Inc.

Bigger Faster Better

Meet four companies that take entrepreneurship beyond the limit

EVERY YEAR, THE INC. 500 celebrates founders and companies that have achieved rapid growth through careful planning and flawless execution. This year, we’re also honoring a slightly different breed—founders for whom good enough isn’t good enough, the ones who blast past what everyone else thinks are boundaries. Take Jared Isaacman. He might have been satisfied by the many years of profit his credit card processing company has generated. But how could that compare with zooming around in fighter jets? That’s what his newer company, Draken International, does to train U.S. military pilots. Draken has assembled one of the world’s largest fleets of privately owned fighter jets—and even on the ground, Draken looks like a business moving at Mach speed, despite the risks. “It’s not

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Inc.

Inc.1 min read
Sebastian Siemiatkowski, Co-founder And CEO Of Payments Platform Klarna, Answers: How Do You Hire People Whose Skill Set You Don't Get?
“The first few years, we weren't really a tech business. We were a sales and marketingdriven business. We called people who were selling stuff online to get them to add our payment method. “None of us cofounders were engineers, so when we started hir
Inc.1 min read
Beauty Filter
Countless companies have elevated everyday items to iconic: Apple upgraded the nerdy MP3 player, Nest turned thermostats into real estate selling points, and Aesop made hand soap a status symbol. Ryan Babenzien and Arjan Singh, founders of NYCbased J
Inc.1 min read
Piersten gaines
26 Going Fishing for Sharks FOUNDER AND CEO OF PRESSED ROOTS Piersten Gaines's first real pitch, to Shark Tank‘s “Mr. Wonderful,” Kevin O'Leary, did not go well. To start, her concept for Pressed Roots—a Dallas-based salon chain focused on curly and

Related Books & Audiobooks