InfluenceAsia Original Future Ranking
InfluenceAsia 2025 Future 100
An independent editorial and research ranking recognizing Asian and Asian-origin figures whose 2025 contributions shaped technology, industry, culture, public institutions, science, sport, capital and social innovation.
Editorial Framework
4 editorial modules behind this annual Future 100.
The edition's editorial context is grouped into compact reading modules so the page keeps momentum before moving into the ranking and methodology.
Ranking Introduction
The people converting Asian influence into global operating power.
InfluenceAsia 2025 Future 100 identifies Asian and Asian-origin figures whose work in 2025 shaped technology systems, industrial capacity, public institutions, consumer culture, scientific ambition, elite sport, social advocacy and cultural imagination. The ranking is built as an independent editorial and research product. It emphasizes verifiable 2025 contribution, international relevance, Asian connection, institutional consequence and future durability over inherited visibility or short-cycle attention.
Annual Theme
Infrastructure, Sovereignty and Cultural Scale
The defining Asian influence of 2025 is not only symbolic. It appears in platforms contested by governments, AI systems reorganizing labor, batteries and chips underwriting industrial strategy, consumer IP traveling across languages, and public figures entering institutions that shape global rules. This edition recognizes people who turned individual authority into systems with reach: companies, missions, films, public mandates, capital networks and social movements.
Selected Subjects
Who is considered for the Future 100.
The 2025 edition considers technology founders, AI builders, new consumer founders, cultural innovators, social innovators, young investors, public-interest leaders, science and health figures, elite athletes and next-generation family enterprise leaders where their 2025 work demonstrates future-facing Asian influence. Selection requires a public, verifiable role and a contribution that is meaningful in 2025 rather than a passive continuation of earlier reputation.
Audience Use
A structured people dataset for editorial, research and digital presentation.
The dataset is designed for direct use in a ranking page, profile-led editorial feature, searchable people database or annual report. Each entry includes cohort, market, role, organization, contribution, territory of influence, profile text and editorial rationale.
Top Ranked
The leading names in the 2025 Future 100.
The opening tier of the published ranking, with role, platform and editorial rationale.
Shou Zi Chew
Chief Executive Officer, TikTok
Chew kept TikTok at the center of a decisive platform-governance test in the United States while sustaining its relevance across creators, advertisers, music, commerce and youth culture.
Sriram Krishnan
Senior Policy Advisor for Artificial Intelligence, White House
Krishnan moved from venture and product leadership into federal AI policy, helping translate frontier technology concerns into public-sector strategy during a decisive year for AI governance.
Alexandr Wang
Founder, Scale AI; AI executive, Meta
Wang became one of the central figures in the AI infrastructure consolidation cycle as Scale AI's data and evaluation capabilities moved into a larger strategic contest for frontier AI talent and systems.
Lei Jun
Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Xiaomi
Lei advanced Xiaomi from consumer electronics champion to serious electric-vehicle manufacturer, turning the company's EV momentum into a broader statement about software-led industrial execution.
Robin Zeng Yuqun
Founder and Chairman, CATL
CATL's 2025 Hong Kong listing and battery-market leadership placed Zeng at the center of global electrification, grid storage and supply-chain strategy.
Shubhanshu Shukla
Astronaut and Pilot, Axiom Mission 4
Shukla served as pilot on Axiom Mission 4 to the International Space Station, giving India a highly visible human-spaceflight milestone and a bridge to its broader Gaganyaan ambitions.
Kash Patel
Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Patel became Director of the FBI in 2025, placing an Indian-origin public figure at the head of one of the world's most visible law-enforcement institutions.
Jay Bhattacharya
Director, National Institutes of Health
Bhattacharya took the helm of the NIH in 2025, moving from health economics and academic debate into leadership of the world's most influential biomedical research funder.
Research Signals
How future-facing influence is scored.
The model reads influence through field consequence, Asia relevance, global signal, execution credibility and future durability.
Signal
20%2025 Contribution
The individual's visible, specific contribution to the year under assessment.
Signal
18%Field Authority
The degree to which the person changed expectations, standards or direction within a field.
Signal
15%Asia Relevance
Connection to Asian markets, identity, institutions, audiences, capital flows or cultural influence.
Signal
15%Global Visibility
International reach through technology, policy, culture, sport, capital, science or public advocacy.
Signal
12%Execution Credibility
Evidence of durable operating capability, institution-building, performance or leadership.
Signal
10%Cultural and Social Signal
The ability to shift aspiration, identity, public trust or collective imagination.
Signal
10%Future Durability
Likelihood that the 2025 contribution will remain relevant to the next decade of Asian influence.
Methodology
InfluenceAsia editorial methodology for this annual Future 100.
The Future 100 is scored through visible annual contribution, Asian connection, institutional consequence, cross-border signal and future durability.
Eligibility
The person must have a public, verifiable role and a clear Asian or Asian-origin connection through nationality, heritage, market, institution or cultural identity.
Contribution Review
The assessment privileges visible 2025 contribution rather than general fame, inherited wealth or long-standing reputation alone.
Influence Mapping
Each candidate is evaluated across field authority, Asia relevance, global visibility, execution credibility, social signal and future durability.
Editorial Calibration
The final order balances category breadth, regional representation, public consequence and the distinctiveness of the 2025 contribution.
Independence Standard
InfluenceAsia applies its own editorial methodology and does not present the ranking as an endorsement, sponsorship product or institutional affiliation with any listed organization.
Full Ranking
InfluenceAsia 2025 Future 100
Search by name, platform, cohort, market, region or profile.
