Our Mission

Everyone builds. Almost no one gets recognized for it.

Every person who has ever built something — a company, a restaurant, a product, a song, a book, a practice — has experienced the same moment. The work is real. The results are real. And the world has no idea.

RECOGNITION

The core issue

This is not a marketing problem.

Marketing gets you attention. Recognition gets you treated differently — by investors, by partners, by the market, by the world. These are not the same thing.

What recognition actually looks like.

There is a difference between being visible and being recognized. Visibility is metrics on platforms you don't own. Recognition is infrastructure you carry everywhere.

01 Forbes

Forbes writes about your company. Every investor treats you differently before the meeting starts.

02 Google

A Knowledge Panel appears next to your name. Every stranger forms an opinion in three seconds.

03 Wikipedia

Wikipedia documents your work. The world accepts it as established fact.

The system that delivered this broke over a decade ago.

Press — the oldest and most powerful form of public credibility — used to function as a bridge. Journalists sought out stories. Publications documented the people and organizations doing work worth knowing about.

Whether it was a global enterprise announcing a market-defining acquisition or an independent founder building something remarkable, the path to recognition existed. The outlets were accessible. The process worked.

The internet changed the mechanics of that system permanently. Outlets went from actively seeking stories to filtering millions of inbound pitches.

The agencies that were supposed to connect organizations to these outlets became intermediaries — adding cost, removing transparency, and delivering uncertainty. Access to press became fragmented, opaque, and unreliable at every level.

Enterprise

Fortune 500 companies with entire communications departments found their coverage scattered and unstrategic. Multiple markets, no coordinated media presence.

Growth Stage

Agencies that charged retainers and delivered excuses. World-class products with zero presence in the publications their investors read.

Founders

A system that didn't know they existed. Decades of experience with no public authority beyond a LinkedIn profile.

The gap between what is being built and what the world knows about is wider now than it has ever been.

MXNN Media was built to close that gap.

The company was founded on a principle the rest of the industry abandoned: direct relationships with the people who own and operate press outlets.

Not wire services. Not syndication platforms. Not third-party intermediaries. Direct access to the journalists, editors, contributors, and publication owners behind 4,000+ outlets across every major industry worldwide.

These relationships were built over years of private practice — one conversation at a time, one outlet at a time. What emerged was an understanding that the outlets themselves were never the problem. The people behind Forbes, Bloomberg, Rolling Stone, TechCrunch, Vogue, and thousands of other publications are deeply committed to the work they do.

The breakdown occurred in the infrastructure that was supposed to connect them to the stories worth telling. MXNN Media rebuilt that infrastructure.

Not by disrupting the outlets. Not by replacing journalists. By building a platform that restores the connection between the people doing work worth recognizing and the institutions designed to recognize them.

About MXNN Media Our History Leadership