors I tested, it's not the only monitor that should be on your radar. I've selected several alternatives for a wide range of buyers, from home office users who desire a reliable budget pick, to content creators who need excellent image quality. 

Here are our top picks for the best computer monitor:

Updated on 1/11/2021 by Matthew Smith: Completely re-wrote article for 2021 with new picks across all subcategories. 

The best computer monitor overall

Dell's affordable S2721QS 4K monitor delivers a sharp, vibrant picture with decent color accuracy and ergonomics.

Pros: Sharp 4K resolution, respectable color accuracy, stand offers ergonomic adjustments, attractive design

Cons: HDR support is poor

The Dell S2721QS is easily the best deal in today's monitor market. Although technically sold at an MSRP of $489.99, this monitor is nearly always "on sale" for $359.99 or less, and occasionally dips to $300 on Amazon. That's very reasonable. Yet the Dell S2721QS sacrifices nothing for affordability.

Its quality is obvious out of the box. It's built from simple but study silver plastic that resists flex when handled. Connectivity options include two HDMI 2.0 ports and one DisplayPort 1.2. Speakers are included and provide adequate quality for a small home office. The monitor is bordered by thin bezels on three sides, giving it a modern look. 

An ergonomically adjustable stand is included and provides 150mm of height adjustment, 60 degrees of swivel, and 25 degrees of tilt. The monitor can also pivot 90 degrees and be used in a vertical orientation. That's not unusual for a $300 monitor, but it ticks off all the right boxes. You'll easily find a comfortable position that works with your desk.

Dell really delivers in image quality. The S2721QS crams in 163 pixels per inch, twice that of a 27-inch, 1080p monitor. It also scores well in color tests, covering 100% of the sRGB color gamut and serving color accuracy that's just a hair worse than professional grade monitors. It has a respectable contrast ratio of 1,150:1, which provides a realistic sense of depth in photos and movies. 

The S2721QS is technically an HDR monitor, and its measured peak brightness of 438 nits is extremely high for a monitor in this price range. However, it lacks local backlight dimming, a key feature in HDR televisions. As a result, HDR content differs little from SDR. This flaw exists in every monitor solid at this price point, however, and many that are much more expensive, so I'm willing to give the S2721QS a pass.

This monitor is often sold out at online retailers. Consider Dell's S2721Q if you need an alternative. The display panel is identical, but the stand only adjusts for tilt. Fortunately, it has a VESA mount, so you can attach it to a VESA-compatible ergonomic stand from a third-party company or an older monitor.



The best computer monitor under $200

Samsung's C27F398 27-inch punches way above its weight in image quality and color for an incredible price.

Pros: Good contrast ratio, vibrant color, realistic image quality

Cons: Stand only adjusts for tilt, feels cheap, mediocre maximum brightness

Buying a budget monitor is overwhelming. Hundreds of models sell under $200, and most are nearly identical. However, one monitor stands out from the rest: Samsung's C27F398.

The key to this monitor's success is its use of VA panel technology, which achieves a better contrast ratio than the IPS or TN panel technology found in most budget monitors. The result? Samsung's C27F398 has a punchy, attractive image that dominates most competitors. 

Samsung goes above and beyond elsewhere, too. The C27F398's color covers 97% of the sRGB color gamut and is accurate for the price, though it falls far short of the best monitor, Dell's S2721QS. 

On the downside, Samsung puts all its money in the monitor's display. The surrounding plastic feels fragile and the featherweight stand only adjusts for tilt. Luckily, the monitor has a standard VESA mount, so you can attach it to a more robust stand. The monitor only has one HDMI and one VGA input.

While I recommend the Samsung C27F398 27-inch, Samsung offers many similar monitors in the CF300 series. They're all good options, so choose whichever has the most attractive pricing when you buy.



The best ultrawide computer monitor

The Dell Ultrasharp U3421WE marries premium image quality with outstanding USB-C connectivity and durability.

Pros: Outstanding image quality, attractive and durable, with 3-year warranty, USB-C hub with 90 watts of power delivery

Cons: Very expensive for its size

Ultrawide monitor pricing plunged throughout 2019 and 2020. If you want the best, however, you'll need to spend a small fortune on Dell's Ultrasharp U3421WE. It's a luxurious ultrawide with outstanding image quality that can also remove tangled wires on your desk. 

Dell's Ultrasharp line is designed for professional, color critical work. As a result, the Dell U3421WE has nearly perfect color accuracy out of the box. It also has a color gamut that spans 99% of sRGB, 99% of Rec. 709, and 95% of DCI-P3. If those figures don't mean anything to you, here's the short-and-simple. The U3421WE can display far more colors than less expensive monitors, and it can display colors as they were intended. This, combined with its sharp 3,440 x 1,440 resolution, provides visual punch few monitors can match. 

The monitor works as a USB-C hub. It has multiple ports, including four USB Type-A ports and Ethernet, and it supports up to 90 watts of power delivery over USB-C. A laptop that supports USB-C can use the monitor as a hub, reducing clutter on your desk. The monitor will even charge the laptop if it supports that feature.

While expensive, the U3421WE is built to last. It has robust, durable construction and a hefty ergonomic stand that can be adjusted for height, tilt, and swivel. Dell backs the monitor with a three-year warranty, while many competitors only include one year of coverage. 



The best computer monitor for USB-C

Viewsonic's VG2455 is among the most affordable USB-C monitors, yet doesn't compromise on image quality or ergonomics.

Pros: USB-C with 60 watts power delivery, sturdy ergonomic stand, solid image quality for the price

Cons: More expensive than monitors without USB-C

A USB-C monitor is a true game-changer for anyone who owns a compatible laptop. It eliminates the hassle of using multiple cables for charging, video, and peripherals. Instead, it's all handled by a single USB-C connection with the monitor. The only problem? Most USB-C monitors are expensive. 

Viewsonic's VG2455 solves that problem without giving up features. This 24-inch, 1080p monitor can deliver 60 watts of power over USB-C, which is enough to charge most laptops. It also includes three USB 3.0 Type-A ports and a USB 3.0 Type B upstream port, so the monitor can act as a USB hub. 

