Arianna Huffington told Fortune that no one with an "interesting job" can simply shut their laptop at 5 p.m.—and warned Gen Z that if they can, they should change jobs.
In this session, moderated by Fortune Europe Editor Francesca Cassidy and presented in partnership with Glean and VivaTech, Fortune explored how senior technology leaders at some of the world's ...
May 29, 2026 00:00 AM UTC - Updated May 29, 2026 11:19 AM UTC In 2026, AI sits on both sides of the hiring desk. Job seekers use it to perfect their resumes. Employers use it to screen those same ...
Fortune’s 2026 Most Powerful Women list is here—and Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser has taken the No. 1 spot. Fraser broke Wall ...
Gabe Stengel studied computer science at Princeton and started his career as an investment banking analyst at Lazard. Then he ...
Dina Powell McCormick is No. 58 on this year's Most Powerful Women list. She joined Meta full-time in January after a year on its board, and is helping transform the company to be viewed as an ...
Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Editor, Emma Hinchliffe, and Editorial Director of Fortune Most Powerful Women, Ellie Austin, discuss the trends shaping the 2026 Most Powerful Women in Business list.
Bolt’s CEO Ryan Breslow was once a proponent of buzzy benefits like a four-day workweek and unlimited PTO at his fintech company until he came to believe flexible perks came at a cost to productivity.
Every day, employers face important questions about compliance, risk, and workplace culture. In this fireside chat, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Chair Andrea Lucas will provide executives ...
Under Mayor Andre Dickens, Atlanta is making a deliberate bet: that workforce investment is the fastest path to citywide ...
Workplaces have been actively rethinking how they approach diversity initiatives, creating an important moment for leadership ...