Showing 100 entries
| Rank | Person | Role / Platform | Cohort / Region | Influence Territory | Score | Signal / Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shou Zi Chew | Chief Executive Officer, TikTok | Technology Executive | platform governance, creator economies, digital sovereignty and global consumer attention | 99 | Annual contribution: Chew kept TikTok at the center of a decisive platform-governance test in the United States while sustaining its relevance across creators, advertisers, music, commerce and youth culture. Editorial rationale: Chew is ranked first for making platform management, trust, sovereignty and creator economics inseparable questions in 2025 global technology. |
| 2 | Sriram Krishnan | Senior Policy Advisor for Artificial Intelligence, White House | Technology Policy Leader | AI policy, technology governance, public-sector strategy and diaspora leadership | 98.8 | Annual contribution: Krishnan moved from venture and product leadership into federal AI policy, helping translate frontier technology concerns into public-sector strategy during a decisive year for AI governance. Editorial rationale: Krishnan is ranked for bringing product-native judgment into the institutional design of AI governance. |
| 3 | Alexandr Wang | Founder, Scale AI; AI executive, Meta | Technology Founder | AI infrastructure, data pipelines, model evaluation and frontier talent markets | 98.6 | Annual contribution: Wang became one of the central figures in the AI infrastructure consolidation cycle as Scale AI's data and evaluation capabilities moved into a larger strategic contest for frontier AI talent and systems. Editorial rationale: Wang is ranked for demonstrating that AI advantage depends as much on operational data systems as on models and compute. |
| 4 | Lei Jun | Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Xiaomi | Technology Founder | electric vehicles, smart devices, consumer ecosystems and advanced manufacturing | 98.4 | Annual contribution: Lei advanced Xiaomi from consumer electronics champion to serious electric-vehicle manufacturer, turning the company's EV momentum into a broader statement about software-led industrial execution. Editorial rationale: Lei is ranked for proving that consumer technology companies can enter heavy industry when brand, software and supply-chain discipline align. |
| 5 | Robin Zeng Yuqun | Founder and Chairman, CATL | Industrial Technology Founder | EV batteries, energy storage, industrial capital and climate infrastructure | 98.2 | Annual contribution: CATL's 2025 Hong Kong listing and battery-market leadership placed Zeng at the center of global electrification, grid storage and supply-chain strategy. Editorial rationale: Zeng is ranked for building battery capacity into one of Asia's most consequential forms of industrial power. |
| 6 | Shubhanshu Shukla | Astronaut and Pilot, Axiom Mission 4 | Science and Space Leader | human spaceflight, scientific aspiration, national technology confidence and STEM culture | 98 | Annual contribution: Shukla served as pilot on Axiom Mission 4 to the International Space Station, giving India a highly visible human-spaceflight milestone and a bridge to its broader Gaganyaan ambitions. Editorial rationale: Shukla is ranked for turning technical training and national aspiration into one of Asia's most visible space moments of 2025. |
| 7 | Kash Patel | Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation | Public Institution Leader | public institutions, law enforcement, national security and diaspora representation | 97.7 | Annual contribution: Patel became Director of the FBI in 2025, placing an Indian-origin public figure at the head of one of the world's most visible law-enforcement institutions. Editorial rationale: Patel is ranked for occupying a consequential public institution at a moment when trust, law and political accountability were intensely contested. |
| 8 | Jay Bhattacharya | Director, National Institutes of Health | Science and Health Institution Leader | public health, biomedical research, science funding and institutional reform | 97.5 | Annual contribution: Bhattacharya took the helm of the NIH in 2025, moving from health economics and academic debate into leadership of the world's most influential biomedical research funder. Editorial rationale: Bhattacharya is ranked for the scale of institutional authority attached to his 2025 public-health mandate. |
| 9 | Zohran Mamdani | Mayor-elect of New York City | Public Leader | urban policy, diaspora politics, affordability, civic mobilization and generational leadership | 97.3 | Annual contribution: Mamdani's 2025 mayoral victory made him one of the most visible new Asian-origin political figures in a global city and turned affordability politics into an international urban signal. Editorial rationale: Mamdani is ranked for converting local electoral energy into a global conversation about cities, class and new political coalitions. |
| 10 | Jafar Panahi | Filmmaker and Palme d'Or winner | Cultural Innovator | cinema, artistic freedom, Iranian culture and global auteur filmmaking | 97.1 | Annual contribution: Panahi won the Palme d'Or in 2025 with It Was Just an Accident, reaffirming the international force of Iranian cinema and the artistic authority of work made under constraint. Editorial rationale: Panahi is ranked for making cinema a public act of witness with enduring international authority. |
| 11 | Wang Ning | Founder and Chairman, Pop Mart | New Consumer Founder | consumer IP, collectible culture, retail globalization and youth consumption | 96.9 | Annual contribution: Wang presided over Pop Mart's global Labubu-led surge, turning collectible toys into a consumer IP engine with mass fashion, retail and social-media reach. Editorial rationale: Wang is ranked for building one of Asia's clearest new consumer-culture exports. |
| 12 | Kasing Lung | Artist and creator of Labubu | Cultural and Consumer IP Creator | character design, art toys, luxury crossover and global youth culture | 96.7 | Annual contribution: Lung's Labubu became a global visual shorthand for collectible desire, crossing toy culture, street fashion, luxury collaboration and celebrity-driven social media. Editorial rationale: Lung is ranked for proving that Asian character design can create global emotional property, not merely merchandise. |
| 13 | Jiaozi (Yang Yu) | Writer and Director, Ne Zha 2 | Cultural Innovator | animation, mythology, Chinese cinema, box office scale and cultural exports | 96.5 | Annual contribution: Jiaozi's Ne Zha 2 became a record-setting animated film in 2025, placing Chinese mythology, domestic animation capability and non-English-language cinema at unprecedented global scale. Editorial rationale: Jiaozi is ranked for expanding the commercial and imaginative ceiling of Asian animation. |