Though it offers USB-C at a low price, the VG2455 doesn't cut back in design or build quality. It's an attractive monitor with slim bezels on three sides and a simple, sturdy feel. The included VESA compatible monitor stand offers 130mm of height adjustment, 45 degrees of tilt, 120 degrees of swivel, and 180 degrees of pivot. That's far more than typical in this price range. 

The VG2455 even has solid image quality with good color accuracy, respectable contrast, and excellent viewing angles. It won't blow you away, but the visuals are better than average for a monitor below $250. 

While I recommend the affordable VG2455, Viewsonic offers several upgrades. You can buy the VG2455-2K if you'd like 1440p resolution with even better image quality. Need a larger monitor? Viewsonic also sells the 27-inch VG2755 and VG2755-2K, which have 1080p and 1440p resolution, respectively. They're all great value and all have USB-C with 60 watts of power delivery.



The best monitor for professionals

BenQ's PD3220U has best-in-class color accuracy and tons of useful features for quick settings changes that creative professionals need.

Pros: Sharp 4K image, excellent color gamut and accuracy, useful "hotkey puck" control, outstanding connectivity

Cons: Mediocre contrast ratio, modest maximum brightness

Professionals seeking a do-it-all monitor need look no further than BenQ'S PD3220U. This 32-inch, 4K monitor has everything required for color-critical work in a professional setting.

The PD3220U has a color gamut covering 100% of the sRGB space and Rec. 709 color space, and 95% of DCI-P3. It has a 4K panel for outstanding clarity. It achieves an average measured color error below 1 in its DCI-P3 color mode, and just above that in its sRGB mode, prior to any calibration. The monitor even has true 10-bit color. The PD3220U's results aren't superior to the competition because most high-end professional monitors score well in these areas. Still, this monitor has all the image quality highlights a professional user will require.

This monitor has a Thunderbolt 3 port with 85 watts of power delivery and a DisplayPort alternate mode. Laptops that support Thunderbolt 3 or USB-C with DisplayPort and Power Delivery, like the Apple MacBook Pro 16 and Dell XPS 15, can connect to the BenQ with a single cable. The monitor will display video while also charging the laptop. Aside from that, the monitor has two HDMI 2.0 ports, one DisplayPort 1.4 port, and three USB 3.1 Type-A ports that can be used for USB peripherals. 

Speaking of peripherals, the BenQ PD3220U has a unique puck controller that's used to access the monitor's menu. It's fast, intuitive, and a useful feature if you frequently switch between display modes for different projects. There's still a joystick on the rear of the monitor, though, so you can change settings if you happen to lose the puck.

The BenQ PD3220U has a sturdy stand, too. It provides 150mm of height adjustment, 60 degrees of swivel, 25 degrees of tilt, and can pivot the monitor 90 degrees into a vertical orientation. The monitor uses a standard VESA mount, so you can easily attach a third-party monitor arm if desired.

While it's a wonderful monitor, the PD3220U isn't perfect. Its modest maximum brightness of 300 nits contributes to a mediocre overall contrast ratio. The monitor is bright enough to use in a corporate or home office, but not bright enough to properly display HDR, despite its compatibility with that standard. These problems make the PD3220U look less impressive than its specifications suggest in movies and games. 

Still, the BenQ PD3220U is a great all-around pick for professionals. It provides everything a professional will need, and goes the extra mile to make its advanced features accessible and easy to use.



What else we considered

The monitors that made this list are far from the only options tested. I've tested hundreds of PC monitors or laptop displays over the past decade and keep results for every display I've handled. This extensive database provides insight into not just how particular monitors perform, but also overall trends for any given brand, panel technology, or price range. Here are the other monitors considered.

  • HP VH240a ($124.99): The HP VH240a is extremely popular on Amazon, thanks to its low price and ergonomic stand. It's functional but suffers poor maximum brightness and an extremely low contrast ratio. Still, it's the best choice if you absolutely can't spend more than $125.
  • Dell S2721HSX ($209.99): The S2721HSX looks like a 1080p version of the top pick, but it performed much worse in testing. It fell short in brightness, contrast ratio, and image uniformity. The Samsung LC27F398 is a far better value.
  • Samsung Odyssey G9 ($1,479.99): This 49-inch super-ultrawide is a flagship monitor that dwarfs the top ultrawide, the Dell U3421WE. However, the Odyssey G9 has inconsistent performance and poor connectivity. It only works as a gaming monitor, and even then, only with specific games.
  • BenQ EX2780Q ($449.99): This 27-inch, 1440p monitor is popular thanks to its high refresh rate, which makes it excellent for fast-paced games. However, its pricing and quality relative to the top pick, the Dell S2721QS, makes it an inferior choice for most buyers.
  • LG 27GL83A-B ($379.99): Another 27-inch, 1440p monitor that's popular thanks to its high refresh rate, this LG can't compete with the Dell S2721QS on image quality. It is more affordable than the BenQ EX2780Q, however.
  • LG 34WN80C-B ($549.99): Though it can't match the Dell U3421WE on image quality or overall connectivity, this LG ultrawide delivers USB-C at a much lower price. Its image quality is acceptable for most owners, as well. This is a solid choice for buyers craving an ultrawide at a more reasonable price.


Our testing methodology

I benchmark the quality of monitors received for testing with a professional calibration tool that generates a detailed, objective report on monitor quality. My testing covers all critical elements of image quality including contrast, color gamut, color accuracy, brightness, black level, gamma accuracy, and uniformity. 

These objective results are filtered through over a decade of experience testing computer monitors and other displays, including laptops and smartphones. I pay close attention to a monitor's contrast, color accuracy, and gamma accuracy, as these have the most dramatic impact on image quality in normal, day-to-day use. 

There's more to a monitor than image quality, however. The best monitors include a solid, VESA compatible stand with significant height and tilt adjustments. This lets you adjust the monitor to a comfortable position or, if you'd prefer, use a third-party stand for even greater adjustment.

Connectivity is key, as well. A great monitor is no use if it can't connect to your devices. I prefer monitors with both HDMI and DisplayPort. I also prefer monitors with multiple USB ports, which makes them useful as a hub for your wired keyboard, mouse, or any other USB device you might use with a PC. USB-C with DisplayPort and Power Delivery, though still a rare feature, carries significant weight in my rankings. It's the most convenient way to connect a Windows or MacOS laptop to a monitor.



