Research Intelligence · Substack Platform · March 2026

Top 10 Business
Newsletters on Substack

Ranked by subscriber count and engagement from Substack's official Business category. Covering product, economics, entertainment, VC, social media, and cultural analysis.

Official Substack.com/top/business Ranking
10
Newsletters Ranked
2M+
Combined Subscribers
50
Latest Posts Tracked
8
Distinct Business Niches
$1M+
Est. Revenue (Top Writers)
01
Lenny's Newsletter
by Lenny Rachitsky · Former Airbnb PM Lead
Weekly deeply-researched advice column on product management, growth strategy, and career advancement — built around interviews with world-class tech operators and founders.
Product Management Growth Career AI Tools Millions of Subscribers
Details
Key Audience
Mid-to-senior Product Managers at B2B SaaS and consumer tech companies seeking frameworks, not just theory
Startup founders (seed–Series B) navigating product-market fit, hiring their first PM, and building growth loops
Tech professionals pivoting into PM roles — engineers, designers, data scientists — who need structured playbooks
Growth leads at AI-native companies seeking updated tactics where traditional playbooks no longer apply
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Operator-Grade Interview Depth
Every insight is sourced directly from the people building iconic products — not analysts. Readers get the playbook Netflix, Airbnb, and Stripe actually used, not theoretical best practices.
2
Immediately Actionable Frameworks
Posts are structured as named, repeatable models (e.g., "Waterline Model," "ARMOR Framework") — readers leave with something they can apply in their next team meeting or 1:1.
3
Career Leverage Ecosystem
Beyond the newsletter: a 30,000+ member Slack community, AI tool bundles ($15K+ value), job board, and evergreen archive function as a career platform — not just a read.
📋 Latest 5 Posts lennysnewsletter.com
POST 01
How to debug a team that isn't working: the Waterline Model
A systematic guide to diagnosing team dysfunction without defaulting to blaming individuals. Introduces the "Waterline" metaphor for identifying whether problems sit above or below the surface.
POST 02
State of the product job market in 2025
Data-driven analysis of PM hiring trends, salary benchmarks, and where demand is concentrating (AI-adjacent roles). Optimistic take: the market is recovering for skilled operators.
POST 03
AI tools are overdelivering: large-scale AI productivity survey results
Survey of 1,000+ knowledge workers quantifying AI's actual output impact — which tools have achieved product-market fit, where the biggest ROI is, and what the skeptics are missing.
POST 04
How to build your PM second brain with ChatGPT
Practical guide to using AI as a thinking partner — not a replacement — for product decisions, user story writing, stakeholder communication, and synthesis of customer research.
POST 05
How to spot a top 1% startup early
Three key signals from employees who've picked multiple iconic companies before they were obvious. Covers founder indicators, market timing heuristics, and organizational culture red flags to avoid.
02
Noahpinion
by Noah Smith · Former Bloomberg Columnist & Finance Professor
Economics-first analysis of global markets, technology, geopolitics, and the forces shaping prosperity and decline — written with a techno-optimist, data-grounded lens. ~5 posts/week.
Macroeconomics Geopolitics Tech Policy AI Economics 400K+ Subscribers
Details
Key Audience
Policy-oriented economists and analysts inside think tanks, government bodies, and international institutions seeking readable macro commentary
Tech-sector investors and VCs who want economic context for decisions — particularly around US-China dynamics, AI economics, and trade policy
Globally-minded startup founders seeking to understand how macro forces (tariffs, currency, labor markets) affect their business environment
Educated general readers frustrated by partisan economics coverage who want honest, empirical takes from a former academic
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Cross-Country Economic Translation
Noah actively covers Japan, China, South Korea, India, and emerging markets — not just the US. Readers gain rare English-language access to economic dynamics that most Western media ignores entirely.
2
Techno-Optimist Framing with Evidence
Unlike doom-heavy macro writing, Noahpinion consistently backs technology and abundance as solutions to stagnation — with actual data. Provides contrarian hope grounded in empirical research.
3
High Volume, Consistently Readable
Five posts per week at varied depth — some are short punchy takes, others 3,000-word deep dives. Readers can engage at any depth and still feel up-to-speed on macroeconomic developments.
📋 Latest 5 Posts noahpinion.blog
POST 01
Why are federal agents gunning down Americans in the streets?