| 14 | Maggie Kang | Creator, Co-writer and Co-director, KPop Demon Hunters | Cultural Innovator | animation, Korean cultural storytelling, streaming, music IP and diaspora creativity | 96.3 | Annual contribution: Kang's KPop Demon Hunters became a global streaming and music phenomenon, turning Korean cultural motifs, animation and pop storytelling into one of 2025's clearest cross-market hits. Editorial rationale: Kang is ranked for creating a new Asian-led animated cultural franchise with global audience force. |
| 15 | EJAE | Songwriter and vocalist | Cultural Innovator | songwriting, K-pop, animation soundtracks, streaming music and Asian-American creativity | 96.1 | Annual contribution: EJAE helped define the musical identity of KPop Demon Hunters, with songwriting and vocal work that carried the film's emotional center into global pop circulation. Editorial rationale: EJAE is ranked for making the soundtrack a primary engine of the year's most visible Asian diasporic animation success. |
| 16 | Lalisa Manobal | Artist, performer and actor | Cultural Innovator | music, television, fashion, Thai soft power and global fandom | 95.8 | Annual contribution: Lalisa expanded her 2025 influence through acting visibility, music, fashion and Thai cultural presence, becoming one of the most globally legible Southeast Asian entertainers. Editorial rationale: Lalisa is ranked for turning individual celebrity into Southeast Asian cultural visibility at global scale. |
| 17 | Jennie Kim | Artist and founder, Odd Atelier | Cultural Innovator | music, fashion, celebrity entrepreneurship and Korean cultural exports | 95.6 | Annual contribution: Jennie's 2025 solo era strengthened her position as a global pop and fashion figure, showing how K-pop alumni can build independent artistic and brand architectures. Editorial rationale: Jennie is ranked for building a more autonomous model of Asian pop celebrity. |
| 18 | Son Heung-min | Footballer and club captain | Cultural Innovator | football, Korean soft power, sports leadership and transnational fandom | 95.4 | Annual contribution: Son captained Tottenham to a 2025 Europa League title before opening a new chapter in Major League Soccer, closing a decade-long Premier League era with rare Asian football authority. Editorial rationale: Son is ranked for turning Asian football excellence into global leadership and enduring fan trust. |
| 19 | Alexandra Eala | Professional tennis player | Cultural Innovator | tennis, Southeast Asian sport, youth aspiration and women's athletics | 95.2 | Annual contribution: Eala's 2025 run delivered the Philippines a rare global tennis breakthrough, including major wins that moved her from promising prospect to international sporting symbol. Editorial rationale: Eala is ranked for converting individual breakthrough into national and regional sporting possibility. |
| 20 | Yang Hansen | Professional basketball player | Cultural Innovator | basketball, Chinese sport, youth development and global leagues | 95 | Annual contribution: Yang entered the NBA as a 2025 first-round draft pick, renewing Chinese presence in the world's most commercially powerful basketball league. Editorial rationale: Yang is ranked for re-opening a high-visibility pathway between Chinese basketball and the NBA. |
| 21 | Hwang Dong-hyuk | Creator, writer and director | Cultural Innovator | streaming drama, Korean storytelling, social allegory and global television IP | 94.8 | Annual contribution: Hwang brought Squid Game through its 2025 closing chapter, reinforcing the power of Korean narrative IP to command global streaming attention across language and geography. Editorial rationale: Hwang is ranked for building Korean narrative IP with durable worldwide recognition. |
| 22 | Lip-Bu Tan | Chief Executive Officer, Intel | Technology Executive | semiconductors, AI compute, foundry strategy and technology turnarounds | 94.6 | Annual contribution: Tan's 2025 appointment placed a Malaysian-born technology leader at the center of a semiconductor turnaround with direct implications for AI, foundry strategy and national industrial policy. Editorial rationale: Tan is ranked for taking responsibility for a company whose future matters to AI infrastructure and geopolitical technology balance. |
| 23 | Ilya Sutskever | Co-founder and Chief Scientist, Safe Superintelligence | Technology Founder | frontier AI, AI safety, research culture and technical leadership | 94.4 | Annual contribution: Sutskever kept safety-first frontier AI at the center of technical and capital conversations as Safe Superintelligence became one of the most closely watched AI laboratories. Editorial rationale: Sutskever is ranked for influencing how the AI field defines ambition and restraint at the frontier. |
| 24 | Daniel Gross | Co-founder, Safe Superintelligence | Technology Founder and Investor | frontier AI, venture networks, talent markets and company formation | 94.2 | Annual contribution: Gross helped position Safe Superintelligence within a high-stakes market for AI talent, capital and institutional design, extending his influence from investing into frontier company-building. Editorial rationale: Gross is ranked for helping build the organizational environment around safety-focused frontier AI. |
| 25 | Assaf Rappaport | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Wiz | Technology Founder | cloud security, enterprise software, cyber infrastructure and strategic acquisitions | 94 | Annual contribution: Rappaport led Wiz through a landmark 2025 cloud-security acquisition agreement, underscoring the global importance of Israeli cybersecurity entrepreneurship. Editorial rationale: Rappaport is ranked for proving that Israeli cyber founders can build companies of global platform consequence. |
| 26 | Ami Luttwak | Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, Wiz | Technology Founder | cloud security, enterprise risk, cybersecurity architecture and technical leadership | 93.8 | Annual contribution: Luttwak's technical leadership at Wiz helped make cloud security posture and risk visibility a board-level enterprise priority in 2025. Editorial rationale: Luttwak is ranked for turning cloud-security engineering into a strategic enterprise capability. |
| 27 | Aman Sanger | Co-founder, Anysphere | Technology Founder | AI coding, developer tools, productivity software and technical work redesign | 93.5 | Annual contribution: Sanger helped build Cursor into a defining AI-native coding environment, making software development one of the clearest commercial frontiers for generative AI. Editorial rationale: Sanger is ranked for making AI-native development tools central to the future of engineering work. |
