Jeevan Vasagar is a writer and award-winning journalist, and Contributing Editor at Tortoise Media. From 2015 to 2017, he was Singapore and Malaysia correspondent for the Financial Times, travelling the region to report on demands for political reform, technological innovation and the growing influence of China.
Before that he was the FT’s Berlin correspondent, reporting on a period in which a vast influx of refugees transformed German politics and society. He also led coverage of the German backlash against Silicon Valley. He spent 12 years at the Guardian, in a range of roles including East Africa correspondent in Nairobi, and education editor in London. His reporting on undergraduate admissions at Cambridge University won a CIPR Education Journalism award.
His writing has also appeared in the Economist, the LA Times and the New Statesman.
Michael Veltri helps organizations and individuals perform at their best, deliver high-impact results without burnout, and drive transformation in their businesses and lives.
Battle Tested: Leadership Lessons from Gettysburg
U.S. Army Colonel Tom Vossler (retired) taught military history, strategy, and leadership at the U.S. Army War College and is a former director of the U.S. Army Military History Institute at Carlisle Barracks, PA. He has published several books on the battles of Gettysburg and Antietam, and has acted as a consultant to the History Channel and other media companies, advising them on Civil War history.With Jeffrey D. McCausland, he is the author of the forthcoming book Battle Tested.
Michael Wade is a Professor of Innovation and Strategy at IMD (Lausanne, Switzerland) and holds the Cisco Chair in Digital Business Transformation. He is the author of Digital Vortex and Orchestrating Transformation.
Mastery
A globally recognized voice in education, Tony Wagner is currently a Senior Research Fellow at the Learning Policy Institute; prior to this appointment, Tony held a variety of positions at Harvard University for more than twenty years, including four years as an Expert in Residence at the Harvard Innovation Lab. Tony’s influential and widely read books on schools and education include The Global Achievement Gap and Creating Innovators.
Paul Waldman is an opinion writer at the Washington Post and the author or co-author of four books about media and politics.
The current managing editor of Reason magazine, Walker has also written for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Salon, The New Republic, L.A. Weekly, and National Review.
Owen Walker is the Financial Times’ European Banking Correspondent, and an award-winning journalist, who has covered business and investment issues in the US, UK and continental Europe.
He was formerly Managing Editor of Agenda, a Financial Times publication for US corporate directors, and Asset Management Correspondent. He was named joint business journalist of the year by the London Press Club in 2020, and in 2021 won a Society of American Business Editors and Writers award.
Untitled
Darren Walker is president of the Ford Foundation, an international social justice philanthropy with a $13 billion endowment and $600 million in annual grant making. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has been included on numerous annual media lists, including Time’s annual list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World, Rolling Stone’s 25 People Shaping the Future, Fast Company’s 50 Most Innovative People, and OUT Magazine’s Power 50.
Wanda Wallace is the President and CEO of Leadership Forum, Inc., an international consulting group that works with organizations on issues of talent acquisition, retention and strategic thinking. Prior to founding LFI, she spent was Associate Dean of Executive Education at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and Executive Vice President of Duke Corporate Education, Inc.
Truth’s Pilgrim: Walter Lippmann and the Making of U.S. Foreign Policy, 1917-1967
Named by House leadership as the Historian of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2010, Wasniewski is the fourth person to serve in the role. He previously served nearly a decade in the House Clerk’s Office of History and Preservation.
John Wass is the CEO of Profit Isle, a trusted partner whose unique, proprietary profit analytics have produced 10-30% year-on-year profit increases on over $100 billion in client revenues. He was a key member of the management team that grew Staples from three stores to over 1,000, serving as SVP, and he was CEO of WaveMark, an RFID (Internet of Things) company that Cardinal Health acquired to spearhead its hospital strategy. He is a graduate of Princeton and MIT, and with Jonathan Byrnes, he is the author of Choose Your Customer, from McGraw-Hill.
You Might Want This
Luc Wathieu is a behavioral economist, professor of marketing at Georgetown University, and renowned expert on consumer behavior, analytics, and marketing innovations. He enjoys a global academic career that brought him from Brussels to Paris, Hong Kong, Boston, Berlin, and now Washington, D.C., where he lives on a small farm with his large family, two horses, and a dog.