What we look forward to testing

I don't expect the monitor market will change significantly through 2021. HDR will become more common, but most monitors will still struggle to display HDR properly. Monitors with a high refresh rate will continue to surge and may become the norm by the end of 2021. 

  • Asus ProArt PA34VC Professional Curved Monitor ($999.99): This monitor, which is currently available, could be a strong alternative to the best ultrawide. It's less expensive and offers a larger screen. It's currently available, although stock can be difficult to find.
  • Alienware AW3821DW ($1,529.99): This 38-inch ultrawide is built for gamers, but its advanced feature set makes it attractive for a wide variety of owners. I've received this monitor for testing and will evaluate it soon. 
  • Acer XB323U GX ($899.99): The Predator XB323U GX is a gaming monitor that promises effective HDR with local backlight dimming and a 270Hz refresh rate. Although meant for gaming, it could be an outstanding general-use monitor if its quality lives up to expectations. It will be released in January 20201.
  • Philips 329M1RV (Price TBD): Philips is looking to prove its relevance in the monitor market with this 32-inch, 4K, high-refresh panel. The monitor's price and availability remain a mystery, however.


What's the difference between TN, IPS, and VA panel technology?

You'll frequently see the terms TN, IPS, and VA while shopping for a monitor. These terms describe the basic panel technology a monitor uses. All monitors using a specific panel technology share strengths and weaknesses.

TN stands for Twisted Nematic, and it's the oldest type of LCD panel technology still used today. Although inexpensive, TN panel technology struggles with color accuracy, color gamut, contrast, viewing angles, and maximum brightness. The falling price of newer technology has crowded TN panel technology out of the market. I recommend avoiding any monitor that still uses a TN panel.

IPS, or In-Plane Switching, surged in popularity after the turn of the millennium and is now the most common option in PC monitors and PC laptop displays. IPS panels have a solid color gamut and good color accuracy, and some are very bright. However, they can't display deep, inky blacks and instead depict dark scenes as a hazy gray. This is called "IPS glow." It's a problem if you intend to watch movies on a monitor, but much less noticeable in other situations.

VA, or Vertical Alignment, has surged in popularity over the past five years. VA panel technology is roughly equal to IPS in color gamut and accuracy but far superior in contrast ratio. A monitor using this technology can offer darker, more convincing black levels, eliminating the "IPS glow" problem. VA panels have a limited viewing angle, however, which can be a problem if the monitor is not always viewed straight-on.

Most monitors on this list use IPS panel technology. That doesn't mean IPS is superior, however. In general, IPS panel is best for productivity and general use, while VA is best for gaming and entertainment, though there's significant overlap.  

I think VA panels are the best bet for affordable monitors, which is why my pick for best monitor under $200, the Samsung CF27L398, has a VA panel. Inexpensive IPS monitors score poorly in brightness and contrast ratio.



Do you really need a 4K display?

Our pick for best computer monitor, the Dell S2721QS, has 4K resolution. To be precise, it provides a resolution of 3,840 x 2,160. This is identical to any 4K television. 

4K resolution is not necessary for a good experience. Computer monitors are much smaller than televisions, so even 1080p resolution is acceptable on a 27-inch display. A 4K monitor is far superior in sharpness, however, which does improve day-to-day use.

You might expect this only matters for movies or games, but the opposite is true. A sharp, clear image is most important for day-to-day use. A 4K monitor can display details, like small fonts or tiny interface buttons, without losing clarity. The result is a more versatile display. You can decrease the size of fonts or windows to fit more on your monitor or blow them up to make them more readable. Either way, the results will look better than at 1080p or 1440p.

4K still carries a bit of a premium, so it's not an absolute necessity. Still, I recommend it if your budget allows.



Do you really need HDR?

HDR, or high dynamic range, is a standard designed to improve the contrast visible in movies, games, and other content. It helps to make bright areas of a scene brighter, and dark areas darker, creating a more dramatic and brilliant image.

Unfortunately, the computer monitor market is struggling to embrace HDR. Even the best monitors achieve a peak brightness level below budget HDR televisions. Computer monitors also rarely offer effective local backlight dimming, a feature that lets an LCD display selectively turn off portions of its backlight. 

HDR content is also more difficult to find and use on a computer. The PC versions of popular streaming apps often have limitations on HDR, and graphics hardware that's more than a few years old may not support the standard.

These problems make HDR less relevant to monitors, which is why I don't give it much weight in this list. Even monitors the best HDR monitors struggle because of inconsistent software support. Until that changes, HDR shouldn't be on your list of priorities.



Goldman Sachs says to buy these 29 stocks poised to deliver the strongest sales growth through year-end

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Summary List Placement

A week into 2021, all eyes on Wall Street are on the growth prospects of the year ahead.

Will the economic recovery and reopening proceed as predicted? Will the much-anticipated reflation trade pan out as expected? A lot of it is riding on the smooth distribution of COVID-19 vaccines and whether it will deliver the projected economic impact, according to Goldman Sachs. 

But the US on Friday posted a surprise 140,000-payroll decline in December, marking "a stark reminder that the virus is still a very significant depressant on economic activity," Goldman's chief economist, Jan Hatzius, said in a Friday "Exchanges at Goldman Sachs" podcast.

That being said, Hatzius pointed out that the recent job losses are concentrated in the hospitality and leisure sector, which is sensitive to the virus, especially in the winter when outdoor dining is less likely to happen. 

In addition, following the Democratic wins of the Georgia Senate run-offs last week, Goldman is expecting to see $750 billion of more fiscal stimulus on top of the recently passed $900 billion package. The prospect of higher fiscal spending is expected to lead to faster economic growth but also higher inflation and interest rates, the bank said in a Monday client note.

"While the economy is going through a much slower stretch, it is sort of holding up and it's not as sensitive to virus and restrictions as was the case earlier in 2020, especially in the spring," Hatzius said. "As we get into the spring, beyond January and February, we are expecting a strong recovery."