Analysis of ICE abuse incidents as symptoms of institutional pathology — arguing that specific enforcement actions reflect a deeper breakdown in institutional culture and accountability structures.
POST 02
Japan can be America's arsenal
Guest post by Rie Yano arguing that Japan's industrial capacity, geographic position, and alliance structure make it the most viable partner for a Pacific defense industrial rebuild.
POST 03
Noahpinion's 2025 Year in Review
Seven key themes from 2025 — from Trump's economic blitzkrieg to AI market dynamics, with predictions for 2026 and reflections on what the subscriber base now looks like at 414,000 readers.
POST 04
The future isn't what it used to be
Essay on how rapid technological change has broken the traditional intergenerational contract — parents can no longer confidently prepare children for a legible future, creating societal anxiety.
POST 05
The AI boom numbers don't add up
Critical examination of AI sector valuations versus actual economic output — where the investment is justified, where it's speculative, and what a potential AI valuation correction would look like.
03
The Ankler
by Richard Rushfield · Former Entertainment Journalist
The definitive business-of-Hollywood newsletter — insiders' intelligence on streaming wars, studio deals, executive power moves, and the cultural-commercial collision reshaping entertainment.
Entertainment Business Hollywood Insider Streaming Media M&A $10M+ Revenue
Details
Key Audience
Hollywood executives, agents, and studio execs who need insider intelligence before it's public — to navigate deals, careers, and power shifts
Entertainment industry investors and analysts tracking streaming economics, M&A activity, and the viability of legacy studios in a fragmented market
Media journalists and entertainment PR professionals using it as a primary source and industry temperature gauge
Serious entertainment consumers who want the "why" behind industry decisions — why projects get greenlit or killed, why executives move
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Deep Industry Source Network
Rushfield's decades of entertainment journalism translate into a source network that insiders speak to candidly. Readers get the "what insiders are saying" angle that trade publications can't access without burning relationships.
2
M&A and Power Structure Intelligence
Real-time analysis of studio mergers, streaming consolidation, and executive hiring/firing as business events — not gossip. Who survives the Paramount-WBD merger? Ankler answers first.
3
Cultural-Financial Synthesis
Connects Hollywood's creative decline directly to financial incentive structures. Readers understand not just what is happening but the business logic — or breakdown of it — behind every decision.
📋 Latest 5 Posts theankler.com
POST 01
10 Burning Qs: Paramount–Warner Bros. — What Survives, and Who
Deep interrogation of the Paramount-WBD merger: which brands survive, which executives keep power, and what an insider says will be "worse than you think" about the combined entity's culture.
POST 02
The Lost Photos: When Hollywood Was Hollywood
Feature piece using Julian Wasser's unprecedented photographic access to Golden Age stars at their most unguarded — a nostalgic contrast with today's hyper-controlled celebrity media environment.
POST 03
The Streaming Reckoning: Who Actually Wins
Analysis of which streaming services are structurally viable versus which are burning capital on subscriber acquisition that can never return a profit — naming the expected survivors and the doomed.
POST 04
Simpson's at 71: Can Jeremy King Still Run a Room?
Profile and industry reaction to Jeremy King's return to one of London's most storied restaurants, used as a lens on whether "old Hollywood hospitality" values still have a commercial place.
POST 05
Inside the Executive Exodus: Why Hollywood's Best Are Leaving
Examines why experienced studio development and creative executives are departing at accelerating rates — mapping the structural reasons from AI displacement anxiety to incentive compression.
04
Feed Me
by Emily Sundberg · Writer & Cultural Critic
A razor-sharp cultural lens on the "spirit of enterprise" — how consumer brands, food culture, media, and startup aesthetics intersect, collide, and shape modern life and commerce.
Consumer Culture Brand Commentary Food Business Media Critique Highly Engaged
Details
Key Audience
Consumer brand founders and DTC entrepreneurs who want cultural intelligence — understanding what aesthetic or narrative makes a brand feel alive or dead right now
Brand marketers and creative directors at consumer companies seeking honest analysis of what is working and what has become clichéd in brand building
Media and Substack writers tracking platform dynamics and the tension between algorithmic growth and authentic editorial voice
Urban professionals aged 25-40 in major cities who live and work in the environments Feed Me critiques — food/hospitality, startup culture, media
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
First-Mover Cultural Signal Detection
Sundberg identifies emerging cultural and consumer trends before they become obvious — serving as an early warning system for what consumers will value (or reject) 12-18 months out.
