Julia Boorstin's Interviews
Julia Boorstin: Powerful Questions, Odds-Defying Success Secrets, & How Women Lead
This week Andrew talks with CNBC’s Senior Media & Tech Correspondent Julia Boorstin. In 2000, Julia landed a job as a reporter at Fortune Magazine to cover the business community — without a single economics or accounting class on her college transcript. Since then, she’s had a powerful impact on the business media wor
X's CEO Speaks, AI's Real Impact On Hollywood, The Streamflation Crisis — With Julia Boorstin
Julia Boorstin is a senior media and tech correspondent at CNBC and author of When Women Lead: What We Achieve, Why We Succeed and What We Can Learn. She joins Big Technology Podcast this Friday to break down the week's news. We cover: 1) Linda Yaccarino's message to advertisers 2) X's goal of becoming an "everything a
CNBC’s Senior Media & Tech Correspondent based at the network’s Los Angeles Bureau, whose through line has been always asking questions as a way to learn, connect and as a shield and whose wakeup call was realizing there were many amazing women leaders that could teach women AND men many things about leadership. https
Episode 252 | Join CNBC’s Senior Media & Tech Correspondent Julia Boorstin as she breathes life into a couple of the stories of the more than 60 women she features in her new book, When Women Lead: What They Achieve, Why They Succeed, and How We Can Learn from Them. Julia offers practical tips for men and women alike t
#32: Julia Boorstin, Senior Media and Tech Correspondent CNBC — The confidence dial, empathy as a strategic skill, and why playing sports makes for better leaders
Julia Boorstin is CNBC’s Senior Media & Tech correspondent based at the network’s Los Angeles bureau, where she reports and conducts CEO interviews across CNBC programming, and plays a key role on CNBC’s bicoastal tech-focused program TechCheck, delivering reporting, analysis, and interviews around streaming, social, a
Why Women Leaders are Good for Companies — and the World
For women, the path to becoming a successful business leader is filled with systemic barriers. But some of the most innovative companies are led by women — Stitch Fix, Feeding America, and Ellevest, just to name a few. How do these women do it, and what can we learn from them? CNBC reporter Julia Boorstin looked at the
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