| 28 | Sualeh Asif | Co-founder, Anysphere | Technology Founder | AI coding, product design, developer workflows and generative software tools | 93.3 | Annual contribution: Asif helped scale Cursor's product relevance in 2025 as AI-assisted programming moved from novelty into a serious developer productivity layer. Editorial rationale: Asif is ranked for helping convert AI coding into a credible operating environment for developers. |
| 29 | Xiao Hong | Founder, Butterfly Effect | Technology Founder | AI agents, productivity software, Chinese startup globalization and product-led AI adoption | 93.1 | Annual contribution: Xiao brought Manus into global attention in 2025, making autonomous AI agents one of the year's most discussed product categories. Editorial rationale: Xiao is ranked for making agentic AI a tangible consumer and enterprise product conversation. |
| 30 | Ji Yichao | Co-founder and Chief Scientist, Manus | Technology Founder | AI agents, computer-use interfaces, product research and technical entrepreneurship | 92.9 | Annual contribution: Ji became one of the visible technical voices behind Manus, framing the product as a step toward computer-using AI agents for research, analysis and task execution. Editorial rationale: Ji is ranked for making the AI-agent interface feel closer to a practical product category. |
| 31 | Scott Wu | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Cognition | Technology Founder | AI agents, software engineering, enterprise automation and developer productivity | 92.7 | Annual contribution: Wu advanced the market for AI software-engineering agents as Cognition pushed Devin into enterprise attention and made autonomous coding a serious commercial category. Editorial rationale: Wu is ranked for shaping one of the most consequential application layers in generative AI. |
| 32 | Adarsh Hiremath | Co-founder, Mercor | Technology Founder | AI recruiting, labor markets, talent evaluation and work infrastructure | 92.5 | Annual contribution: Hiremath helped scale Mercor as AI talent assessment and workforce matching became central to how companies hired for model-era work. Editorial rationale: Hiremath is ranked for linking AI adoption to the future of hiring and skills verification. |
| 33 | Surya Midha | Co-founder, Mercor | Technology Founder | AI labor platforms, recruiting systems, workforce data and startup execution | 92.3 | Annual contribution: Midha helped build Mercor into a high-visibility platform for matching technical talent with AI-era work, reflecting a new employment layer around frontier technology. Editorial rationale: Midha is ranked for building a company at the point where AI demand meets human capability. |
| 34 | Yang Zhilin | Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Moonshot AI | Technology Founder | large language models, Chinese AI, assistant products and model commercialization | 92.1 | Annual contribution: Yang kept Moonshot AI in the front rank of China's model companies, with Kimi helping define the domestic market for long-context and general-purpose AI assistants. Editorial rationale: Yang is ranked for keeping Chinese foundation-model entrepreneurship at global attention level. |
| 35 | Zhang Peng | Chief Executive Officer, Zhipu AI | Technology Executive | large language models, open AI ecosystems, enterprise AI and Chinese research commercialization | 91.9 | Annual contribution: Zhang helped Zhipu AI sustain its position in China's frontier-model landscape, emphasizing open model ecosystems, enterprise deployments and domestic AI capability. Editorial rationale: Zhang is ranked for building model infrastructure with both research and enterprise relevance. |
| 36 | Yan Junjie | Founder and Chief Executive Officer, MiniMax | Technology Founder | multimodal AI, consumer AI, model applications and Chinese technology entrepreneurship | 91.7 | Annual contribution: Yan positioned MiniMax as a major Chinese AI startup across text, audio, video and consumer-facing model applications in 2025. Editorial rationale: Yan is ranked for connecting model development to consumer and creative AI use cases. |
| 37 | Arvind Krishna | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, IBM | Technology Executive | enterprise AI, hybrid cloud, automation and technology services | 91.4 | Annual contribution: Krishna kept IBM focused on enterprise AI, hybrid cloud and automation, reinforcing the importance of trusted systems for regulated industries. Editorial rationale: Krishna is ranked for making enterprise trust and deployment discipline central to the AI cycle. |
| 38 | Hock Tan | President and Chief Executive Officer, Broadcom | Technology Executive | semiconductors, AI networking, data centers and infrastructure economics | 91.2 | Annual contribution: Tan kept Broadcom at the heart of AI infrastructure demand, with networking, custom silicon and data-center components becoming essential to the scaling of compute. Editorial rationale: Tan is ranked for turning infrastructure execution into strategic leverage in the AI era. |
| 39 | C.C. Wei | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, TSMC | Technology Executive | semiconductor manufacturing, AI chips, supply chains and Taiwan's strategic economy | 91 | Annual contribution: Wei led TSMC through another year in which AI chips, advanced nodes and global fabrication strategy made Taiwan indispensable to technology supply chains. Editorial rationale: Wei is ranked for stewarding the industrial foundation of the AI economy. |
| 40 | Young Liu | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Foxconn | Technology Executive | electronics manufacturing, AI servers, mobility supply chains and industrial transformation | 90.8 | Annual contribution: Liu kept Foxconn positioned around AI servers, electronics manufacturing and mobility ambitions, extending Taiwan's manufacturing relevance into new infrastructure categories. Editorial rationale: Liu is ranked for connecting manufacturing capacity to the physical demands of the AI cycle. |
| 41 | Nikesh Arora | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Palo Alto Networks | Technology Executive | cybersecurity, enterprise platforms, AI defense and technology consolidation | 90.6 | Annual contribution: Arora kept cybersecurity consolidation and AI-enabled defense at the center of enterprise technology spending in 2025. Editorial rationale: Arora is ranked for making cybersecurity a core operating system for enterprise AI adoption. |
| 42 | Sridhar Ramaswamy | Chief Executive Officer, Snowflake | Technology Executive | data cloud, enterprise AI, analytics infrastructure and software leadership | 90.4 | Annual contribution: Ramaswamy led Snowflake through the AI data-cloud cycle, emphasizing that model adoption depends on governed, accessible and commercially useful data. Editorial rationale: Ramaswamy is ranked for placing data architecture at the center of AI deployment. |
