Anushree Jindal
I'm a builder, dealmaker, connector, and artist.
I've spent most of my career at the early edges of things — joining digital advertising when it was still proving itself, and staying drawn to the parts of any industry where the frameworks don't yet exist. What makes the work I've done slightly unusual isn't any single project — it's the combination of where I've sat: inside one of the companies that helped shape digital advertising from the beginning, across three continents, alongside the founders, CMOs, and CFOs deciding what the next chapter of commerce looks like.
I currently lead enterprise partnerships at Google, where my work sits at the intersection of commercial strategy, product partnerships, and senior executive trust. Most of my time goes toward the relationships and frameworks that move large organizations forward — whether that's building a new partnership forum, helping a retailer rethink how it measures growth, or working alongside a founder preparing to go public.
Education and access to opportunity matter deeply to me. They're the reason I'm able to do the work I do — and they're the thing I most want to give back to others. I co-founded the Asian Googler Network for Sales because representation in senior leadership matters more than people sometimes admit, and I've stayed involved since 2016. I've spent years coaching women entrepreneurs on digital marketing fundamentals, including a cohort I had the chance to host at the President's House in India. I care about who gets to sit in the rooms where decisions happen — and about making those rooms wider.
Outside work, I'm drawn to culture in most of its forms — art, architecture, design, music, food, and the conversations at the edges of all of them. I make art, mostly printmaking, lino printing, and mixed media; I'd call myself an occasional artist with a long-term dream of building a real studio and a thriving creative practice. I read widely and constantly, usually working through several books at once across unrelated subjects (this week, the economics of drug cartels and the legacy of the Ottoman Empire). I spend long Saturdays in art museums, dessert and coffee crawls, in conversations with strangers, and chasing whatever subject has caught my attention this month — recently, CRISPR gene editing, while helping my nephew with a school project. I follow my curiosity wherever it leads.
I grew up in India, moved to New York in 2016, earned my MBA from The Wharton School while working full time, and have spent most of my career working across India, North America, Europe, and Asia. I've always loved E.B. White's observation that New York belongs to three kinds of people — the native, the commuter, and the person who came “in quest of something.” The last one, he wrote, gives the city its passion. I came in quest of something, and I've never quite stopped looking. New York has been the best of chapters — and I'm open to whatever the next one is.
If this sounds like your kind of person, or you're working through something interesting, or if you just want to trade notes on any of the above — I'd love to hear from you.