2
Anti-Hype Brand Critique
Provides honest, sometimes unflattering analysis of brands that are culturally over-leveraged or aesthetically exhausted — rare in a media landscape dominated by brand-friendly coverage.
3
The "Enterprise Spirit" Business Lens
Reframes everyday consumer and media observations as business intelligence — helping readers see restaurant openings, Substack dynamics, and cooking media as economic indicators, not just lifestyle content.
📋 Latest 5 Posts readfeedme.com
POST 01
The machine in the garden
Viral essay (3,000+ likes) on Substack's encroachment into a "respectably literate walled garden" — arguing that platform incentives are degrading the quality of writing that made Substack valuable.
POST 02
TBPN... for cooking
Playful interrogation of whether the "The Best Products Need No Explanation" aesthetic has colonized the cooking media space — and what this means for how brands communicate around food.
POST 03
The case for taking a more relaxed approach to launching new social pages
Counterintuitive argument against the obsessive multi-platform brand presence strategy — examining which brands have won by restraint rather than ubiquity in social media expansion.
POST 04
What the Feed Is For: A Rethinking
Explores the shift in how social feeds function now — less discovery, more confirmation — and what that means for consumer brands that built growth models on organic social reach.
POST 05
Restaurant as Cultural Barometer
Uses openings and closings in major cities as economic mood indicators — arguing that what people are willing to pay for in restaurants reveals deeper anxieties about value, identity, and belonging.
05
The VC Corner
by Ruben Dominguez · Mundi Ventures Team
A weekly guide through the dynamic world of startups and venture capital — curating news, insights, reports, and investor databases to keep founders and early investors informed and ready to act.
Venture Capital Startup Funding Investor Intelligence Fundraising Tactics Hundreds of Thousands
Details
Key Audience
First-time and repeat startup founders at pre-seed and seed stage who are actively fundraising or preparing to raise and need practical investor intelligence
Aspiring angel investors and syndicate leads who want to understand deal flow, term structures, and how top VCs evaluate companies
Startup operators (COOs, BD, finance leads) in early-stage companies who need awareness of the VC ecosystem to advise their CEO effectively
MBA and entrepreneurship students building fluency in venture capital before entering the ecosystem as founders or investors
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Curated Investor Database Access
Provides regularly updated lists of active investors — including family offices, angels, and VC funds — with investment stage, sector focus, and direct contact links. Saves founders weeks of research.
2
AI-Enhanced Fundraising Playbooks
Tactical, step-by-step guides built from real founder interviews — showing exactly how to use AI tools in the fundraising process to improve pitch materials, investor outreach, and due diligence prep.
3
Weekly VC Ecosystem Pulse
Synthesizes major deals, fund announcements, and market trends across the VC landscape weekly — giving founders context to calibrate their valuation expectations and approach timing.
📋 Latest 5 Posts thevccorner.com
POST 01
AI-Powered Fundraising Prep: The Founder's Tactical Playbook
Built from conversations with founders who recently closed seed rounds — covering exactly how AI tools are accelerating pitch deck creation, investor research, and due diligence documentation.
POST 02
The Ultimate Guide to Finding Investors for Your Startup
Most-liked post (290 likes): a comprehensive, filterable master list of active investors — VCs, angels, family offices — with investment details and direct contact links, organized by stage and sector.
POST 03
A Curated List of 1,000 Active Family Offices Investing in Startups
Proprietary database of family offices worldwide — complete with preferred investment stages, geographic focus areas, check sizes, and direct decision-maker contact links for founder outreach.
POST 04
How Top-Tier Founders Are Building Relationships with VCs Before They Fundraise
Explains the "relationship-first" fundraising strategy — how to get on a VC's radar 12-18 months before your raise so that when you send the deck, they already have context and conviction.
POST 05
Weekly VC Deal Flow & Ecosystem Roundup
Regular feature covering major funding rounds, new fund launches, and notable VC firm moves — synthesizing what the deal flow patterns reveal about where capital is concentrating in 2025.
06
Link in Bio
by Rachel Karten · Social Media Strategist
The practitioner's newsletter for social media professionals — covering platform strategy, brand voice, content trends, and the changing economics of working in social media at scale.
