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Good Worldwide


GOOD Worldwide Inc., is a United States-based company with offices in Los Angeles, New York, and Seattle that reports on businesses and non-profits. GOOD produces a website, a quarterly magazine, online videos, and events. Content covered includes environmental issues, education, urban planning, design, politics, culture, technology, and health. Good Worldwide Inc. is the consolidation of originally separate brands: Reason Pictures, GOOD magazine, and GOOD Digital, in partnership with Causes, a Facebook/MySpace app promoting donations of time and money to charities and non-profits; Goodrec and Govit, an application that connects US citizens with their elected representatives. GOOD Worldwide Inc. is made up of three organizations: GOOD/Media, GOOD/Community and GOOD/Corps.

GOOD/Media produces an online news site, www.good.is, and quarterly print magazine, GOOD magazine. The magazine was started in 2006. The website receives about 10.1 MM unique visitors to its website each month. In June 2012, most of its editors were fired. The firings were "for strategic reasons" to shift GOOD's focus to its social network. Eight former GOOD magazine editors and writers raised funds on Kickstarter to create the one-shot magazine Tomorrow before going their separate ways.

GOOD resumed publication of the magazine in 2014, with a new design and format in March 2015. In 2017, the magazine received a National Magazine Award in the Personal Service category for the Winter issue, ″What Can He Really Do, What Can We Do About It?″

GOOD Corps is GOOD Worldwide Inc’s social impact consultancy, specializing in developing initiatives and powerful calls to action. ”

GOOD Corps major projects include DICK'S Sporting Goods' "Sports Matter" and Carnegie Corporation's 100Kin10.

GOOD was founded in 2006 by Ben Goldhirsh (son of Inc. magazine founder Bernie Goldhirsh) who wanted to create a "free press for the critical idealist." Eschewing experienced editors, he hired friends from college and high school, including Al Gore's son, Al Gore III, to create a media company characterized by "both bold graphic style and an unconventional approach to business." The team was initially criticized by some industry experts, such as magazine executive and publishing expert Chip Block, who said, "This sounds a lot to me like vanity publishing, a bunch of kids sitting around with something they think is a really good idea, and one of them has a lot of money." Others in the industry praised the magazine's design and concept upon its launch.


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