Background
Winkler was born June 1, 1955 in New York City and was raised in Grand View, New New York
Winkler was born June 1, 1955 in New York City and was raised in Grand View, New New York
He attended Kenyon College, where he received a bachelor’s degree in history and later, an honorary doctorate of laws.
He is also co-author of Bloomberg by Bloomberg and the author of The Bloomberg Way: A Guide for Reporters and Editors. Winkler is married to Lisa Klein Winkler. The couple has three children and lives in New Jersey.
Winkler began his journalism career at the Kenyon Collegian and later, at a local paper, the Mount Vernon News while he was a student at Kenyon College.
Following his years at the Mount Vernon News, Winkler worked as a New York-based reporter and assistant editor at The Bond Buyer. Between 1980 and 1990, Winkler was a reporter in London and New York for The Wall Street Journal, a reporter for Barron"s, and the founding editor/reporter for the Dow Jones Capital Markets Report.
Between 1991 and 1994, he wrote the Capital Markets column for Forbes magazine. After working at The Wall Street Journal for 10 years, Winkler left in 1990 when he co-founded with Michael Bloomberg and became its editor-in-chief
Originally founded to provide financial bulletins to augment Bloomberg terminal service, has since grown to include a wire service, a global television network, radio station, website, subscription-only newsletters and two magazines, Bloomberg Businessweek and Bloomberg Markets.
In 2011, included more than 2,300 editors and reporters in 72 countries and 146 news bureaus worldwide. In 1997, Winkler partnered with Michael Bloomberg to write his autobiography, Bloomberg by Bloomberg. The book chronicles the development of Bloomberg, L.P., from niche financial data provider in 1981 to global financial information services and media company 15 years later.
The Bloomberg Way Winkler is known for his enforcement of the "Bloomberg Way," which includes a 300 plus-page guide outlining reporting standards and its ethics and values.
Reporters following the "Bloomberg Way" are instructed to consider the "Five Fs": factual word, first word, fastest word, final word and future word.