Entrepreneur

Despite the Dangers, This Founder Is Staying in War-Torn Syria to Help Entrepreneurs

Sami Ismail refuses to leave, wanting to instead continue supporting local entrepreneurs who are trying to succeed.
Source: Courtesy of Sami Ismail
Courtesy of Sami Ismail

This article is part of our 50 Most Daring list. To see who else made our 2017 list, head over this page.

Entrepreneurship is challenging in any context. But for Sami Ismail, it’s challenging in a way few others can understand: His company, Intellect Events, which puts on cultural, business and networking events for entrepreneurs, is based in Damascus, Syria. “We’re living in a war zone,” Ismail says. 

Ismail, 27, is a scene, having launched his first company, Findbook, in 2010. He conceived of it as a sort of Amazon for Syria, but when a promotional book fair for the brand brought in more money and buzz than the actual brand did, Ismail realized the entrepreneur community was hungrier for intellectual events and safe spaces to gather and network. So he closed Findbook and launched with a partner in 2011.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur2 min read
Make A Million Dollars In A Weekend?
Noah Kagan was the 30th employee at Facebook, the fourth employee at mint.com, and has started many successful businesses of his own. Now, his company AppSumo does nearly $100 million in annual revenue. Along the journey, he says he’s discovered some
Entrepreneur10 min read
Top Franchises for Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
A franchise is most successful when it reaches a wide variety of communities—and to do that best, it needs to bring a diversity of voices and experiences into its franchisee and corporate-level ranks. That’s why, for the third year, we’ve chosen the
Entrepreneur2 min read
The Skills You Never Knew You Needed
“I underestimated the importance of discernment. Early on, we had what seemed like a dream client—but red flags started to emerge. They were going through some internal strife, and their executives were contradicting each other, which bled onto our t

Related Books & Audiobooks