Founded in 2022, Briefly is independent business journalism built for the people who are actually running, investing in, and building American enterprise. We don't do press releases. We don't do puff pieces. We do reporting.
Briefly was founded by three journalists who had spent a combined forty years at major financial publications and were tired of the same problem: business journalism that was simultaneously too slow and too shallow. The news cycle demanded speed; the complexity of modern business demanded depth. Most outlets chose speed. We chose depth.
We launched with a simple thesis: there is a large and underserved audience of executives, investors, operators, and engaged citizens who want business journalism that treats them as intelligent adults. People who don't need the headlines explained but do want the implications analyzed. People who would rather read one exceptionally reported story than ten aggregated ones.
Four years in, that thesis has been validated. Briefly has grown to 140,000 subscribers without a single venture dollar, a single sponsored post, or a single story that we're not proud of. We're profitable, independent, and—we believe—exactly the publication the current moment needs.
We report on what matters, not what's comfortable. We name names. We publish findings even when powerful interests would prefer we didn't.
Every claim is substantiated. Every source is verified. Every piece goes through a fact-checking process before it sees a reader.
No corporate owner. No advertiser control. No agenda except the one you can read on our front page.
Our mission is to produce the most useful business journalism in America—useful not in a self-help sense, but in the sense that it gives readers a more accurate picture of the economic forces shaping their world, their industry, and their organization.
We believe that accurate information, widely distributed, is one of the most powerful forces for accountability in a market economy. Companies that are honestly reported on make better decisions under scrutiny. Investors who have accurate information allocate capital more efficiently. Policymakers who are accurately covered face more effective accountability. All of this is downstream of good journalism.
Briefly covers American business comprehensively, with particular depth in: technology and its effects on labor and competition; financial markets and monetary policy; climate change as an economic phenomenon; healthcare economics and policy; and the venture capital and startup ecosystem. We also maintain a global coverage desk focused on the geopolitical developments most directly affecting American business.
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