| 43 | Arvind Jain | Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Glean | Technology Founder | enterprise search, workplace AI, knowledge systems and productivity software | 90.2 | Annual contribution: Jain advanced Glean as enterprise AI search became a practical way for companies to make internal knowledge usable across teams and workflows. Editorial rationale: Jain is ranked for making workplace intelligence a deployable enterprise product. |
| 44 | Melanie Perkins | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Canva | Technology Founder | design software, creator tools, workplace productivity and visual communication | 90 | Annual contribution: Perkins kept Canva central to the democratization of design as AI features, workplace adoption and creator workflows converged in 2025. Editorial rationale: Perkins is ranked for scaling creative software into a global operating layer for communication. |
| 45 | Lucy Guo | Founder, Passes; co-founder, Scale AI | Technology Founder and Creator Economy Builder | creator economy, startup culture, AI wealth creation and digital monetization | 89.8 | Annual contribution: Guo remained a visible young founder at the intersection of AI wealth creation, creator monetization and platform entrepreneurship. Editorial rationale: Guo is ranked for turning founder visibility into a broader signal about technology, wealth and creators. |
| 46 | Miranda Qu | Co-founder, Xiaohongshu | Technology Founder | social commerce, lifestyle communities, platform globalization and creator culture | 89.5 | Annual contribution: Qu's platform became an unexpected global signal during the 2025 TikTok uncertainty, as RedNote briefly drew large international attention. Editorial rationale: Qu is ranked for helping create a platform where commerce, search, lifestyle and community operate together. |
| 47 | Charlwin Mao | Co-founder, Xiaohongshu | Technology Founder | social platforms, social commerce, recommendation systems and cross-border attention | 89.3 | Annual contribution: Mao's co-founded platform entered a rare cross-border visibility moment in 2025, making Xiaohongshu part of a wider debate about social media, trust and cultural exchange. Editorial rationale: Mao is ranked for co-creating one of Asia's most important lifestyle-community platforms. |
| 48 | Deepinder Goyal | Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Eternal | New Consumer Founder | food delivery, quick commerce, consumer platforms and Indian urban infrastructure | 89.1 | Annual contribution: Goyal's portfolio moved deeper into quick commerce, food delivery and adjacent consumer infrastructure, making Eternal a defining Indian platform company in 2025. Editorial rationale: Goyal is ranked for turning Indian consumer behavior into a multi-vertical platform strategy. |
| 49 | Albinder Dhindsa | Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Blinkit | New Consumer Founder | quick commerce, last-mile logistics, urban consumption and retail technology | 88.9 | Annual contribution: Dhindsa's Blinkit remained one of the clearest examples of quick commerce becoming an everyday infrastructure category for Indian cities. Editorial rationale: Dhindsa is ranked for helping define India's most aggressive consumer-logistics category. |
| 50 | Aadit Palicha | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Zepto | Young Entrepreneur | quick commerce, youth entrepreneurship, grocery logistics and Indian startup culture | 88.7 | Annual contribution: Palicha kept Zepto at the center of India's quick-commerce race, representing a founder generation that builds operationally intense companies at unusual speed. Editorial rationale: Palicha is ranked for making quick commerce a generational startup category in India. |
| 51 | Kaivalya Vohra | Co-founder, Zepto | Young Entrepreneur | quick commerce, logistics systems, Indian consumer behavior and youth entrepreneurship | 88.5 | Annual contribution: Vohra remained central to Zepto's young-founder story as the company continued to shape expectations around instant grocery, dense logistics and urban consumer demand. Editorial rationale: Vohra is ranked for helping convert an urban consumer habit into a high-growth operating model. |
| 52 | Tarun Mehta | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Ather Energy | Technology Founder | electric two-wheelers, mobility, battery systems and Indian manufacturing | 88.3 | Annual contribution: Mehta led Ather through a public-market and policy-facing phase in 2025, keeping engineering-led electric two-wheelers central to India's mobility transition. Editorial rationale: Mehta is ranked for making Indian EV entrepreneurship technically credible and institutionally visible. |
| 53 | Swapnil Jain | Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, Ather Energy | Technology Founder | EV engineering, battery systems, embedded software and charging infrastructure | 88.1 | Annual contribution: Jain's technical leadership remained central to Ather's scooter, battery, software and charging ecosystem as India's EV market became more competitive. Editorial rationale: Jain is ranked for helping turn electric two-wheelers into a serious technology platform. |
| 54 | Harshil Mathur | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Razorpay | Financial Technology Founder | digital payments, business banking, fintech infrastructure and Indian startups | 87.9 | Annual contribution: Mathur kept Razorpay at the center of India's digital payments and business-finance infrastructure as the company prepared for a more public institutional phase. Editorial rationale: Mathur is ranked for helping institutionalize digital payments for Indian enterprise. |
| 55 | Shashank Kumar | Co-founder and Managing Director, Razorpay | Financial Technology Founder | fintech platforms, payment gateways, SME finance and business software | 87.7 | Annual contribution: Kumar helped expand Razorpay's payments and financial stack for Indian businesses, reinforcing the company's place in the country's startup and SME infrastructure. Editorial rationale: Kumar is ranked for building financial technology that supports India's business formalization. |
| 56 | Peyush Bansal | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Lenskart | New Consumer Founder | eyewear, omnichannel retail, consumer technology and Indian brand globalization | 87.5 | Annual contribution: Bansal kept Lenskart on a globalizing path in eyewear, combining retail, manufacturing, technology and brand execution across Asian and international markets. Editorial rationale: Bansal is ranked for scaling an Indian consumer brand with international operating ambition. |
