Skip to content

Daniel Epstein - Co-founder of Unreasonable Group

Phil McKinney
Phil McKinney
1 min read
Daniel Epstein - Co-founder of Unreasonable Group

Daniel’s life has been shaped by a fundamental belief that entrepreneurship is the answer to nearly all the issues we face today. By the time he received his undergraduate degree in philosophy, he’d already started three companies. In 2012 he was recognized by Inc. Magazine as a “30 under 30 entrepreneur” and by Forbes as one of the “top 30 most impactful entrepreneurs” of the year. In 2013, he received the prestigious “Entrepreneur of the World” award along with Richard Branson at the Global Entrepreneurship Forum. Today, this passion for entrepreneurship and startups has led to the creation of Unreasonable Group ( www.unreasonablegroup.com ). The vision of Unreasonable Group is to create a collective family of companies that will, together, put a dent on the seemingly intractable social and environmental challenges of this century. Daniel is proudly the founder of many Unreasonable companies including the Unreasonable Institute, Unreasonable Adventures, Unreasonable.is, Unreasonable at Sea, and Unreasonable Media. Daniel is also the co-founder and director of the Girl Effect Accelerator which is the world’s first program dedicated to entrepreneurs who are positioned to benefit millions of girls in poverty. Daniel believes in militant transparency and truthfulness in his everyday life and in all of the projects he is part of. He also has an overt love for his hometown of Boulder Colorado and for his dog, Kaya. (For more info, see Wikipedia)

Daniel appeared on the July 26, 2015 show

Twitter: @EpsteinDaniel

Facebook: unreasonably

Website: www.unreasonablegroup.com

Studio SessionsPast Guests

Phil McKinney Twitter

Phil McKinney is an innovator, podcaster, author, and speaker. He is the retired CTO of HP. Phil's book, Beyond The Obvious, shares his expertise and lessons learned on innovation and creativity.


Related Posts

How to Improve Your Second-Order Thinking Skills

The most expensive failures don't announce themselves. They start as weak signals somebody noticed once and explained away. Second-order thinking is how you stop being that somebody.

Second-order thinking

How to Improve Your Inversion Thinking Skills

Most innovation tools teach you how to win. Inversion thinking teaches you how to lose on purpose, so you catch the failure while you can still change course.

Image of inversion thinking - showing Phil McKinney inverted.

How to Improve Your First Principles Thinking Skills

First principles thinking is the most talked-about skill in innovation. It's also the most misunderstood. Here's what it actually looks like.

Podcast Episode on First Principals Thinking Skills