Social Media Strategy Brand Content Platform Trends Community Building Hundreds of Thousands
Details
Key Audience
In-house social media managers and content leads at consumer brands and DTC companies who need to stay ahead of platform changes and audience shifts
Brand and creative directors trying to understand whether their brand's social strategy is still culturally resonant — or quietly becoming irrelevant
Freelance social media consultants who use the newsletter to stay current with platform changes and articulate strategy recommendations to clients
Marketing agency teams who manage multi-brand social portfolios and need a common framework for evaluating what's working and what's shifting
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Practitioner-to-Practitioner Knowledge
Written by someone who has done the job — not a consultant or media analyst. Every piece of advice is grounded in actual platform management experience, not theoretical best practices.
2
Platform Shift Early Warning System
Covers emerging platform changes before they become mainstream — "Post-social media" (615 likes) is a prime example of identifying a structural shift (follower counts mattering less) early enough to act on it.
3
Brand Storytelling Frameworks
Goes beyond tactics to give brands narrative-level frameworks — like "evidence of effort" — that can be applied across platforms and content types, not just optimized for individual algorithm moments.
📋 Latest 5 Posts milkkarten.net
POST 01
Post-social media: It's time to rethink what the feed is for
Viral post (615 likes) arguing that social feeds have fundamentally shifted from discovery tools to confirmation environments — and what that means for brands still building follower-count-driven strategies.
POST 02
Evidence of effort: why brands should make effort a character in their story
Introduces the "evidence of effort" framework — arguing that showing audiences the work behind the product or content is now more powerful than polished output, particularly for Gen Z audiences.
POST 03
The case for relaxed social page launches
Challenges the default assumption that new brand social pages need aggressive launch campaigns — arguing that slow, authentic growth outperforms manufactured momentum in building durable communities.
POST 04
How the best brand social teams are using AI without losing their voice
Practical guide to AI-assisted content creation for social teams — covering where AI accelerates without homogenizing, and which parts of the social content process require irreplaceable human judgment.
POST 05
The Brands Making Social Work in 2025
Annual survey of which brand social accounts are genuinely thriving — analyzing the common threads: community-first orientation, willingness to be weird, and consistency over virality chasing.
07
The Generalist
by Mario Gabriele · Founder & Partner at Hummingbird
Long-form, rigorously researched analysis of the people, companies, and technologies shaping the future — known for marathon deep-dives (up to 35,000 words) on defining companies and investors.
Tech Deep-Dives VC Analysis Startup Profiles Future of Technology 162K+ Subscribers
Details
Key Audience
Venture capitalists and institutional investors who use The Generalist as deep background research on companies and fund dynamics before making investment decisions
Startup founders at Series A-C stage studying how iconic companies were built — their strategy, culture, financing history, and the decisions that made or broke them
Tech-adjacent professionals (operators, analysts, consultants) who want to be the most informed person in the room when a company or investor is discussed
Journalists and researchers in technology and business who use The Generalist's primary research as source material and reference points
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Unprecedented Research Depth
The "No Rivals" Founders Fund series ran 35,000 words over four installments — with 12+ primary interviews and previously undisclosed return data. This level of depth doesn't exist elsewhere in the newsletter world.
2
Insider Access to Defining Investors & Founders
Mario's position as a GP at Hummingbird gives him credibility and access to top-tier VCs and founders who wouldn't speak to journalists. Readers get interview depth that functions like primary source intelligence.
3
Future 50 Database
Annual curation of 50 highest-potential startups under $200M valuation — provides a forward-looking watchlist that subscribers use as both investment pipeline and competitive landscape intelligence.
📋 Latest 5 Posts generalist.com
POST 01
No Rivals: The Prophet (Part I) — Founders Fund Deep Dive
First installment of a 35,000-word series on Founders Fund and Peter Thiel — analyzing the fund's contrarian philosophy, how "wanting differently" became its competitive edge, and its previously undisclosed returns.
POST 02
Infinite Games: Joining the Hummingbird Partnership
Personal announcement of Mario's transition from pure writer to GP at Hummingbird VC — exploring what it means to build a media and investment career simultaneously and why the two reinforce each other.
POST 03
The Future 50: 2025 Edition
Annual database of the world's 50 highest-potential startups valued at or under $200M — nominated by top VCs and operators, with detailed sector breakdown and investment thesis for each company.
POST 04
Mercury CEO Immad Akhund: Obsessions and Contrarian Opinions
Year-end founder interview covering the Mercury CEO's latest intellectual obsessions — from Mongolian Empire parallels to banking infrastructure strategy — with direct implications for fintech founders.