| 57 | Falguni Nayar | Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Nykaa | New Consumer Founder | beauty commerce, lifestyle retail, women's entrepreneurship and Indian consumer brands | 87.2 | Annual contribution: Nayar continued to shape India's beauty and lifestyle market, proving the durability of founder-led consumer commerce in a more demanding public-market environment. Editorial rationale: Nayar is ranked for giving India's beauty economy a scaled, founder-led digital institution. |
| 58 | Vineeta Singh | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, SUGAR Cosmetics | New Consumer Founder | beauty brands, youth consumption, founder-led media and women's entrepreneurship | 87 | Annual contribution: Singh kept SUGAR visible in India's competitive beauty market, connecting youth-focused branding, offline expansion and founder personality. Editorial rationale: Singh is ranked for building consumer-brand authority through product, media and distribution. |
| 59 | Ghazal Alagh | Co-founder, Honasa Consumer | New Consumer Founder | personal care, D2C brands, maternal consumer trust and Indian consumer products | 86.8 | Annual contribution: Alagh remained a visible figure in India's personal-care economy, representing the transition from digital-first challenger brands to broader consumer-goods platforms. Editorial rationale: Alagh is ranked for turning personal-care trust into a scalable consumer platform. |
| 60 | Anthony Tan | Co-founder and Group Chief Executive Officer, Grab | Technology Founder | superapps, mobility, digital payments and Southeast Asian consumer infrastructure | 86.6 | Annual contribution: Tan kept Grab central to Southeast Asia's everyday digital economy through mobility, delivery, payments and financial services. Editorial rationale: Tan is ranked for building a regional platform that functions as daily-life infrastructure. |
| 61 | Tan Hooi Ling | Co-founder, Grab | Technology Founder | Southeast Asian platforms, mobility, inclusion and founder governance | 86.4 | Annual contribution: Tan's co-founder legacy remained central to Grab's 2025 identity as a Southeast Asian platform shaped by regional operating realities rather than imported models. Editorial rationale: Tan is ranked for helping create a Southeast Asian technology company with durable public recognition. |
| 62 | Forrest Li | Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Sea Limited | Technology Founder | e-commerce, gaming, digital finance and Southeast Asian internet ecosystems | 86.2 | Annual contribution: Li's Sea remained one of Southeast Asia's most important technology groups, balancing e-commerce, gaming and financial services in a more disciplined growth environment. Editorial rationale: Li is ranked for sustaining one of Asia's most consequential internet groups outside China and India. |
| 63 | Patrick Walujo | Chief Executive Officer, GoTo Group | Technology Executive and Investor | Indonesian technology, mobility, e-commerce, fintech and platform turnarounds | 86 | Annual contribution: Walujo continued the operational reset of GoTo in 2025, focusing one of Indonesia's most important digital platforms on discipline, profitability and strategic clarity. Editorial rationale: Walujo is ranked for shaping the next operating phase of Indonesia's digital economy. |
| 64 | Neil Shen | Founding and Managing Partner, HongShan | Investor | venture capital, Chinese technology, hard tech, healthcare and founder ecosystems | 85.8 | Annual contribution: Shen remained one of Asia's most influential technology investors as capital allocation in China adjusted to AI, hard technology, healthcare and global uncertainty. Editorial rationale: Shen is ranked for shaping Asian venture capital at institutional scale. |
| 65 | Jenny Lee | Senior Managing Partner, Granite Asia | Investor | venture capital, deep tech, Asian startups and women in investing | 85.6 | Annual contribution: Lee remained a defining investor in Asia's technology market, with influence across deep tech, enterprise software, consumer technology and cross-border capital. Editorial rationale: Lee is ranked for bringing institutional credibility to Asian technology investing. |
| 66 | Haseeb Qureshi | Managing Partner, Dragonfly | Young Investor | crypto, venture capital, stablecoins, decentralized infrastructure and financial technology | 85.3 | Annual contribution: Qureshi remained an influential crypto investor and public thinker as digital assets moved through a new phase of institutional attention and regulatory negotiation. Editorial rationale: Qureshi is ranked for shaping how founders and investors interpret the next institutional phase of crypto. |
| 67 | Yat Siu | Co-founder and Executive Chairman, Animoca Brands | Technology Founder and Investor | Web3, gaming, digital property rights and creator economies | 85.1 | Annual contribution: Siu continued to advocate for open digital property, gaming assets and Web3 culture as blockchain gaming searched for durable consumer models. Editorial rationale: Siu is ranked for keeping digital property rights central to the future of gaming and creator economies. |
| 68 | Anu Hariharan | Founder, Avra | Investor | growth investing, founder coaching, AI startups and diaspora capital networks | 84.9 | Annual contribution: Hariharan continued to influence founder development and growth investing through a new independent platform focused on ambitious technology companies. Editorial rationale: Hariharan is ranked for shaping how high-growth founders access capital, advice and global networks. |
| 69 | Isha Ambani | Director, Reliance Retail Ventures | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | retail, consumer brands, family enterprise succession and Indian consumption | 84.7 | Annual contribution: Ambani remained central to Reliance's consumer and retail ambitions, linking Indian household consumption, brand partnerships, digital commerce and family-enterprise transition. Editorial rationale: Ambani is ranked for representing family-enterprise succession at national consumer scale. |
| 70 | Akash Ambani | Chairman, Reliance Jio Infocomm | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | telecommunications, digital infrastructure, AI services and family enterprise transition | 84.5 | Annual contribution: Ambani continued to steer Jio's telecommunications and digital platform role as India's data economy, AI services and connectivity ambitions expanded. Editorial rationale: Ambani is ranked for holding a next-generation mandate over core digital infrastructure. |
| 71 | Karan Adani | Managing Director, Adani Ports and SEZ | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | ports, logistics, infrastructure, trade corridors and family enterprise succession | 84.3 | Annual contribution: Adani remained a central next-generation executive in ports, logistics and infrastructure as India continued to position itself as a manufacturing and trade corridor. Editorial rationale: Adani is ranked for representing the next generation of Indian infrastructure leadership. |
