Ron Bruder worked as a real estate developer for more than 30 years, and his earliest real estate activity involved converting an "electric generating plant in lower Manhattan to residential use." He created The Brookhill Group, a real estate company that built and turned around shopping centers and reclaimed brownfields. From there, he went on to found a "medical technology company and an oil-and-gas business, and he redeveloped a number of shopping malls". It was after this that he started working with brownfields in partnership with Dames and Moore, a multibillion-dollar engineering company. Bruder invented a method of encouraging investment in tainted properties by capping clean-up costs and "securitizing the debt", which enabled The Brookhill Group to become "one of the largest buyers of distressed properties in the U.S." The group quickly obtained properties in more than 21 states. The September 11 attacks were very traumatic for Bruder, as his eldest daughter was working near the World Trade Center and the event drove Bruder to "make a real impact" in something other than real estate. Working with experts and business owners in the Middle East and North Africa, Bruder investigated entrepreneurial responses to overcoming two key challenges in the Middle East and North Africa: the world's large youth bulge and the highest youth unemployment in the world. He believes that stable societies can only be built if youth have economic opportunity and jobs. After hiring the Brookings Institution to research methods of ameliorating the situation, along with traveling for several months in Middle Eastern countries, Bruder decided to create Education For Employment. His stated reason for doing so was, Bruder self-funded the creation of the foundation. Since its establishment in 2002, EFE has grown to become a network of locally-run and staffed affiliate organizations located across the Middle East and North Africa and supported by capacity building nonprofits in the United States and Europe. In order to expand within each of the network's countries of operation, Bruder partnered with "local companies that provide funding and agree to hire a set number of graduates from his training programs". The first Middle Eastern affiliate, JCEF, was founded in Jordan in 2005 and the second, Palestine EFE, in the Gaza Strip in 2006. They were followed by the creation of EFE-Egypt, EFE-Morocco, EFE-Yemen, EFE-Tunisia, EFE-Algeria, EFE-United Arab Emerites and EFE-Saudi Arabia. Bruder has become a major voice in the conversation on youth unemployment in the Middle East and North Africa. He has served as a delegate of the Council on Foreign Relations to the Jeddah Economic Forum, and a contributor to the US-Islamic World Forum in Doha, Qatar. He is frequently invited to share EFE's best practices at major international conferences and fora and in the media, including the Harvard Business Review. Bruder has also addressed audiences at the Clinton Global Initiative, World Economic Forum and the United Nations, among others. At the World Economic Forum Meeting of New Champions in 2012, Bruder was named Global Social Entrepreneurs of the Year by the Schwab Foundation. In 2014, he received the Creativity in Philanthropy Award from the New York University George H. Heyman, Jr. Center for Philanthropy and Fundraising for his contributions to enhancing economic opportunities for women in the Middle East and North Africa. In 2011, Bruder appeared on the Time magazine list of 100 Most Influential People in the World and subsequently authored an op-ed for the magazine. In 2010, he received The Amy and Tony Polak 2010 Distinguished Advocate Award from the Anne Frank Center for his contributions to world education.