Have a Nice Day: A Journey Through Obama’s America
Justin Webb is the longest serving presenter of BBC Radio 4’s flagship news and current affairs programme, ‘Today’, and presents the hugely popular 'Americast' podcast.
He has worked for the BBC since 1984, previously serving as a reporter for 'Today', Foreign Affairs Correspondent, presenter of 'Breakfast News', Europe and Washington Correspondent, and as North American Editor. He regularly writes for The Times (London) and the Radio Times.
Thomas Wedell-Wedellsborg is the co-author of Innovation As Usual and author of What's Your Problem?, both from a Harvard Business Review Press. An expert on innovation, problem-solving and thinking, Thomas has worked with managers in nearly all parts of the globe and his research has been featured in Harvard Business Review, The Sunday Times, The Telegraph, BBC Radio, Bloomberg Businessweek and the Financial Times.
The Lost Founder: James Wilson and the Dream of a New America
Jesse Wegman joined the editorial board of the New York Times in 2013, and has since written close to 600 signed and unsigned editorials on the Supreme Court, politics, law, and justice. He was previously a senior editor at The Daily Beast and Newsweek, a legal news editor at Reuters, and the managing editor of The New York Observer.
A leading Middle East scholar, Wehrey’s writings on failed states, the Islamic State, and U.S. policy have appeared in the New Yorker, the Atlantic, the New York Times, and Foreign Affairs. He has been among the few Western researchers and journalists to visit Libya continuously since the 2011 revolution, reporting from the front-lines of the battle against the Islamic State’s strongholds in Sirte and Benghazi. A twenty-one year military veteran, he has served across the Middle East and North Africa. He holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford and currently works as a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington DC.
Yo, Blair!
Geoffrey Wheatcroft is a journalist and author. In 1975, he joined the weekly Spectator as Assistant Editor, and from 1977 to 1981 was Literary Editor as well as columnist and reporter. He left to work freelance, to report from South Africa, and to write his first book, The Randlords. In 1985-6 he edited the ‘Londoner’s Diary’ of the Evening Standard, whose opera critic he subsequently became.
After several years as a columnist with the Sunday Telegraph and the Daily Express he is now once more freelance, writing regularly for the Guardian, the New Statesman, and the TLS in London, as well as the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, Boston Globe, Atlantic Monthly and Harper’s in America. He was formerly a Contributing Editor to the New Republic, and for some years he broadcast as the British correspondent for Radio Ireland in Dublin.
He was born in London, the son of an economist and a social worker, and educated at University College School in Hampstead and as a Scholar of New College, Oxford, where he read Modern History.
A graduate of Yale and the University of Virginia School of Law, Senator Whitehouse (D-RI) was nominated by President Bill Clinton to be Rhode Island’s US Attorney in 1994. Her served as Rhode Island’s US Attorney until 1998, when he became State Attorney General. He was elected to the United States Senate in 2007.
Lethal Beauty
Triple Threat
Winning Every Time
The Truth Advantage
Lis Wiehl is a former legal analyst for Fox News. She is also the former co-host of WOR radio's “WOR Tonight with Joe Concha and Lis Wiehl,” has served as legal analyst and reporter for NBC News and NPR’s All Things Considered and as a federal prosecutor in the United States Attorney’s office, and was a tenured professor of law at the University of Washington. Today, she appears frequently on CNN as a legal analyst.Lis Wiehl is considered one of the nation’s most prominent trial lawyers and highly regarded commentators. She earned her Juris Doctor from Harvard Law School and her Master of Arts in Literature from the University of Queensland.Wiehl is the author of 19 books including Hunting The Unabomber, Hunting Charles Manson, The 51% Minority, which won the 2008 award for Books for a Better Life in the motivational category, and Winning Every Time.
Tom Wright is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a regular contributing writer at The Atlantic, and the author of the book All Measures Short of War (Yale University Press, 2017). His book with Colin Kahl, Aftershocks, is forthcoming from St. Martin's Press.
Ben Wright has been a Political Correspondent for the BBC since 2008. After two years leading the political coverage for BBC Breakfast and the One O'Clock News, Ben became the Chief Political Correspondent for Radio 4 in 2012, appearing daily on the Today Programme, World at One and PM.
