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Five Ways To Revamp Your Pathetic Follow-Up Emails

“Following up” often creates more work because it just grabs someone’s attention without giving them new information.

“Following up” often creates more work because it just grabs someone’s attention without giving them new information.

Emails are usually about asking. Either someone is asking you for something—to do a task, consider an offer, or share a piece of information—or you are asking them.

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Sheryl Sandberg On The Future Of Advertising: Mobile, Mobile, Mobile

Facebook’s COO offers insight on how the company is pushing clients to take advantage of the smartphone revolution.

Facebook’s COO offers insight on how the company is pushing clients to take advantage of the smartphone revolution.

Facebook’s growing stature as an advertising juggernaut is increasingly overshadowing its identity as a mere “social network.” This evolution was especially clear during New York’s annual Advertising Week event, as chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg and a team of Facebook of executives revealed some key client metrics and initiatives—among them, the fact that Facebook now has a whopping 4 million advertisers on its platform. Sandberg talked with Fast Company about the ways Facebook is helping advertisers take advantage of the global proliferation of mobile devices.

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Female Execs To Contrite VC: Thanks But The Damage (Continues To Be) Done

A recent article went viral for telling women to use their initials online. Here’s why successful female entrepreneurs think that’s bunk.

A recent article went viral for telling women to use their initials online. Here’s why successful female entrepreneurs think that’s bunk.

“How does someone get that much space,” Nicole Sanchez asks, to write about a subject when “they don’t understand the world they’re talking about?” Sanchez—who currently works at GitHub as its vice president of social impact, but has been a decades-long technology diversity activist— was referring to an op-ed written in the Wall Street Journal.

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From Reading Habits To The Power Of To-Do Lists: September’s Top Leadership Stories

This month’s top stories may get you to pick up a book, train for a marathon, and give yourself a break about those incomplete to-do lists.

This month’s top stories may get you to pick up a book, train for a marathon, and give yourself a break about those incomplete to-do lists.

This month, we learned how even unfinished to-do lists may still have productivity perks, why one exec turns to extreme sports to stay grounded in the office, and what it might take to revamp the presidential debate format.

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HBO’s Westworld Creators Talk AI, Sentience, And Surveillance

Lisa Joy and Jonah Nolan explore dark sides of AI and humanity in series that reboots the 1973 film about a robotic theme park gone haywire.

Lisa Joy and Jonah Nolan explore dark sides of AI and humanity in series that reboots the 1973 film about a robotic theme park gone haywire.

As Game of Thrones marches into its final seasons, HBO is debuting this Sunday what it hopes—and is betting millions of dollars on—will be its new blockbuster series: Westworld, a thorough reimagining of Michael Crichton’s 1973 cult classic film about a Western theme park populated by lifelike robot hosts. A philosophical prelude to Jurassic Park, Crichton’s Westworld is a cautionary tale about technology gone very wrong: the classic tale of robots that rise up and kill the humans. HBO’s new series, starring Evan Rachel Wood, Anthony Hopkins, and Ed Harris, is subtler and also darker: The humans are the scary ones.

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