POST 05
Europe's Tech Reckoning: What Will It Take to Compete
Deep-dive conversation with Helsing co-founder Torsten Reil on the structural barriers preventing European tech scale — and whether the continent's defense sector might be the unexpected catalyst for change.
08
Derek Thompson
by Derek Thompson · The Atlantic Staff Writer
A newsletter about abundance — exploring how technology, policy, and ideas can build a richer, more productive world, with particular focus on AI economics, housing, healthcare, and innovation systems.
Abundance Economics AI Policy Innovation Systems Tech Optimism Hundreds of Thousands
Details
Key Audience
Policy-oriented tech optimists who believe technology can solve abundance problems (housing, healthcare, energy) and want rigorous arguments to deploy in institutional and political debates
Executives at infrastructure and energy companies tracking the economic and policy environment around power grids, AI chips, and physical-world AI deployment
Atlantic-adjacent readers and media professionals who value the combination of literary quality writing with serious macroeconomic and policy substance
Founders and investors in "hard tech" sectors (energy, biotech, infrastructure) who need narrative frameworks for communicating the societal case for their work
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
The "Abundance" Framework Made Actionable
Provides a coherent economic philosophy — that scarcity in housing, healthcare, and energy is a policy choice, not a natural state — that readers can apply when evaluating regulation, investment, and business strategy.
2
AI's Real Economic Footprint
Goes beyond hype to ask hard questions: where is AI actually generating productivity gains, where are the numbers speculative, and what would a measured AI economic impact actually look like at macro scale?
3
Accessible Prose for Complex Ideas
Thompson's Atlantic-honed writing translates dense economic and policy research into readable, shareable essays — giving readers content they can pass to non-expert colleagues without a primer.
📋 Latest 5 Posts derekthompson.org
POST 01
The AI Boom Is the Most Important Economic Story — But the Numbers Don't Add Up
Rigorous analysis of the gap between AI investment levels and measurable productivity gains — probing whether the boom is justified optimism, speculative mania, or something more complex than either narrative.
POST 02
Why Hasn't the U.S. Power Grid Improved in Decades?
Interview with Zach Dell (founder of Base) on the structural incentives that have kept grid infrastructure stagnant — and why AI demand might finally force the modernization regulators failed to achieve.
POST 03
The Abundance Agenda: What Government Can Actually Do
Policy-oriented piece translating the "abundance" philosophy into concrete regulatory and legislative recommendations — covering zoning reform, FDA modernization, and permitting processes.
POST 04
How AI Is Changing the Economics of Information Work
Examines whether white-collar productivity gains from AI are real or illusory — with data on where knowledge work costs are actually declining and which sectors remain stubbornly resistant to automation.
POST 05
What America Gets Wrong About Building Things
Comparative analysis of why the US can't build critical infrastructure at a competitive cost — examining cultural, institutional, and regulatory root causes through the lens of semiconductor fab construction.
09
Category Pirates
by Christopher Lochhead, Eddie Yoon & Nicolas Cole
The leading newsletter for category design — teaching entrepreneurs and executives how to create and dominate entirely new market categories, rather than competing on existing battlefields.
Category Design Market Strategy Brand Positioning Entrepreneurship Digital Academy
Details
Key Audience
Series A–C founders struggling with differentiation in crowded markets who need a framework for repositioning their product as a category-defining solution, not a better version of existing options
CMOs and brand strategists at growth-stage companies tasked with building brand awareness in markets where conventional positioning frameworks produce undifferentiated messaging
Product marketers working on category creation — launching genuinely new product types and needing frameworks for educating the market rather than simply competing for existing demand
Business school and MBA professionals who found traditional Porter's Five Forces and BCG frameworks inadequate for the dynamics of today's platform and AI-driven markets
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Category Design Methodology
Provides a complete, proprietary framework for creating new market categories — from identifying the "problem you want to own" to naming and framing a category that competitors can't easily enter. Directly applicable to positioning work.
2
Anti-Benchmarking Philosophy
Explicitly teaches readers to stop comparing themselves to competition and instead design the rules of the game. This contrarian mindset shift is actionable: it changes how founders pitch, how marketers write copy, and how execs set strategy.
3
Case Studies from Category Kings
Dissects how Salesforce, Hubspot, Apple, and others designed and captured categories — extracting repeatable patterns. Readers learn to recognize the moment a company stopped competing and started category creating.