| 72 | Roshni Nadar Malhotra | Chairperson, HCLTech | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | IT services, philanthropy, education, women in leadership and enterprise succession | 84.1 | Annual contribution: Nadar Malhotra continued to combine technology leadership, philanthropy and education-focused institution building at one of India's major IT services groups. Editorial rationale: Nadar Malhotra is ranked for aligning enterprise succession with long-term civic investment. |
| 73 | Nisaba Godrej | Executive Chairperson, Godrej Consumer Products | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | consumer goods, governance, family enterprise succession and emerging-market brands | 83.9 | Annual contribution: Godrej continued to shape an Indian consumer-goods company with global emerging-market reach, brand discipline and professionalized family governance. Editorial rationale: Godrej is ranked for advancing a durable Indian consumer company through disciplined leadership. |
| 74 | Adar Poonawalla | Chief Executive Officer, Serum Institute of India | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | vaccines, biomanufacturing, global health and family enterprise succession | 83.7 | Annual contribution: Poonawalla remained one of the world's most important vaccine-manufacturing executives, keeping Indian biomanufacturing central to global health capacity. Editorial rationale: Poonawalla is ranked for making Indian life-sciences manufacturing globally consequential. |
| 75 | Jay Y. Lee | Executive Chairman, Samsung Electronics | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | semiconductors, smartphones, memory chips, AI hardware and Korean industry | 83.5 | Annual contribution: Lee continued to steer Samsung through the AI semiconductor cycle, memory-market pressure and strategic technology competition. Editorial rationale: Lee is ranked for the scale of Samsung's role in the hardware foundations of digital life. |
| 76 | Chung Euisun | Executive Chair, Hyundai Motor Group | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | mobility, electric vehicles, hydrogen, robotics and Korean manufacturing | 83.3 | Annual contribution: Chung kept Hyundai positioned across EVs, hybrids, hydrogen, robotics and global manufacturing as mobility markets reset around technology and cost discipline. Editorial rationale: Chung is ranked for keeping Asian automotive leadership relevant in a volatile mobility transition. |
| 77 | Koo Kwang-mo | Chairman, LG Group | Next-Generation Family Enterprise Leader | batteries, electronics, displays, materials and Korean industrial succession | 83 | Annual contribution: Koo continued to lead LG through batteries, electronics, displays and advanced materials, keeping the group tied to the physical systems behind AI and mobility. Editorial rationale: Koo is ranked for connecting family-enterprise leadership with the infrastructure needs of future technologies. |
| 78 | Usha Vance | Second Lady of the United States | Public and Cultural Figure | diaspora representation, public culture, law, family visibility and political symbolism | 82.8 | Annual contribution: Vance entered one of the most visible family roles in American public life in 2025, increasing the presence of Indian-origin identity in national political symbolism. Editorial rationale: Vance is ranked for the representational weight attached to her position in American public life. |
| 79 | Ahmed al-Sharaa | Transitional President of Syria | Public Leader | state transition, regional diplomacy, security, reconstruction and West Asian politics | 82.6 | Annual contribution: Al-Sharaa became Syria's transitional president in 2025, making him central to one of West Asia's most consequential and contested post-conflict state transitions. Editorial rationale: Al-Sharaa is ranked for the scale of regional and institutional consequences attached to Syria's transition. |
| 80 | Joseph Aoun | President of Lebanon | Public Leader | state institutions, security, economic stabilization and Lebanese public life | 82.4 | Annual contribution: Aoun's 2025 presidency marked a critical attempt to restore institutional function in Lebanon after prolonged political paralysis. Editorial rationale: Aoun is ranked for assuming leadership in a fragile institutional environment with regional implications. |
| 81 | Nawaf Salam | Prime Minister of Lebanon | Public Institution Leader | law, diplomacy, governance, reform and Lebanese institutions | 82.2 | Annual contribution: Salam brought international legal and diplomatic credibility into Lebanon's 2025 government formation, becoming a central figure in efforts to restore governance. Editorial rationale: Salam is ranked for linking legal authority, diplomacy and reform expectations in public office. |
| 82 | Malala Yousafzai | Education advocate and producer | Social Innovator | girls' education, human rights, media advocacy and youth leadership | 82 | Annual contribution: Yousafzai continued to make girls' education a global policy and cultural issue, using advocacy, media and institutional partnerships to keep attention on access and safety. Editorial rationale: Yousafzai is ranked for sustaining one of the world's clearest youth-led education movements. |
| 83 | Nadia Murad | Human rights advocate and founder | Social Innovator | survivor justice, human rights, Yazidi communities and post-conflict recovery | 81.8 | Annual contribution: Murad continued to advocate for survivors of conflict-related sexual violence and for the reconstruction of Yazidi communities affected by genocide. Editorial rationale: Murad is ranked for keeping survivor justice present in global human-rights work. |
| 84 | Bisan Owda | Journalist, filmmaker and digital witness | Social and Cultural Innovator | journalism, digital witnessing, conflict memory and Palestinian public voice | 81.6 | Annual contribution: Owda remained one of the most visible Palestinian digital witnesses, using first-person reporting to make civilian life, displacement and survival legible to international audiences. Editorial rationale: Owda is ranked for showing how independent digital journalism can shape international attention. |
| 85 | Sophia Kianni | Climate advocate and founder | Social Innovator | climate communication, youth advocacy, multilingual education and civic technology | 81.4 | Annual contribution: Kianni continued to connect climate communication, youth advocacy and multilingual access, arguing that climate knowledge must be available beyond English-speaking audiences. Editorial rationale: Kianni is ranked for treating climate literacy as an equity issue and a mobilization tool. |
