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Joey Abrams

Joey Abrams is the associate production editor at Fortune. He joined Fortune as a newsletter curation fellow after graduating from the College of the Holy Cross, where he served as editor-in-chief of the school newspaper and interned at Morning Brew.

Two business colleagues looking at laptop and discussing a new project in the office.
NewslettersChatGPT can boost or tank employee performance, depending on what tasks it’s used for
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 27, 2023
The childcare cliff arrives this weekend, threatening to leave 3.2 million kids without care
NewslettersThe childcare cliff arrives this weekend, threatening to leave 3.2 million kids without care
By Emma Hinchliffe and Joey AbramsSeptember 26, 2023
Stock illustration of a robot hand picking a stick figure out of a lineup.
NewslettersRecruiters are using this AI platform to reduce interview times and evaluate job candidates based on skills
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 26, 2023
business professionals entering an office building
NewslettersExclusive: Wall Street’s next leaders are embracing AI and bullish about their financial future, according to Goldman Sachs’s summer intern survey
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 25, 2023
portrait of woman in gray tank top smiling
NewslettersNubank’s cofounder considered leaving after a blockbuster IPO. Instead, she’s leading the Warren Buffett-backed bank into its second decade
By Emma Hinchliffe and Joey AbramsSeptember 25, 2023
Mother working on laptop, daughter on table
NewslettersMore workers are returning to the office. Mothers may end up paying the price
By Alicia Adamczyk and Joey AbramsSeptember 22, 2023
man in collared shirt and suit jacket speaking onstage
NewslettersResearchers asked ChatGPT to rate which job skills it performs best. Its answers show what roles are most at risk for AI disruption
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 22, 2023
This CEO wants to change the conversation on stay-at-home motherhood: ‘Every mother is working’
NewslettersThis CEO wants to change the conversation on stay-at-home motherhood: ‘Every mother is working’
By Alicia Adamczyk and Joey AbramsSeptember 21, 2023
An older businessman speaks to a younger businesswoman who is rolling her eyes.
NewslettersWomen are more likely to receive unhelpful feedback in performance reviews, so they’re quitting
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 21, 2023
woman speaking onstage
NewslettersInstacart CEO Fidji Simo celebrates the grocery delivery platform’s mixed-blessing IPO
By Maria Aspan and Joey AbramsSeptember 20, 2023
Instacart CEO says its IPO was for employees as the grocery delivery service lets workers sell their stocks
NewslettersInstacart CEO says its IPO was for employees as the grocery delivery service lets workers sell their stocks
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 20, 2023
PBS CEO Paula Kerger learned the importance of stakeholder management by overseeing 330 independent stations
NewslettersPBS CEO Paula Kerger learned the importance of stakeholder management by overseeing 330 independent stations
By Emma Hinchliffe and Joey AbramsSeptember 19, 2023
Stock illustration of a giant magnifying glass examining a group of people.
NewslettersCompanies sit on a goldmine of untapped talent. But many employers don’t know how to access it
By Michal Lev-Ram and Joey AbramsSeptember 19, 2023
Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan want to address all disease by 2100—and make medical research more diverse in the process
NewslettersMark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan want to address all disease by 2100—and make medical research more diverse in the process
By Joey Abrams and Ellie AustinSeptember 18, 2023
a crowd holding a banner and marching through the street
NewslettersWhat leaders can learn from the UAW strikes about communicating pay decisions
By Paige McGlauflin and Joey AbramsSeptember 18, 2023
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Most Popular
Success
After forcing workers back to the office, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are now letting their staff work remotely—but only for the World Cupplaceholder alt text
By Orianna Rosa RoyleJune 23, 2026
Economy
The Pentagon said Iran War costs $29 billion, but the real cost is closer to $200 billion—and countingplaceholder alt text
By Jacqueline MunisJune 24, 2026
Banking
Markets tumble worldwide as Fed resets expectations: $400 billion wiped off SpaceX stockplaceholder alt text
By Jim EdwardsJune 23, 2026
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