📋 Latest 5 Posts categorypirates.substack.com
POST 01
Why AI Companies Are Making the Exact Same Positioning Mistake
Analysis of how most AI startups are positioning as "better ChatGPT" or "AI for X" — instead of designing new categories. Shows the opportunity cost of competitive framing in a market still defining itself.
POST 02
The Category Design Playbook: From Zero to Category King
Step-by-step framework piece laying out the full Category Pirates methodology — from problem identification and "the lightning strike" launch to ecosystem building and category maintenance at scale.
POST 03
How Founders Fund Designed a Category: The Anti-Portfolio Company
Case study examining how Peter Thiel's fund itself is a category design exercise — refusing to be benchmarked against other VC firms and instead defining investment success on entirely different terms.
POST 04
The Superconsumer: The Customer Segment Most Companies Ignore
Eddie Yoon's framework for identifying "superconsumers" — the 10% of customers who generate 30-70% of a category's revenue and signal where a category can expand or contract in the next 5 years.
POST 05
The Writing Flywheel: How Nicolas Cole Built a Category in Online Writing
Case study on how co-founder Nicolas Cole applied category design to his own career — creating "ghostwriting" as a legitimate, premium professional category rather than competing as a freelance writer.
10
No Mercy / No Malice (Prof G)
by Scott Galloway · NYU Stern Professor & Serial Entrepreneur
Uncompromising, data-driven analysis of the forces transforming business, power, and society — Scott Galloway's "zero filter" commentary on Big Tech, capitalism, and where both are taking us.
Big Tech Critique Business Analysis Society & Power Executive Insight Hundreds of Thousands
Details
Key Audience
C-suite executives and senior leaders at large enterprises who want sharp, opinionated takes on how technology and market forces are reshaping their competitive landscape
MBA students and business school faculty who follow Galloway for frameworks connecting macroeconomic forces, company strategy, and social outcomes in ways traditional curricula avoid
Investors and analysts covering FAANG/Big Tech who want a provocateur's take to stress-test their own investment theses against hard questions about market concentration and regulation
Policy advocates and journalists covering antitrust, tech regulation, and wealth inequality who use Galloway's data as a source of quotable, shareable evidence-backed commentary
Top 3 Practical Value Propositions
1
Data-Backed Provocation
"All data, zero filter" is the brand promise — and it delivers. Every take is anchored in market cap data, earnings figures, and demographic trends. Readers get opinions they can verify and repeat in professional settings with credibility.
2
Intellectual Permission to Criticize Big Tech
In corporate environments where criticizing Amazon, Apple, or Meta feels risky, Prof G gives readers a credentialed, sourced framework to raise concerns. Functions as an intellectual "permission structure" for legitimate dissent.
3
Business Strategy Through a Societal Lens
Unlike newsletters that analyze companies in isolation, Prof G connects firm strategy directly to social outcomes — inequality, youth opportunity, democratic health. Readers gain a macro framework for evaluating the ethics of business decisions.
📋 Latest 5 Posts profgalloway.com
POST 01
The UnitedHealth CEO Murder and What America's Elite Disdain Is Creating
Galloway connects Brian Thompson's assassination and the viral online reaction to it with elite institutional failures — arguing that the response reveals a society where rule-of-law legitimacy is eroding from above and below simultaneously.
POST 02
Trump Settled with Ticketmaster — What It Actually Means for Antitrust
Analysis of the DOJ's Ticketmaster settlement as a case study in the difference between political antitrust theater and structural enforcement — and what it signals for Big Tech platform cases going forward.
POST 03
The History and Politics of Monopoly Power
Long-form historical analysis of how market concentration has evolved from Standard Oil to Google — mapping the political cycles that alternately enable and constrain monopoly formation in American capitalism.
POST 04
Why Young Men Are Leaving the Economy Behind
Data-driven analysis of male economic disengagement — mapping the labor force participation, educational attainment, and earnings data that shows a structural, not cyclical, shift in how young men relate to formal economic participation.
POST 05
Meta's 2025 Strategy: What Zuckerberg Figured Out That Everyone Missed
Reluctant-admiration analysis of Meta's strategic recovery — examining how cost-cutting, AI pivot, and platform monetization improvements rebuilt shareholder value, and what it says about Zuckerberg's actual capabilities as a strategist.