| 86 | Waad Al-Kateab | Filmmaker and human rights advocate | Social and Cultural Innovator | documentary film, human rights, Syrian memory and public advocacy | 81.2 | Annual contribution: Al-Kateab continued to use documentary practice and public advocacy to keep civilian experience, displacement and human dignity visible in global conflict narratives. Editorial rationale: Al-Kateab is ranked for turning personal documentation into durable public conscience. |
| 87 | Akiko Iwasaki | Immunologist and Sterling Professor | Science and Health Leader | immunology, public science, long COVID, vaccines and biomedical communication | 80.9 | Annual contribution: Iwasaki remained a leading public scientific voice on immunity, respiratory disease, long COVID and the translation of immunology into practical health understanding. Editorial rationale: Iwasaki is ranked for making advanced immunology publicly understandable and institutionally relevant. |
| 88 | Ugur Sahin | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, BioNTech | Science and Technology Founder | mRNA medicine, oncology, biotechnology and translational science | 80.7 | Annual contribution: Sahin continued to advance mRNA and immunotherapy beyond pandemic response, keeping cancer vaccines and programmable medicine in the global biomedical conversation. Editorial rationale: Sahin is ranked for keeping Asian-origin scientific entrepreneurship central to the future of oncology. |
| 89 | Ozlem Tureci | Co-founder and Chief Medical Officer, BioNTech | Science and Technology Founder | oncology, mRNA medicine, clinical science and women in biotechnology | 80.5 | Annual contribution: Tureci remained central to BioNTech's clinical and scientific direction as the company pursued immunotherapy and mRNA applications beyond infectious disease. Editorial rationale: Tureci is ranked for advancing the clinical credibility of programmable medicine. |
| 90 | Shohei Ohtani | Baseball player | Cultural Innovator | baseball, Japanese soft power, sports marketing and elite performance | 80.3 | Annual contribution: Ohtani's 2025 return to two-way play reinforced his singular position in global baseball and kept Japanese sporting excellence at the center of North American sports culture. Editorial rationale: Ohtani is ranked for continuing to redefine the limits of modern professional sport. |
| 91 | Rohit Sharma | Cricketer and India ODI captain | Cultural Innovator | cricket, Indian sport, leadership, mass fandom and national culture | 80.1 | Annual contribution: Sharma led India to the 2025 Champions Trophy title, giving the world's largest cricket market another global tournament moment. Editorial rationale: Sharma is ranked for delivering elite sporting leadership at the scale of Indian public attention. |
| 92 | Yuki Tsunoda | Formula One driver | Cultural Innovator | Formula One, Japanese sport, motorsport fandom and global sponsorship culture | 79.9 | Annual contribution: Tsunoda's 2025 promotion to Red Bull Racing made him one of the most visible Japanese drivers in Formula One and elevated Asian presence in the sport's highest-pressure environment. Editorial rationale: Tsunoda is ranked for carrying Japanese motorsport representation into Formula One's front-line conversation. |
| 93 | Roki Sasaki | Baseball pitcher | Cultural Innovator | baseball, Japanese player development, MLB globalization and youth sport | 79.7 | Annual contribution: Sasaki's 2025 move to the Dodgers brought another elite Japanese pitching talent into Major League Baseball and deepened the Japan-MLB talent corridor. Editorial rationale: Sasaki is ranked for renewing Japan's status as a major supplier of elite baseball talent. |
| 94 | Abdukodir Khusanov | Footballer | Cultural Innovator | football, Central Asian sport, Premier League visibility and youth aspiration | 79.5 | Annual contribution: Khusanov joined Manchester City in 2025, becoming a breakthrough figure for Uzbek football in the Premier League era. Editorial rationale: Khusanov is ranked for opening a higher-visibility pathway for Central Asian players. |
| 95 | Neeraj Chopra | Javelin thrower | Cultural Innovator | athletics, Indian sport, Olympic legacy and elite performance culture | 79.3 | Annual contribution: Chopra crossed the 90-meter mark in 2025 and remained one of Asia's most globally recognizable track-and-field athletes. Editorial rationale: Chopra is ranked for making Indian athletics credible on the highest global stage. |
| 96 | Zhang Weili | Mixed martial artist | Cultural Innovator | combat sports, Chinese sport, women's athletics and global martial arts culture | 79 | Annual contribution: Zhang remained a defining Chinese figure in global combat sports, defending elite relevance in UFC competition and extending Asian visibility in mixed martial arts. Editorial rationale: Zhang is ranked for sustaining Asian authority in one of the world's most competitive individual sports. |
| 97 | Divya Deshmukh | Chess player | Cultural Innovator | chess, Indian sport, women's competition and youth excellence | 78.8 | Annual contribution: Deshmukh won the 2025 Women's World Cup, earned the Grandmaster title and entered the Candidates pathway, becoming one of India's most important young chess figures. Editorial rationale: Deshmukh is ranked for giving Indian women's chess a new world-class benchmark. |
| 98 | Bodhana Sivanandan | Chess player | Cultural Innovator | chess, youth excellence, diaspora talent and girls in sport | 78.6 | Annual contribution: Sivanandan became one of the most extraordinary youth chess stories of 2025, setting age-related records and defeating far more experienced opposition. Editorial rationale: Sivanandan is ranked for turning youth performance into a global chess story. |
| 99 | Ocean Vuong | Poet and novelist | Cultural Innovator | literature, migration narratives, queer writing and Southeast Asian diaspora culture | 78.4 | Annual contribution: Vuong's 2025 novel extended his role as one of the most internationally visible Vietnamese-American literary voices, linking migration, class, care and memory. Editorial rationale: Vuong is ranked for expanding the emotional and literary range of Asian diasporic storytelling. |
| 100 | R. F. Kuang | Novelist and scholar | Cultural Innovator | literature, speculative fiction, academia, screen rights and Asian-American cultural criticism | 78.2 | Annual contribution: Kuang's 2025 publication cycle kept her at the center of contemporary speculative fiction, academia-facing satire and Asian-American literary debate. Editorial rationale: Kuang is ranked for turning literary production into a broad cultural and intellectual franchise. |
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