Forbes @ 100: The Poetry of Jim Michaels
What makes Forbes journalism work? Let the 'Bard of Business' explain

“If the chairman of the company is a nincompoop,” he said, “say so—if there’s evidence to prove it.”
Woe to writers who violated that compact. As journalism entered the digital era in the early 1990s, Michaels would post caustic critiques in an open forum for the entire staff to see, using a stream-of-consciousness style that broke every rule of punctuation and capitalisation.
In retrospect, it was poetry.
Many of the recipients of these missives run this magazine and other national publications today. Nobody took it personally: Jim made the staff and the magazine better in the process—even after he was gone. At his wake in 2007, mourners were given a card with his face on it and a final exhortation on the back: “Keep it short.”
First Published: Nov 04, 2017, 10:24
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