Lucy Kellaway's five-step guide to public speaking
Arrive early, remind yourself how awful most business leaders are and a swig of wine couldn't hurt.
Lucy Kellaway is an Associate Editor and management columist at the Financial Times. She has worked at the FT in London for 25 years.
Arrive early, remind yourself how awful most business leaders are and a swig of wine couldn't hurt.
It doesn't make sense to lock older, more cynical colleagues out of your organisation.
Time spent waiting is an opportunity to catch up with emails, reading and phone calls, writes Lucy Kellaway.
It's good to get feedback on your conversational or presentation skills,writes Lucy Kellaway.
Peeing at work has traditionally been a segregated business. This is now under threat by the rise of the gender-neutral toilet.
The Tiger Oil chief’s missives were rude but his style was perfect.
Lucy Kellaway felt exposed and vulnerable when she lost her smartphone but by day three, panic was replaced by freedom.
Wells Fargo's apology after news its staff had set up fake accounts just takes customers for a ride.
The plague of compulsory creativity may be dying out.
Ask anyone in your office how much money your company made last year and I bet they won't have the foggiest idea. There is a lesson here for...
If you can't let go of your emails while on holidays it's now a sign of bad management.
An article by BCG head Rich Lesser is very bad advice indeed and twentysomethings need to be warned about trying to follow it.
We are simply more interested in women CEOs and we will go on being more interested until there are more of them.
Showing off if you are a chief executive has never been harder. Fortunately there is a new way for CEOs to stand out.
Careful control of her facial expressions took new UK prime minister Theresa May all the way to the top.
Your departure offers a rare chance to voice what you like while everyone is listening.
The 10 minutes I debated high heels on the radio were the sanest I have had since the referendum.
I did not set out to be uncivil to my colleagues. This is just how office life has become.
Sir Philip's words are good. The syntax is great. But the repetitions tell you everything you need to know about his character.
Smart clothes pegs? Connected tampons? Lucy Kellaway is tiring of the internet of things.
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