⚡ Get All Content for 20% Off ⚡

She Started A Company At 19. Now It's Valued At $200 Million, and She's Launching A New Media Brand to Help Others Achieve "Financial Freedom" The Newsette founder Daniella Pierson is launching a new company called Be a Breadwinner.

By Jason Feifer

entrepreneur daily
Courtesy of Pierson
The Newsette founder and CEO Daniella Pierson, and J.P. Morgan Wealth Management CEO Kristin Lemkau.

Daniella Pierson started her media company, The Newsette, at age 19, then built it into a juggernaut valued at $200 million, and became what Forbes called "one of the wealthiest women of color in the U.S." Now she's launching a new media company to help people do what she's done — achieve financial freedom.

"The whole thing is money equals freedom," says Pierson, who is 28. "It's framing finance as financial fitness, so it becomes a daily practice and something you're actually excited about."

The new company is called Be a Breadwinner. It launches on March 20 with a kickoff event at J.P. Morgan Chase's headquarters in New York City, as well as a newsletter. Other media products, including a podcast network and a book, as well as a new venture capital arm, are slated to follow.

J.P. Morgan Chase is the company's first partner, and Pierson spent a lot of time developing the concept with Kristin Lemkau, chief executive officer of J.P. Morgan Wealth Management. Chase will co-host the kickoff event in New York — where speakers include designer Diane von Furstenberg, poet Rupi Kaur, Sakara Life cofounder Danielle DuBoise, and Love Wellness founder Lo Bosworth — and Chase will distribute content from the event as well.

Pierson says that Be a Breadwinner and Chase are currently exploring a longer-term partnership.

Be a Breadwinner will be aimed at a wide audience, but Pierson says she's particularly focused on reaching people like her — someone who, at an earlier stage of life, did not think she could be financially successful. Pierson is open about her mental health challenges, including having ADHD, OCD, and depression, as well as the difficulties she faced starting a business and getting partners to take her seriously.

"It's based on the struggles that I faced," she says, "and taking my struggles and my story and everything I learned and building an ecosystem for anyone to become their own breadwinner."

In addition to Newsette, Pierson also co-founded Wondermind, a mental fitness company she started with Selena Gomez and Mandy Teefey. The trio were featured on Entrepreneur's cover in 2021.

Jason Feifer

Entrepreneur Staff

Editor in Chief

Jason Feifer is the editor in chief of Entrepreneur magazine and host of the podcast Problem Solvers. Outside of Entrepreneur, he is the author of the book Build For Tomorrow, which helps readers find new opportunities in times of change, and co-hosts the podcast Help Wanted, where he helps solve listeners' work problems. He also writes a newsletter called One Thing Better, which each week gives you one better way to build a career or company you love.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Science & Technology

This App Will Help You Become Fluent in 10 Different Languages

An $80 lifetime subscription can only be found here.

Leadership

If You Want to be Successful, Become a Better Speaker — Follow This 7-Step Process for Effective Speaking

Discover the transformative power of mastering presentation skills with this 7-step process.

Business News

Is TikTok Getting Banned In the U.S.? Here's What We Know So Far

The House passed a bill that could ban TikTok in the country that uses it the most.

Innovation

You Can Fear It and Still Use It — Why Are So Many American Workers Shy About AI?

A recent study has revealed a worrying trend: American workers use artificial intelligence (AI) and AI-enabled tools less than their counterparts in other countries — far less.

Business News

Virgin Voyages Wants Remote Workers to 'Work From Helm' on Month-Long Cruises

The inaugural sailing takes off in June, with new cruises each month through September.

Side Hustle

I Made Over $400,000 From a Side Hustle on Top of My 6-Figure Salary Last Year. I Love Diversified Income — and This Game-Changing Money-Saver.

When Chisom Okwulehie learned she wouldn't receive a merit-based pay bump during the pandemic, she took matters into her own hands.