Forbes - USA (2019-06-30)

(Antfer) #1

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  1. KIT CRAWFORD
    $890 million
    AGE: 60 RESIDENCE: St. Helena, California
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 8
    Crawford and husband Gary Erickson returned as co-CEOs
    of $890 million (est. revenue) Clif Bar, the organic snack bar
    company, in October 2018 after taking a nearly six-year hiatus.
    Since coming back, Crawford has spent the last few months
    launching the company’s first national TV campaign. She met
    Erickson while working part-time at his bakery. Before that
    she was a modern jazz dancer and worked as a maid, truck
    driver and woodchopper at national parks.

  2. TORY BURCH
    $850 million
    AGE: 53 RESIDENCE: New York City
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 7
    In December 2018, Burch became executive chairman and
    chief creative officer of the $1.5 billion (est. revenue) fashion
    company that bears her name. Pierre-Yves Roussel, a former
    LVMH executive and Burch’s husband, took over the CEO
    position. In March, Bank of America committed $100 million
    to Burch’s decade-old charitable foundation to expand a
    program that has been helping women entrepreneurs get
    loans since 2014.
    30. YOUNG SOHN
    $840 million
    AGE: 61 RESIDENCE:
    New York City
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 6
    Sohn’s fortune stems from
    her stake in Veeva Systems,
    a software firm that works
    with pharmaceutical compa-
    nies like Merck and Pfizer to
    streamline their clinical trials
    processes. She sat on the Cali-
    fornia firm’s board from 2007
    when it was founded through
    2014, the year after its IPO.
    (Its shares are up more than
    200% since the IPO.) That
    same year she cofounded
    Vlocity, a cloud-applications
    software company that an-
    nounced in March that it was
    raising $60 million. Early on
    she started software outfit
    Nomadic Systems and sold it
    to Siebel Systems for $11 mil-
    lion in 1997.
    32. NANCY ZIMMERMAN
    $740 million
    AGE: 55 RESIDENCE: Boston
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 8
    The Goldman Sachs alum, who got her start trading currency
    options on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange,
    cofounded hedge fund Bracebridge Capital in 1994. The
    firm, which she still helps run as managing partner, has $12
    billion in net assets from pensions, endowments and others,
    including Yale’s $29 billion investment office.
    33. ANNE
    WOJCICKI
    $690 million
    AGE: 45 RESIDENCE:
    Los Altos, California
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 7
    Her 23andMe has sold around
    10 million DNA “spit kits,”
    up from 5 million at the start
    of 2018. The genetics testing
    company has deep roots in
    Silicon Valley: Her sister is
    YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki
    (No. 44) and her ex-husband
    is Google cofounder Sergey
    Brin. (See p. 86.)
    31. SHEILA JOHNSON
    $820 million
    AGE: 70
    RESIDENCE: The Plains, Virginia
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 9
    Cofounder of cable network
    Black Entertainment
    Television, which she and her
    then-husband Robert sold in
    2001, Johnson now invests
    in hotels and golf resorts.
    Her Salamander Hotels &
    Resorts operates four golf
    courses at Palm Harbor,
    Florida’s Innisbrook Resort,
    which hosts an annual PGA
    Tour championship. With a
    local hotelier, it also recently
    opened Hotel Bennett in
    Charleston, South Carolina.
    34. ANNE
    DINNING
    $680 million
    AGE: 56
    RESIDENCE: New York City
    SELF-MADE SCORE: 6
    Dinning joined quantitative
    hedge fund D.E. Shaw in
    1990, two years after it
    was founded above a small
    bookstore in Manhattan.
    The NYU alum originally
    wanted to be an academic—
    she earned a doctorate
    in computer science—but
    started building computer
    algorithms to forecast
    Japanese stocks. She
    became part of an executive
    committee that ran the $50
    billion (assets) firm after
    founder David Shaw stepped
    away from daily operations
    in 2002. Dinning, who dialed
    back her role at the firm in
    2017, rejoined the executive
    committee in 2019. She sits
    on the boards of the Robin
    Hood Foundation and Math
    for America.


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