Guy Raz interviews the world’s best-known entrepreneurs to learn how they built their iconic brands.
We're hard at work planning our upcoming live shows, so we bring you this favorite from the last yea
In 1997, Navy SEAL Randy Hetrick was deployed in Southeast Asia, where he was stationed in a remote
In 2007, architect Miguel McKelvey convinced his friend Adam Neumann to share an office space in Bro
Lisa Price worked in television but had a passion for beauty products. At her mother's suggestion, s
Jerry Murrell's mother used to tell him, you can always make money if you know how to make a good bu
Blake Mycoskie started and sold four businesses before age 30. But only in Argentina did he discover
In 1981, engineer Rod Canion left Texas Instruments and co-founded Compaq, which created the first I
In 1978, college drop-out John Mackey scraped together $45,000 to open his first health food store,
In 1972, Maureen and Tony Wheeler bought a beat-up car and drove from London "as far east as we coul
As a kid, Troy Carter dreamed of being a rapper, but soon discovered he was a better manager than a
Barbara Corcoran grew up in a working-class Irish Catholic family in Jersey – with nine brothers and
Brian Scudamore didn't dream of a life hauling away other people's trash. But when he needed to pay
App developer Apoorva Mehta almost gave up on being an entrepreneur until he figured out what he rea
When Steve Case started out in the tech business in the mid-80s, the idea of the internet — as we th
As a refugee growing up in Tel Aviv, Haim Saban remembers not having enough money to eat. As an adul
Ever since she was a little girl playing dress-up in her aunt's closet, Kendra Scott loved fashion.
After living as a monk in India and running a plastics company in Florida, Manoj Bhargava decided to
Twenty-five years ago, when Mei Xu emigrated from China to the U.S., she loved going to Bloomingdale
Before he turned 40, Nolan Bushnell founded two brands that permanently shaped the way Americans amu
In 1962, Gordon Segal — with his wife Carole — opened a scrappy Chicago shop called Crate & Barrel.