He has covered a general election, budgets, Presidential visits, Prime Ministerial trips and an expenses scandal. Wright is the author of Order! Order! The Rise and Fall of Political Drinking which was published by Duckworth in 2016.
A longtime food and travel journalist, Wulfhart writes the “Carry-On” column for the New York Times. Her work has also been published in Travel + Leisure, Bon Appétit, Condé Nast Traveler, the Wall Street Journal Magazine, and elsewhere.
Deputy national editor at the New York Times, Jia Lynn Yang has edited and published stories about economics, immigration, China, business history, and political history. She was previously the deputy national security editor for the Washington Post, her writing has appeared in the Post and in Fortune, and she has been a guest on NPR’s Morning Edition, The Diane Rehm Show, and PBS Newshour.
Jonathan Yates is Executive Director of the Youth Endowment Fund, a £200m charitable fund focused on integrating young people into society, and designed the UK’s National Citizen Service. He has appeared on BBC News, Sky News, ITV News, Radio 4’s ‘The Moral Maze’, Radio 4’s ‘You and Yours’, BBC London Radio, LBC, local BBC Radio stations, and has been featured in the Independent, the Guardian, the Telegraph and the Daily Mail.
The Lion And The General
Mitch Yockelson is a professor of military history and the chief historian for the United States World War One Centennial Commission. He leads the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) Archival Recovery Program and investigates the theft of historical documents. He has taught at the United States Naval Academy and is currently a professor in Norwich University (Northfield, VT) Military History master’s program. He is the author of five books and has written numerous book reviews and articles published in professional journals, popular magazines and newspapers including The Washington Post and The New York Times. He lectures internationally as one of the foremost authorities on military history and has served as an on-screen consultant to the History Channel, PBS, and the Pentagon Channel.
Tomoko Yokoi is a writer, management researcher and entrepreneur. She is a regular Forbes.com contributor on digital transformation and innovation. With a background in international affairs and business, she focuses on stories at the intersection of business, technology and society.
Howard Yu is a professor of strategic management and innovation at the prestigious IMD Business School in Switzerland, as well as the director of IMD’s signature program, the Advanced Strategic Management executive education course. He also develops customized training programs for large companies, and his clients include Mars, Maersk, Proctor & Gamble, Nestle, Sanofi, Novartis, and Lego, among many others. He writes regularly for Forbes, Fortune, Harvard Business Review, Sloan Management Review, and the South China Morning Post.
A Washington Post reporter since 2005, Zak has covered subjects ranging from from the Vanity Fair Oscar party to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill to the military drawdown in Iraq. He’s previously written for Entertainment Weekly and for the Buffalo News in his hometown of Buffalo, New York.
Born in Iran and raised as a member of the Baha’i faith, Payam Zamani is the founder, chairman, and CEO of One Planet, a socially responsible hybrid tech firm that owns and operates a suite of online technology and media businesses and is an early stage investor. He is also the Founder and the Editor-in-Chief of BahaiTeachings.org.
Dan Zehr is a journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Times; he is currently covering the economy for the Austin-American Statesman.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy is the President of Ukraine, a position he has held since 2019. He was named the Financial Times' and Time's Person of the Year for 2022, and amongst many international honours was most recently awarded the 2023 Chatham House Prize.
Previously, he studied law at the Kryvyi Rih Institute of Economics and went on to pursue a career in entertainment, creating the production company Kvartal 95 and portraying a fictional Ukrainian president in the series Servant of the People.
James Zogby is founder and president of the Arab American Institute and a senior advisor to the polling firm Zogby International. He writes a weekly column That appears in twenty Arab newspapers and hosts a weekly program on Abu Dhabi television. A member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Democratic National Committee, and co-chair of the DNC’s Resolutions Committee, he is the author of Arab Voices (Palgrave).
Justin Zorn is a writer, policy maker, and mindfulness teacher. A Harvard and Oxford-trained specialist in economic and environmental policy, he has served as legislative director to three Members of Congress, a Fulbright Scholar, a Truman National Security Fellow, a Senior Adviser to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and has written for The Washington Post, Time, Newsweek, Harvard Business Review, The Atlantic, The Nation, Foreign Policy, and CNN.