



Regular features include "Made to Stick" by Chip Heath and Dan Heath, "Do Something" by Nancy Lublin, and short profiles in a section of the magazine called "Next." Referencesįast Company - can refer to:* Fast Company (1918 film), starring Lon Chaney, Sr. The website features FC Now, which launched in 2002, and was one of the first staff-written blogs maintained by a print magazine. magazine, which is dedicated to covering growing businesses and entrepreneurs.į operates as a network of sites with Inc.com and is a member of the Online Publishers Association. Mansueto Ventures also owns Fast Company's sister publication, Inc. Mansueto became a billionaire and joined the Forbes 400 list of the richest Americans when Morningstar went public in 2005. The magazine and its website are now owned by Mansueto Ventures, a private media company controlled by Joe Mansueto, the founder and CEO of mutual fund rating company Morningstar, Inc. The site is updated frequently with new articles and content. The articles on the site are divided into four main groups (Technology, Design, Leadership, and Ethonomics). The site has a global rank of 1,769 (US: 728). In 2011, Fast Company redesigned their website, and provided an online app that allows users to view all articles posted electronically and allows users to view magazine articles with a subscription code. G&J sold the magazine in 2005 and shortly thereafter exited the U.S. At the time this was the second largest amount for any US magazine in history. In 2000, Fast Company was sold to Gruner + Jahr, majority owned by media giant Bertelsmann, for $350 million. In 1997, Fast Company created an online social network, the "Company of Friends" which spawned a number of groups that began meeting in person. The publication began with $550,000 in funding from 11 individuals, raised to create a prototype. Fast Company was launched in November 1995 by Alan Webber and Bill Taylor, two former Harvard Business Review editors.