Hatzius' GDP forecast for 2021 remains 6.4%, more than two percentage points above the consensus of forecasters.

Unsurprisingly, in this projected environment, it is the companies that can take advantage of the pent-up consumer demand and grow their sales that stand apart. 

Using data from FactSet, Goldman's portfolio strategy research team screened the S&P 500 for the 100 largest stocks ranked by their expected sales growth in 2021. They excluded the financials, real estate, and utilities sectors.

Overall, the energy sector is expected to generate 15% sales growth by year-end. The communications services sector is expected to grow sales by 14%, while the consumer discretionary sector is anticipated to finish the year with 13% sales growth.

Sales for the S&P 500 overall are expected to land at 9%, while the information technology (8%), materials (7%) and healthcare (6%) sectors experience similar single-digit sales growth.

The 29 stocks are ranked below from lowest to highest based on their expected sales growth through year-end. 

SEE ALSO: The CIO of a $500 million crypto asset manager breaks down 5 ways of valuing bitcoin and deciding whether to own it after the digital asset breached $40,000 for the first time

29. Stryker

Ticker: SYK

Market cap: $91.41 billion

Expected sales growth: 15%

Source: Goldman Sachs



28. T-Mobile US

Ticker: TMUS

Market cap: $164.99 billion

Expected sales growth: 15%

Source: Goldman Sachs



27. Intuit

Ticker: INTU

Market cap: $100.82 billion

Expected sales growth: 16%

Source: Goldman Sachs



26. Danaher

Ticker: DHR

Market cap: $169.95 billion

Expected sales growth: 16%

Source: Goldman Sachs



25. Edwards Lifesciences

Ticker: EW

Market cap: $55.63 billion

Expected sales growth: 16%

Source: Goldman Sachs



24. Lam Research

Ticker: LRCX

Market cap: $73.94 billion 

Expected sales growth: 17%

Source: Goldman Sachs



23. Starbucks

Ticker: SBUX

Market cap: $121.06 billion

Expected sales growth: 17%

Source: Goldman Sachs



22. Intuitive Surgical

Ticker: ISRG

Market cap: $94.82 billion

Expected sales growth: 17%

Source: Goldman Sachs



21. Micron Technology

Ticker: MU

Market cap: $87.89 billion

Expected sales growth: 18%

Source: Goldman Sachs



20. AbbVie

Ticker: ABBV

Market cap: $188.02 billion

Expected sales growth: 18%

Source: Goldman Sachs



19. Netflix

Ticker: NFLX

Market cap: $224.38 billion

Expected sales growth: 18%

Source: Goldman Sachs



18. Amazon.com

Ticker: AMZN

Market cap: $1.58 trillion

Expected sales growth: 18%

Source: Goldman Sachs



17. PayPal

Ticker: PYPL

Market cap: $274.85 billion

Expected sales growth: 19%

Source: Goldman Sachs



16. Mastercard

Ticker: MA

Market cap: $348.1 billion

Expected sales growth: 19%

Source: Goldman Sachs



15. Adobe

Ticker: ADBE

Market cap: $228.73 billion

Expected sales growth: 19%

Source: Goldman Sachs



14. NIKE

Ticker: NKE

Market cap: $228.06 billion

Expected sales growth: 20%

Source: Goldman Sachs



13. Salesforce.com

Ticker: CRM

Market cap: $199.06 billion

Expected sales growth: 21%

Source: Goldman Sachs



12. Alphabet

Ticker: GOOGL

Market cap: $1.198 trillion

Expected sales growth: 21%

Source: Goldman Sachs



11. Nvidia

Ticker: NVDA

Market cap: $329.75 billion

Expected sales growth: 22%

Source: Goldman Sachs



10. Exxon Mobil

Ticker: XOM

Market cap: $189.73 billion

Expected sales growth: 22%

Source: Goldman Sachs



9. Facebook

Ticker: FB

Market cap: $763.95 billion

Expected sales growth: 24%

Source: Goldman Sachs



8. TJX Companies

Ticker: TJX

Market cap: $83.76 billion

Expected sales growth: 25%

Source: Goldman Sachs



7. ServiceNow

Ticker: NOW

Market cap: $99.85 billion

Expected sales growth: 25%

Source: Goldman Sachs



6. Chevron

Ticker: CVX

Market cap: $173.34 billion

Expected sales growth: 25%

Source: Goldman Sachs



5. Advanced Micro Devices

Ticker: AMD

Market cap: $114.23 billion

Expected sales growth: 27%

Source: Goldman Sachs



4. Qualcomm

Ticker: QCOM

Market cap: $175.75 billion

Expected sales growth: 29%

Source: Goldman Sachs



3. Boeing

Ticker: BA

Market cap: $119.85 billion

Expected sales growth: 34%

Source: Goldman Sachs



2. Tesla

Ticker: TSLA

Market cap: $772.01 billion

Expected sales growth: 47%

Source: Goldman Sachs



1. Booking

Ticker: BKNG

Market cap: $91.55 billion

Expected sales growth: 52%

Source: Goldman Sachs



Today's best online deals: eufy BoostIQ RoboVac 15C MAX robot vacuum, Beats Solo Pro headphones, Braun Series 9 electric razor, and more

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eufy robovacEvery day, we round up the 5 best deals and bargains available on tech, home goods, fashion, and more. 

Summary List Placement

We've sorted this list with the best deals first. The prices and discounts are accurate at the time of publication but are subject to change without warning. For even more deals and savings across the web, check out the best online deals and sales happening now and Business Insider Coupons.

1. eufy BoostIQ RoboVac 15C MAX robot vacuum

Product Card

Check our guide to the best robot vacuums.



2. Beats Solo Pro headphones

Product Card

Read our full review of the Beats Solo Pro headphones.



3. Braun Series 9 (9370cc) electric razor

Product Card

Check our guide to the best electric razors.



4. Nuun Sport electrolyte drink tablets

Product Card

Read our guide on what to eat to properly recover.



5. Logitech MX Master 3 mouse

Product Card

Check our guide to the best computer mice.



The 26 billion-dollar startups to watch that are revolutionizing healthcare in 2021

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The financial calamities predicted at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic didn't materialize for most healthcare startups. 

