Forbes: Journalists and Statistics: Paying Attention to the Data of a New Media World
Tuesday, 28 June 2011, 10:32
Lewis DVorkin: Forbes is using Newsbeat, a product from Betaworks as a real-time analytics tool. Also: "Our full-time staffers and contributors each have their own personal dashboard to tell them how they are doing. And, of course, each of their p…
Forbes: Turning Forbes magazine content into Web content — and vice versa
Monday, 28 February 2011, 14:13
Lewis DVorkin: "The way Forbes sees it, there are two sets of business news consumers — print and digital — and each wants something different. The imperative is to use the same underlying information to serve both. To accomplish that, we’re…
Forbes.com: Interactive: Billionaires’ Favorite Politicians
Monday, 1 November 2010, 18:43
"The billionaires on the Forbes 400 list have given more than $30 million to politicians and political action committees since 2006, along with millions more in soft money to politically active groups. Although Forbes 400 members give about 15% more money to Republicans than Democrats, they fund groups across the political spectrum."
AllThingsD: Forbes Gets a Facelift. Next Up: A New Body
Thursday, 23 September 2010, 17:28
Peter Kafka: "Forbes’s famously cluttered pages have been cleaned up (the print magazine has a new look, too) and that the whole thing looks, and acts, a whole lot like Facebook. That’s very much intentional, says [Lewis D’Vorkin]: 'We are putting news, and the journalists, at the center of social media.'"
Business Insider: Forbes Blogs To Get A Big Upgrade, Every Reporter Will Have One
Tuesday, 3 August 2010, 10:51
"every [Forbes] reporter will now be required to have his or her own blog, and that most are starting from scratch."
Monday, 6 August 2007, 18:02
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"The New York Times yesterday names Forbes technology editor, Daniel Lyons, as Fake Steve Jobs.
Lyons praised the sleuthing skills of NYT reporter Brad Stone for tracking him down"
Sunday, 20 May 2007, 09:48
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Nine young Forbes.com staffers "have recently fled", along with at least 50 other editorial staff since 2005. The churn, some say, is because of a "page-view sweatshop” conditions at the business web site.
Saturday, 5 May 2007, 21:48
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Murdoch in Forbes: "Media companies don’t control the conversation anymore, at least not to the extent that we once did."










