Holmes will only say - and this is more than she has ever said before - that her company uses ‘the same fundamental chemical methods’ as existing labs do. Most Ominous Empty Detail: “Precisely how Theranos accomplishes all these amazing feats is a trade secret. “ This CEO Is Out For Blood” - Roger Parloff, Fortune, June 2014 The Jcover of Fortune Amazonīest Quote: “When I finally connected with what Elizabeth fundamentally is, I realized that I could have just as well been looking into the eyes of a Steve Jobs or a Bill Gates.” - Stanford chemical engineering professor and Theranos adviser Channing Robertson “ This Woman Invented a Way to Run 30 Lab Tests on Only One Drop of Blood” - Caitlin Roper, Wired, 5. “ The Time 100, Titans – Elizabeth Holmes” - Henry Kissinger*, Time, April 2015 “ Blood Simpler” - Ken Auletta, the New Yorker, December 2014 If you have any additional insights, suggestions or responses, give me a shout on Twitter or send an email to Mentions/Technically-Not-Cover Stories We’ve put together a ranking of some of her biggest stories, evaluating the praise they lavish on her and on Theranos, the new information they surface and the quality of the cover. But which of these stories gives the best details? Which covers play up Holmes’s Jobsian tics the most? Which ones best capture Holmes’s work and her ascent to Silicon Valley stardom? She even has a Soylenty answer for why she does the Steve Jobs thing of wearing the same outfit everyday (“It makes it easy, because every day you put on the same thing and don’t have to think about it - one less thing in your life,” she told Glamour). The picture of Holmes that emerges from all these prominent write-ups is that she’s a Stanford dropout-turned-entrepreneur who doesn’t have a much of a life outside of her work at Theranos. Very few stories about the company fail to mention these facts. This has made Holmes the world’s youngest self-made billionaire, worth about $4.5 billion, almost all of it on paper. Theranos claims it can dramatically lower the cost of diagnosing medical conditions, which is the kind do-gooder techie venture that is bound to get you lots of favorable media attention.īig names including Oracle founder Larry Ellison have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into Theranos, which was last valued at around $9 billion. The promise of Holmes’s efforts at Theranos is in its blood-testing technology, which was called into question by a damning Wall Street Journal investigation earlier this month. She got a lengthy write-up in the New Yorker late last year, and Wired has called the implications of her work “mind-blowing.” She has been on the cover of Forbes and Fortune, and she was named one of Time’s “100 Most Influential People” of 2015. This week, she was on the cover of an edition of T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and she is also on the cover of this month’s issue of Inc. Even as Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes was battling a slew of investigative journalists and nagging regulators, the good press that she has enjoyed over the last couple years continued throughout this month.
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