The industry's up-and-coming private companies largely benefited from the one-two punch of financial concerns in other parts of the market and an increased focus on healthcare with all eyes on America's wavering pandemic response.

2020 will likely go down as one of the single most pivotal years for the US healthcare industry in history. Even outside large hospitals and pharmaceutical companies, private startups raised a whopping $17 billion in 2020, a 57% increase over 2019's record, according to a new report from Silicon Valley Bank.

That led to a new herd of healthcare unicorns, private companies valued at or above $1 billion. Some former unicorns, like GoodRx and Amwell, made public market debuts while others continued raising venture capital and private financings while the market was favorable. Some startups raised two separate funding rounds in the last year alone.

Read more:The 8 digital health startups to watch that are changing healthcare in 2021

Business Insider rounded up the 26 healthcare companies currently valued at more than $1 billion, according to Pitchbook and additional reporting.

SEE ALSO: Investors think Amazon and Alphabet could set the pace for healthcare deals in 2021. Here's what they are watching.

MDLive - $1 billion

MDLive is a long-standing telemedicine provider that has boomed during the pandemic. The 11-year-old company offers a suite of digital health and virtual care services to its patients in the United States and operates on a similar level to its competitor, telehealth giant Teladoc.

Teladoc in October completed its merger with Livongo, a company that helps patients manage chronic conditions like diabetes, spurring speculation that MDLive may pursue a similar blockbuster deal in 2021. 

MDLive indicated its plan to go public in 2021 instead when it announced $50 million in equity investment in September. According to Pitchbook data, the round valued MDLive at $1 billion and also included $25 million in debt financing as a separate transaction.

— Megan Hernbroth



Cityblock Health - $1 billion

Cityblock Health wants to improve healthcare outcomes for low-income patients through its social support services for what investors call social determinants of health in addition to its virtual care service.

These factors, which include access to public transportation, affordable and reliable housing, and nutritious food, operate outside the four walls of a clinic or doctor's office but have massive implications on patients' long-term health.

Cityblock Health raised $160 million in Series C funding on December 14, catapulting the three-year-old startup to the unicorn club.

Investors recently told Business Insider that startups like Cityblock could be poised to rise even further in 2021 as the pandemic continues and the inequities in care remain at the forefront of the nation's response.

— Megan Hernbroth



Virta Health - $1.1 billion

Virta Health is a Silicon Valley startup that combines virtual care and the trendy ketogenic diet to help patients with diabetes. 

Virta encourages patients with type 2 diabetes to adopt a low-carb, high-fat diet and matches them with trained professionals to help track and manage their symptoms. In a peer-reviewed study Virta funded, researchers found that these changes to a patient's diet could ultimately reduce or remove the need for medications like insulin.

Virta raised $93 million in Series C funding in January 2020 before raising another $65 million in Series D funding on December 2. The subsequent round valued the startup its $1.1 billion, Bloomberg reported.

— Megan Hernbroth

 



Lyra Health - $1.1 billion

Lyra is a mental health startup that works with companies to provide better benefits to employees. The startup has a network of therapists, coaches, and other care providers that provide virtual care visits to any employee with access to the software at little or no cost.

The service has been booming during the pandemic, according to investors, as remote employees struggle with work-life balance and employers seek to replace the enticing in-office perks with options that benefit more people.

Lyra raised $110 million in Series D funding on August 27, earning the five-year-old startup a $1.1 billion valuation, according to Pitchbook data.

Investors have been eager to back mental health startups in 2020, and many told Business Insider they foresee that trend only increasing in 2021

— Megan Hernbroth

 



Sema4 - $1.1 billion

Sema4 is a data analytics startup based in Stamford, Connecticut, that looks at data sets of large populations to gain insight into health outcomes. The company spun out of the Mount Sinai Health System in 2017, and was named for a system of sending messages using codes, which is the core function of its technology.

On July 29, the company said that it raised $121 million in Series C funding from BlackRock Innovation Capital Group, Mount Sinai Health System, The Blackstone Group, Moore Strategic Ventures, Deerfield Management, Oak HC/FT, Decheng Capital, Connecticut Innovations, and Section 32.

The round came about a year after a $120 million Series B funding round. In total the company has raised nearly $371 million, according to Pitchbook data.

— Megan Hernbroth



Freenome - $1.2 billion

Freenome is a liquid biopsy startup that seeks to detect cancer through a routine blood draw. 

"What we're aiming to do is develop a test that healthy patients would take as part of their annual physical that tells you whether or not somebody's going to have cancer," cofounder and CEO Gabe Otte told Business Insider in 2016 following the company's seed funding round.

Otte developed technology that can read the human genome for early markers of cancer by looking at a patient's blood instead of more traditional biopsies that rely on sampling tumor cells. In the years since his first fundraising round, Otte and his team have also created software that creates a system for early disease detection and screenings.

The San Francisco-based company raised $270 million in Series C funding in July. Its investors include GV, Roche Venture Fund, Kaiser Permanente Ventures, Fidelity Investments, Novartis, American Cancer Society, Andreessen Horowitz, BrightEdge Ventures, Polaris Partners, Section 32, RA Capital Management, and Farallon Capital Management, among others. It has raised more than $508 million in total, according to Pitchbook data.

— Megan Hernbroth

 

 



Rakuten Medical - $1.2 billion

Headquartered in San Diego, Rakuten Medical develops precision-targeted cancer therapies designed to treat solid tumors. 

The biotech is led by the Japanese billionaire Hiroshi Mikitani, who is also founder and CEO of the large Japanese e-commerce firm Rakuten. Mikitani said he was inspired to fund the cancer research after his father was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2012.

Rakuten Medical has raised about $471 million, according to PitchBook. Both Mikitani and Rakuten have invested in Rakuten Medical.

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Orca Bio - $1.2 billion

Biotech startup Orca Bio creates new cell therapies for procedures like bone marrow transplants that help strengthen patients' immunity. The doses are personalized to each patient and are built cell-by-cell using another person's blood.

According to the company, this treatment could help cure certain diseases and decrease side effects commonly experienced with current drugs. In November, the startup released a study of its therapy's success on patients with graft-versus-host disease, a complication commonly associated with transplant recipients. 

