Middle age isn’t the end of a woman’s life and career — it’s a new beginning.
That’s one of the core messages of NextTribe, a magazine and lifestyle brand for and by women over 45. The publication features writing from high-profile women, including New York Times columnist Judith Newman and veteran author and advice columnist E. Jean Carroll.
The two writers spoke at a NextTribe event called “Screw Invisibility!” last week in Manhattan, where 200 women over 45 gathered to celebrate “aging boldly,” which is part of the magazine’s tagline.
Other speakers included New York Fashion Week creator Fern Mallis, DOVE Marketing founder and breast cancer survivor Ricki Fairley, and Allure Magazine founder Linda Wells.
The women shared stories about embarking on new paths later in life. Mallis, for example, quit running Fashion Week in 2010 and has since worked on speaking engagements, a book, a play, a radio show and more.
“I was 62 at the time [I quit], and I knew I had to continue to work. I had nobody else taking care of me. There was no question that I wasn’t just going to walk off into the sunset,” Mallis, 71, said at the event.
In an interview with Know Your Value, NextTribe founder Jeannie Ralston said she built the brand out of personal need. When her youngest child went to college, Ralston fell into a depression.
“I kept thinking ‘Is my life over?’ And then I was like ‘wait, it can’t be over. I still have so much life in me,’” she said. “I’m probably in the best shape of my life. I have so much to give. I started looking around to what is out there for women like me, what magazines, websites and nothing really spoke to me because it felt like it was either too earnest, or it was all about Medicare.”
Ralston was a magazine writer throughout her career, so she was able to source high-profile writers for NextTribe. Her goal is to change how women view and experience middle age.
“We talk about beauty, fashion, books— we’re all multifaceted,” Ralston said. “And that’s the thing, we’re multi-faceted and nobody gives us credit for that…I get so tired and so mad about getting lumped into some idea of what aging is.”









