The Forbes Effect: What do such awards really achieve?

Select Language

English

Down Icon

Select Country

Germany

Down Icon

The Forbes Effect: What do such awards really achieve?

The Forbes Effect: What do such awards really achieve?

How much does such an award bring? Nina Mannheimer (founder of Klim), Sead Ahmetović (founder and CEO of WeAreDevelopers), and Felicia von Reden (founder and CEO of Ovom Care) shared their experiences with us.
Klim GmbH, Ovom Care GmbH, WeAreDevelopers, Collage: Dominik Schmitt / Gründerszene

When Hanno Renner landed on the Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe list in 2020, Personio was five years old. Since then, the Munich-based HR unicorn has raised over €500 million in fresh capital and was most recently valued at €7.2 billion .

Read also

Celonis Co-CEO Alexander Rinke was also among the Forbes 30 honorees in 2015; seven years later, the company's valuation was around 11 billion euros (13 billion dollars) .

Awards like the Forbes list are considered coveted recognition for young founders. But behind all the dazzling LinkedIn posts, the question remains: Does such a seal really provide tangible benefits – for example, in fundraising or recruiting? Do startups whose founders have been recognized have it easier than those without such a seal of approval?

We spoke to Nina Mannheimer (Klim, Forbes 2023), Felicia von Reden (Ovom Care, Forbes 2025) and Sead Ahmetović (WeAreDevelopers, Capital 2023) about this.

businessinsider

businessinsider

Similar News

All News
Animated ArrowAnimated ArrowAnimated Arrow