The Silicon Valley company raised $192 million in Series D funding from Lightspeed Venture Partners and 8VC on June 17. According to Pitchbook data, it has raised $300 million since it was founded in 2016.

— Megan Hernbroth



Whoop - $1.2 billion

Whoop makes a health and fitness tracking strap that has won over everyone from Lebron James to Eli Manning to Kevin Durant.

The strap, which functions similar to existing watch fitness trackers, allegedly helped PGA Tour golfer Nick Watney detect early COVID-19 symptoms by picking up on his elevated respiratory rate, in addition to integrating with popular fitness app Strava. The strap itself costs nothing and is included with a membership for $30 a month or $288 for one year.

The 8-year-old startup was founded by 31-year-old founder and CEO Will Ahmed. On October 28, Whoop said it had raised $100 million in Series E funding at a $1.2 billion valuation. 

— Megan Hernbroth



Butterfly Network - $1.3 billion

Butterfly Network, a company that developed an iPhone-based ultrasound device, wants to make the technology more accessible to doctors and healthcare workers so they can make more precise diagnoses on the move. 

The device, called Butterfly iQ, plugs into the iPhone and isn't much bigger than the phone itself. It's been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in imaging the abdomen, bladder, and heart. 

In September 2018, Butterfly raised $250 million from investors such as Fidelity, Fosun Pharma, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In total, the company raised $370 million. 

In November, the company said it plans to go public via a merger with the special purpose acquisition company Longview Acquisition Corp., a deal that would value the company at $1.5 billion. The deal, commonly referred to as a SPAC, was among a wave of similar reverse mergers that allowed startups to forgo the traditional IPO process while still taking advantage of public markets investors.

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Everlywell - $1.3 billion

Everlywell offers at-home testing kits for food sensitivity, fertility, hormones, STDs, and thyroid or metabolism issues, all compliant with federal standards. The startup sends samples to accredited labs, which perform the tests using patient-provided samples similar to what would occur at a routine doctor's office visit. 

The tests are not currently covered by any insurance providers, but Everlywell says that it tries to keep its pricing simple and easy for consumers to understand. 

Everlywell patients receive results that have been reviewed by licensed physicians through a mobile app. They are then able to take those to a primary care or specialist provider without having to step foot in a traditional medical testing lab. The startup received national attention when founder Julia Cheek pitched the idea on Shark Tank.

In March, Everlywell announced it was also offering an at-home COVID-19 test as the coronavirus pandemic took hold in the United States. It partnered with independent labs to scale infrastructure to the point where it can handle up to 250,000 tests weekly, according to the company.

The company raised $25 million in Series C funding in February 2020. On December 3, the startup announced it raised $175 million in Series D funding from Goodwater Capital, Highland Capital Partners, and Next Coast Ventures in addition to several private equity firms. In total, the company has raised more than $250 million.

— Megan Hernbroth



Grand Rounds - $1.3 billion

Grand Rounds works with companies like Walmart and Home Depot to offer an on-demand healthcare virtual assistant to employees as an employer-provided benefit. The company previously focused on large self-insured companies like the aforementioned, but have recently started selling to medium-sized companies as the pandemic left many employers scrambling to offer relevant benefits while maintaining low costs.

In September, Grand Rounds raised $175 million from private equity firm Carlyle Group that launched its valuation to $1.3 billion, according to Pitchbook data.  

"As COVID hit and these employers, to take care of digital and work-from-home workforces across the country, they all had unique situations and needs pop up," Carlyle Group investor and Grand Rounds board member Robert Schmidt told Business Insider in September.

— Megan Hernbroth

 



Ro - $1.5 billion

Ro is a direct-to-consumer provider that offers generic medications for conditions such as erectile dysfunction, hair loss, and weight management through the mail. Patients can consult a doctor through Ro's telemedicine service throughout the course of treatment and are required to pay a cash fee for medication and the visit since Ro doesn't accept insurance. 

The three-year-old company raised $200 million in venture funding on July 27, nabbing a $1.5 billion valuation as a result. It acquired Workpath, another startup that provides in-home care services, in December as it seeks to expand beyond digital health.

— Megan Hernbroth



Olive - $1.5 billion

Olive makes automation technology for healthcare workers. Its artificial intelligence software picks up on keystrokes to learn how a healthcare worker interacts with specific applications and provide suggestions for tasks like prior authorizations or patient verifications. It also has a tool to help automate processes in hospitals' human resources, finance, and supply chain departments.

Olive raised $106 million in venture funding in September, just months after raising $51 million in March. It is currently valued at $1.5 billion, according to Pitchbook data. In December acquired Verata Health to further expand its services to insurance companies and hospitals.

— Megan Hernbroth



Hims - $1.6 billion

Be it depression, hair loss, or erectile dysfunction, Hims wants men to "take care of themselves" without fear of stigma via its suite of telemedicine and personal care offerings.

Besides online primary care visits and therapy, it sells hair, skin, and sex products directly to consumers. Its sister site, Hers, offers similar services for women. Hims says its total funding to date is $260 million.

On October 1, the company announced that it was going public through a reverse merger with blank-check company Oaktree, that valued Hims publicly at $1.6 billion.  

Its investors include Atomic, Maverick Ventures, Forerunner Ventures, Founders Fund, 8VC, and Redpoint Ventures.

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer & Megan Hernbroth



HeartFlow - $1.6 billion

HeartFlow is trying to make the process of finding blockages in the heart a lot less invasive. Using imaging from a CT scan, HeartFlow builds a 3D model that pinpoints the blockages associated with coronary-artery disease, a heart condition that affects millions of Americans and is the leading cause of death in the US

HeartFlow is based in Redwood City, California, and reached unicorn status in 2018 after raising $240 million. In total, the company has raised $532 million

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Zocdoc - $1.8 billion

Zocdoc helps patients book doctors' appointments and check-in for them — everything from primary care to dental to optometry appointments.

Users can search based on procedures, conditions, and even a particular doctor they might want to book an appointment with.

