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Anand Sanwal
Co-Founder at Yardstiq & CEO and Co-Founder at CB Insights
Anand Sanwal is the Executive Chair and Co-Founder of CB Insights, a prominent business analytics platform that specializes in providing data and insights on technology companies. Under his leadership, CB Insights has grown significantly, generating approximately $100 million in annual revenue. Sanwal previously served as the CEO of the company for 14 years before transitioning to his current role as Executive Chair in early 2024.14
Professional Background
Before founding CB Insights in 2010, Sanwal held several key positions in various organizations. Notably, he was the Vice President of the $50 million Chairman's Innovation Fund at American Express, where he focused on investing in disruptive technologies. He also has experience in strategic planning and operations from his time at Kozmo.com and Atlas Industries.35
Education
Sanwal holds degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, including a Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering and a Bachelor of Science in Economics with a focus on Finance and Accounting. He has also completed executive education programs at Harvard Business School and The Wharton School.3
Personal Interests
Beyond his professional endeavors, Anand Sanwal has a passion for outdoor activities, having climbed Mount Kilimanjaro and participated in multiple New York City half-marathons. He is also involved in philanthropic efforts, serving on the board of Pratham USA, an organization dedicated to improving education for underprivileged children in India.32
Highlights
Dear Girl Dads,
53% of high school girls are persistently sad or feel hopeless
BUT, these same girls are absolutely crushing school.
▪️ 70% of valedictorians are female. ▪️ Girls average a 3.23 GPA. Boys average 3.0. ▪️ 85% of girls graduate. 78% of boys do.
They're outperforming on every metric school was built to measure.
And, yet somehow, still miserable.
WTF?! (exactly)
Grades clearly aren't the answer.
In fact, they seem to be part of the trap. Doing-as-your-told for "perfect" performance ends up hurting more than helping.
Research on 16-year-olds found that boys overestimate their creative abilities while girls underestimate theirs.....even when actual performance is equal or better.
It's called the "confidence gap."
It's a massive barriers girls hit on the way to real achievement. And great grades clearly don't fix it.
But making things does.
In fact, studies on adolescent girls in creative problem-solving environments show increased confidence and greater willingness to take on new challenges.
Action creates confidence. It's not fake achievement (grades). It's not praise. It is doing.
We built @ForgePrep around that single insight. Every project ends in something real, with her name on it.
Instead of beating meaningless benchmarks, she builds things people actually need. 53% of her classmates are miserable chasing and even crushing the benchmark. She doesn't have to be.

Why are American kids so pessimistic?
▪️ 40% of 12th graders in the USA say it's "hard to have hope for the world." ▪️ Nearly 1 in 3 wonder if there's a purpose to life.
The problem is we’ve built schools that confirm the feeling of helplessness.
So what actually creates optimism?
Not affirmations or SEL curricula or growth mindset lectures. Not telling kids to look on the bright side.
It's demonstrating capability.
Contributing to something real.
Adolescents need to feel that their work has real value in the real world.
▪️ Not gold stars on worksheets.
▪️ Not dioramas on books they didn’t read.
▪️ Not memorizing trivia for tests.
Actual contribution.


