The Five Step 'Algorithm' Driving Tesla’s Success
What is the trick behind the Elon Musk school of management? In this episode of Bold Names, host Tim Higgins sits down with Jon McNeill, the former pr...
Southwest’s $1 Billion Pivot: CEO Bob Jordan on Bag Fees And Other Changes
Southwest Airlines was built on three pillars: low fares, friendly service, and a quirky "sit anywhere" policy. But in a post-pandemic market, the rul...
The SEAL Turned CEO: Brandon Tseng on the AI-Powered Future of War
Former Navy SEAL and Shield AI co-founder Brandon Tseng is building the autonomous drones that are redefining global defense.This week on Bold Names, ...
The AI Agent in Your Pocket: Qualcomm’s CEO on the Future of Mobile
The smartphone is everywhere, but its next evolution won’t look like the apps we use today. In this episode of Bold Names, WSJ’s Tim Higgins sits down...
Can Zillow’s 'Super App' Fix a Broken Housing Market?
"Depressed." That’s how Zillow CEO Jeremy Wacksman describes the current state of the U.S. housing market. With sales hitting 30-year lows and a defic...
Why Cigna’s CEO Is Confident We Can Fix American Healthcare
How do we fix the American healthcare system? On this episode of Bold Names, we ask David Cordani, the chairman and CEO of one of America’s biggest he...
Encore: Can IBM Beat Microsoft and Google in the Quantum Computing Race?
IBM has made a comeback in the past six years under the leadership of CEO Arvind Krishna. That's thanks to success in its hybrid cloud business and co...
‘We Sell Scarcity:’ How Lamborghini Continues to Stay So Cool
Lamborghinis dominate pop culture – from rap lyrics to blockbuster movies – but the reality is few people actually own them. Every year, the luxury ca...
How SAP's CEO Is Remaking the European Tech Giant For The Age Of AI
In 2020, SAP CEO Christian Klein decided to shift the 50-year-old German software giant entirely to the cloud. The immediate result? The stock price d...
How Athletic Brewing Sells Beer for a Post-Alcohol Generation
When Bill Shufelt left Wall Street to make non-alcoholic beer, most people thought he was crazy. At the time, the category made up less than 1% of U.S...