In 2019, the company changed the way it pays its doctors in some states, moving from a subscription model to one that charges a per-booking fee. Some doctors weren't been happy about the switch.

Zocdoc, which is based in New York, most recently raised $130 million in a Series D round in August 2015, bringing its total raised to $223 million. The company's last reported valuation is from 2015, according to PitchBook.

During the pandemic, Zocdoc introduced video visits for the providers on its platform to use with patients. 

Zocdoc cofounder Cyrus Massoumi in September sued the company, claiming he was pushed out of his role as CEO in an illegal "coup." The lawsuit was dismissed shortly after in December 2020. 

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Devoted Health - $1.8 billion

Devoted Health wants to reinvent how we care for aging Americans.

The company started selling Medicare Advantage plans in parts of Florida for 2019. In its second year, its enrollment jumped, in line with the company's expectations

Read more: Oscar Health has confidentially filed to go public. Here's a look at how the health insurer and rivals Clover and Bright have fared so far this year.

The company's plans might look a bit different from traditional insurance in that Devoted plans to do more than pay for visits to doctors and hospitals. It also hires nurses and other employees directed at keeping seniors healthier and out of the hospital.

Devoted was founded in 2017 by brothers Ed and Todd Park. Before Devoted, Todd Park cofounded the health IT company Athenahealth and served as the chief technology officer of the US during the Obama administration. Ed Park, who serves as Devoted's CEO, was formerly the chief technology officer and later chief operating officer at Athenahealth.

In October 2018, the Waltham, Massachusetts-based company raised $300 million in a Series B round led by Andreessen Horowitz, bringing its total funding to $369 million.

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Zymergen - $2.1 billion

Synthetic biology company Zymergen is a Silicon Valley company that turns living organisms into new materials. Synthetic biology involves harnessing the power of cells to make products like less-toxic sweeteners for food or drugs and biodegradable building materials and bags. It was a popular area of investment for cutting edge VC firms prior to the pandemic as the technology could help combat single-use plastic use.

On July 29, the eight-year-old startup raised $350 million in Series D funding led by private equity firm Baillie Gifford, according to Pitchbook data. Other investors include SoftBank Investment Advisers, SVF, Schiehallion Fund, SciFi VC, DCVC Bio, True Ventures, Perceptive Advisors, Baron Funds, Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, and MicroVentures.

— Megan Hernbroth



Lyell - $2.5 billion

The San Francisco biotech company is focused on treating cancer with cell therapies. Lyell's goal is to develop cell-based immunotherapies for cancer, with a focus on CAR-Ts and solid tumors.

In March 2020, the company raised a total $493 million in funding from undisclosed investors. The company has raised a total of $851 million, according to CB Insights, from investors including Foresite Capital Management, Arch Venture Partners, and Altitude Life Science Ventures.

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Sana Biotechnology - $2.8 billion

Sana Biotechnology is developing engineered cells that can be used as medication for patients. The goal, according to the company, is to engineer cells to repair and control genes or replace missing or damaged cells with an entirely new set of therapies for a range of conditions. It is currently focusing on immunology, stem cell biology, gene delivery, and gene modification.

The Seattle-based company said it has roughly 250 employees across three offices. In June, it raised $435 million in Series B funding from GV, Omega Fund, and Flagship Pioneering, according to Pitchbook data. The round was part of a larger initial financing, according to the company, which totaled $700 million after multiple separate rounds of fundraising.

Additional investors include ARCH Venture Partners, F-Prime Capital, Altitude Life Science Ventures, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, City Hill Ventures, Baillie Gifford, Alaska Permanent Fund, Public Sector Pension Investment Board, and Bezos Expeditions.

— Megan Hernbroth



Radiology Partners - $4.3 billion

Southern California-based Radiology Partners owns and operates radiology clinics in 26 states across the US. According to the company, it employs roughly 1,500 radiologists and provides radiology services to more than 1200 hospitals on-site and virtually.

The eight-year-old company raised an undisclosed amount of private equity financing from Heritage Group in 2020, according to Pitchbook data, and subsequently raised two rounds of debt financing. Prior to 2020, it raised $750 million in growth financing from Starr Investment Holdings on July 19, 2019.

— Megan Hernbroth



Gingko Bioworks - $4.9 billion

Ginkgo Bioworks is a startup that designs microbes to produce substances like fragrances and medications. The Boston-based company sends the programmed bugs to partner companies that put them to use.

In September 2019, Ginkgo raised an additional $290 million. In total, the company has raised $719 million and a $350 million fund to invest in spinout companies that use its technology

In 2020 Ginkgo responded to the coronavirus pandemic by helping with testing, vaccines, and antibody therapeutics, according to its website

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Tempus Labs - $8.1 billion

Chicago-based Tempus got its start in 2015, and then rocketed into unicorn territory.

The startup, which was founded by Groupon founder Eric Lefkofsky, hopes to help doctors use data to find better cancer treatments for patients, using both clinical data — information about which medications patients have taken and how they responded to them — and data it sequences in its lab based on the tumors and hereditary genetics of cancer patients.

Tempus raised $100 million in March 2020 and another $200 million in December 2020, putting the company at an $8.1 billion valuation. So far, the company has raised about $1 billion. 

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Roivant Sciences - $9 billion

Roivant Sciences is a company known for developing drugs that other pharmaceutical companies have abandoned.

The company was founded by CEO Vivek Ramaswamy, who's 35. Through its subsidiary companies, it identifies experimental drugs that other companies may have stopped developing for one reason or another that still have potential to get approved and go on the market.

So far, it has launched 17 subsidiary "-vant" companies, including a number that have gone public. Those include the neurodegenerative-disease-drug developer Axovant Sciences, the women's health company Myovant Sciences, and the urology company Urovant Sciences.

In December 2019, the company entered a deal with Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma. The company raised $200 million from investors in 2018 a little more than a year after raising $1.1 billion in a monster round led by SoftBank's Vision Fund. The $200 million round valued the company at $7 billion. 

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



Samumed - $12.4 billion

Samumed is the highest-valued startup on this list.

The San Diego-based company has attracted a total of $764 million and a heady valuation thanks to a pipeline of what could be revolutionary treatments to regenerate hair, skin, bones, and joints.

