Fast Company, Senior Editor
As Senior Editor, I guided many features. Most notably I came up with The Most Creative People In Business. The vision included a conference business built on top of an annual editorial issue. It quickly became the magazine's most profitable franchise.
I also wrote cover stories and edited feature packages including the National Magazine Award and a Webby nominated Influence Project.
“To use Borden’s words, there is something random about our ranking of the 100 Most Creative People in Business — but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a strategy at work. Creativity cannot be reduced to a formula.”
Letter From the Editor: Think Randomly, Execute Strategically
Curious story behind the picture that accompanies this Fast Company Editor's Letter about me. Pharrell Williams is holding my now nine-year old daughter Clementine. We randomly met at LAX. Shortly after, I strategically included him in The Most Creative People In Business package that I produced for the magazine.
Welcome to The Influence Project
The Influence Project aimed to remove some of the mystery behind the inherent passivity of social network numbers. This experiment shows what happens when an individual takes an audience at rest and applies an unbalanced force that moves it into action.
Fast Company honored with National Magazine Award
Fast Company received two nominations from the National Magazine Awards for Digital Media, the magazine industry’s highest honor: “The Influence Project,” a November 2010 story with a comprehensive online companion, in the Multimedia Package category, and Co.Design. Co.Design won the Ellie for the Online Department category.
Nokia Rocks the World: The Phone King’s Plan to Redefine Its Business
Nokia’s 43-year-old executive vice president of entertainment and communities, Tero Ojanperä, and Eurythmics founder and Nokia consultant, Dave Stewart make for an odd pairing. Stewart with his quintessential British rock-‘n’-roll-ness. Ojanperä with his Finnish-savant electrical-engineer-ness. Together they guide us through the early battles of the smartphone wars.
All Systems Go
With back orders of more than $5 billion for jet engines to the Chinese government, GE targets the $2 trillion in infrastructure projects--power grid, water, and rail--its aviation experts discover in a countrywide airport plan.
Freelance Writing
As a writer, I’ve explored eclectic topics like private wave ownership in Fiji, the rise of medical and legalized marijuana, the idiosyncratic allure of Fender’s Jazzmaster guitar, the economics of height and the demons and genius driving designer Marc Jacobs.
Shortchanged
More than a hundred years ago, social scientists established the correlation between height and socioeconomic status, and they’ve been trying to solve the enigma of the “height premium” ever since. A Princeton study presents an explanation that pisses of short people.
Guitar Hero
Over the run of 50 years, the Fender Jazzmaster guitar has developed a following as musically diverse as surf (the Ventures), new wave (the Cars), indie (Yo La Tengo), electronic (Stereolab) and alternative (My Bloody Valentine). And yet it never captured its intended audience.
High Times
The feds say medical marijuana is illegal. State authorities disagree. A tour through the capital of quasi-legal pot, where the buds are stony and confusion is king.