Spriha Srivastava is the UK Bureau Chief and the International Executive Editor for Business Insider, overseeing journalists across the UK and Singapore newsrooms.
Prior to joining Business Insider, Spriha was the Deputy Digital News Editor for CNBC International in London. She helped manage a team of reporters for CNBC.com and regularly wrote and edited market-moving, fast-paced business news stories.
In the past, Spriha has worked at the Financial Times' Money Management magazine covering personal finance, where she won an award for her work. Prior to that, she was at Thomson Reuters where she was one of the moderators for Global Markets Forum, a 24x7 live forum for traders and market professionals.
Spriha has won a number of awards for her work. In 2015, Spriha won a runner up in newcomer of the year category in Santander Media Awards. In July 2020, Spriha won Women Economic Forum's "Iconic Women Creating A Better Tomorrow" award.
In September 2020, Spriha was also shortlisted for the Asian Women of Achievement Award in media category. Spriha was recently also included as one of the Top 50 leaders in the UK recognized for kindness in leadership.
Spriha loves to travel around the world and has taken more than 30 flights with her toddler. She also regularly moderates and speaks at a number of events.
As a working parent, Spriha Srivastava often has mom guilt when traveling. She now enjoys trips after dealing ways to deal with it.
The pre-wedding events for Anant Ambani and Radhika Merchant, which featured Rihanna, show a blatant disregard for poverty in India, Indians said.
India has 1.4 billion people and Narendra Modi hopes it can become a $7 trillion economy by 2030, but it's got plenty of problems to solve first.
Tech
2024-02-04T11:03:01Z
AI is set to transform the workplace. Experts say it could mean leaders are judged more by their skills, not the size of their budgets or teams.
An Israeli hostage who was held in Hamas tunnels for 55 days said the conditions were awful and they'd only get one small bowl of rice a day.
Ravin Jesuthasan of Mercer said artificial intelligence could be revolutionary for the workforce, but only if leaders integrate it effectively.
A future-of-work expert said Gen Zers didn't have the "promise of stability" at work, so they're putting their personal lives and well-being first.
Tech
2024-01-17T11:50:12Z
Artificial intelligence is this year's buzzword at the World Economic Forum in Davos, but working out how firms can use it is a more complex question.
Business Insider's UK bureau chief is attending the World Economic Forum summit in Davos and is stunned by the snowy scenery in the Swiss Alps.
Can friendships survive kids? Childcare and community play a part. We talk about why the divide between friends with and without kids is so tough.
Only 7% of the population in China speaks English. Insider's writer got around the country with a translation app and made a number of friends.
Tech
2023-07-07T10:54:04Z
Joining Threads, Meta's new social media platform, brought me a sense of deja vu. It was like joining Twitter all over again.
During my recent trip to China, I found steamed turtles, donkey burgers, sea cucumber, octopus dim sums, and spicy chicken feet on display.
Chinese premier Li Qiang criticized Western governments for their steps to reduce dependency from China.
China has opened its doors to over 1,500 top government and business officials as it hosts the first in-person WEF event since the pandemic started.
The conversations around severe air pollution in New York brings back memories of growing up in the Indian capital.
Tech
2023-06-08T11:35:46Z
"What I lose the most sleep over is the hypothetical idea that we already have done something really bad," OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said.
Tech
2023-06-02T10:16:00Z
The pace of development in artificial intelligence is creating a divide across generations, with boomers, millennials, and Gen Z struggling to keep up.
Tech
2023-04-22T08:45:00Z
Now my son's five, our bedtime stories have become more creative and complex. ChatGPT's helped me to write bespoke stories that has made bedtime fun.
Central banks, regulators and governments are rushing to save banks from collapsing. But the uncertainty is far from over.