The company's science hinges on something called progenitor stem cells. Samumed hopes to manipulate the pathway that makes these progenitor stem cells spring into action so that they don't cause conditions like hair loss or osteoarthritis. 

The company had previously raised funding from backers including high-net worth people and sovereign funds rather than venture capital. Samumed's chief business officer, Erich Horsley, said in May 2018 that the company could go public in the next three to four years.

— Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer



TCL's 2021 TV lineup includes a massive 85-inch Roku TV for just $1,599

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TCL Mini LED TVs

Summary List Placement
  • TCL has detailed its upcoming collection of 2021 4K and 8K TVs during CES 2021.
  • The lineup includes new 8K TVs and third-generation Mini LED TVs with slimmer screens.
  • A trio of massive 85-inch displays will also be released this year, including an 85-inch Roku TV for just $1,599.
  • Full details for TCL's 2021 lineup have not been announced yet, but we'll update this article with preorder listings when they're available.
  • See also: The best cheap TVs you can buy in 2021
Table of Contents: Masthead Sticky

CES 2021 has arrived, and to coincide with the virtual technology showcase, TCL has revealed its latest lineup of TVs. The new collection is divided into three main categories: OD Zero Mini LED TVs, XL 85-inch TVs, and 6-Series 8K TVs.

The OD Zero collection will combine TCL's advanced Mini LED backlighting with a new and improved ultra-slim design. This will allow the TVs to produce better contrast while also offering a thinner profile compared to last year's models. For buyers who prefer a really big screen, TCL will also offer XL TV models with giant 85-inch sizes across three performance levels. 

Meanwhile, TCL's highly rated 6-Series will jump from 4K to 8K for 2021. With that said, the 2020 4K 6-Series lineup will remain available, so customers can still choose which resolution they'd like. 

Full specifications and pricing information are not yet available, but we've detailed everything we know so far about TCL's 2021 lineup below. 

TCL 6-Series 8K TVs

TCL's highly rated 6-Series is making the jump from 4K to 8K resolution for 2021.

The TCL 6-Series is known for offering an impressive balance between great HDR picture quality, reliable smart TV streaming, and very affordable costs. Though current models max out at 4K resolution, the company's 2021 lineup will feature 8K panels.

8K offers four times the resolution of a 4K screen, which can translate to sharper detail. That said, actual 8K content remains virtually nonexistent, so the benefits of 8K versus 4K are debatable. With the right upscaling technology, 8K TVs can provide a better viewing experience, but how dramatic these improvements will be depends largely on the size of your screen and how close you sit to your display.

We'll need to get hands-on with TCL's new 8K 6-Series TVs to really evaluate their value, but based on what I've seen from other 8K TVs so far, I'm hesitant to recommend an 8K model based purely on its higher resolution. 

Like other 6-Series TVs, the new 8K models will also make use of QLED tech with quantum dots for wide colors, along with Mini LED backlighting. Mini LEDs are much smaller than the standard light sources used in traditional LED modes. This allows for more dimming zones with more precise control over contrast and brightness.

In other words, Mini LED TVs have the potential for black levels that come closer to the performance of an OLED TV, while still offering the bright highlights that LED TVs are known for.

Pricing, sizes, and exact release dates for TCL's new 8K 6-Series lineup have not been revealed yet. We'll update this section with retailer options once they're available.

In addition to releasing the new 8K sets, TCL will be carrying over its 4K 6-Series lineup for 2021. The 4K 6-Series is available in 55-, 65-, and 75-inch screen sizes, but the latter two models are currently sold out.

TCL 55-inch 6-Series QLED 4K TV, $649.99, at Amazon

TCL 65-inch 6-Series QLED 4K TV, $899.99, at Best Buy

TCL 75-inch 6-Series QLED 4K TV, $1,399.99, at Best Buy



TCL XL TVs

For the first time, TCL is offering 85-inch TV models for buyers who want a more immersive home theater experience.

TCL's current TV lineup maxes out at 75-inches, but the company is set to change that for 2021 with its new XL Series. The collection will feature a trio of 85-inch TVs across three performance levels.

The entry-level 85-inch 85R435 4-Series TCL Roku 4K TV will be the most affordable option at just $1,599. This model will offer basic 4K HDR support but it won't include more advanced features, like a QLED panel of Mini LED backlighting.

For QLED picture quality, you'll need to step up to the 85-inch 85R745 4K TV. This model will also add support for Dolby Vision, Variable Refresh Rate, and 120Hz HDMI capabilities, making it an ideal choice for next-gen gaming systems. 

Finally, a flagship 85-inch 8K XL TV model with Mini LED backlighting will round out the lineup. The Mini LED backlight will enable even better contrast. Likewise, the massive 85-inch screen size will offer a nice showcase for what 8K can offer, since higher resolutions tend to be a better fit for bigger screens.

The TCL 85-inch 85R435 4-Series Roku 4K TV is set to launch by the end of the first quarter. Pricing and release dates for the other XL TVs have not been announced yet.

TCL 85-inch 85R435 4-Series Roku 4K TV, $1,599

TCL 85-inch 85R745 Roku QLED 4K TV, price TBA

TCL 85-inch 8K Mini LED TV, price TBA



TCL OD Zero Mini LED TVs

TCL's new OD Zero Mini LED technology promises TVs with high-end contrast and ultra-slim designs.

TCL was the first TV manufacturer in the US to add Mini LED technology to its TV lineup. The tech uses smaller LEDs than a conventional TV, enabling more precise control over brightness and contrast.

That said, TCL's Mini LED displays, like the 8-Series and 6-Series, have featured thicker panels than some of the competition. Likewise, they have been known to suffer from issues with blooming. For 2021, the company is using new OD Zero Mini LED tech to help address this. 

OD Zero Mini LED TVs still feature thousands of Contrast Control Zones, but the technology has been improved in order to enable a reduced distance between the Mini LED backlight layer and the TV's LCD layer. This allows for an ultra-thin panel, along with a more balanced image across the screen with less of a halo effect around bright images.

There's no word yet on which TCL models will use OD Zero technology, but we'll update this post with specifications and pricing when they're revealed.

 

 



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