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Lucy Kellaway

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Name
  
Lucy Kellaway


Role
  
Columnist

Lucy Kellaway OneonOne Lunch at the Quality Chop House London with

Spouse
  
David Goodhart (m. ?–2015)

Education
  
Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, Camden School for Girls

Books
  
Who moved my BlackBerry?, In Office Hours, Sense and Nonsense in the Offi, The Answers: All the Off, Martin Lukes: Who Mov

Lucy kellaway s office space lego ft comment


Lucy Kellaway (born 26 June 1959) is the management columnist at the Financial Times and co-founder of the educational charity Now Teach. Her column is syndicated in The Irish Times. In addition she has worked as energy correspondent, Brussels correspondent, a Lex writer, and interviewer of business people and celebrities, all with the FT. She has become best known for her satirical commentaries on the limitations of modern corporate culture. She is a regular commentator on the BBC World Service daily business programme Business Daily.

Contents

Lucy Kellaway 30 years 1 stop Bravo Live amp Learn

I’m becoming a teacher at 58 – this is why you should too | Lucy Kellaway | TEDxLondonBusinessSchool


Early life and career

Lucy Kellaway Lunch with the FT39s Lucy Kellaway 39chief bullst

Born in London, the daughter of Australians Bill and Deborah Kellaway, the writer on gardening, Kellaway attended Camden School for Girls, where her mother taught English, and then Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where she read Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE).

After initially working at the foreign exchange dealing room of Morgan Guaranty and at the Investors Chronicle, Kellaway won the Wincott Young Financial Journalist Award in 1984.

At the Financial Times

Since 1985, she has worked for the FT, where she wrote the Monday column "Lucy Kellaway on Management". Some years later, a satirical column purporting to be the emails of Martin Lukes, a senior manager in a company called A&B (later expensively re-branded to a-b glöbâl) would appear on Thursdays. It was revealed in 2005 that these were written by Kellaway (see below). At the British Press Awards 2006, Kellaway was named Columnist of the Year.

She currently writes the "Dear Lucy" column, in which she adopts the point of view of a business agony aunt in response to letters sent by readers.

Kellaway has won the Work Foundation's Workworld Media Award twice.

Author

She wrote the management book Sense and Nonsense in the Office in 1999.

Her second book was a satirical novel in emails: Martin Lukes: Who Moved My BlackBerry? (July 2005).

"Martin Lukes stands for every male manager trying to scramble to the top of the greasy pole. He is driven by ambition. He has little self-doubt—and even less self-knowledge. He thinks of himself as highly emotionally intelligent but has no idea how he is coming across. He is hungry for money, but more hungry for recognition. He wants people to love him and to be dazzled by his ability to "think outside the square," yet the ideas he comes up with are phony and pedestrian. He is a shameless player of the political game who manages by being a world-class brownnoser to disguise the fact that his native abilities are not quite as world-class as he would like."

On the launch of a redesigned FT in April 2007, the editor listed Kellaway (and Lukes) as the second of five key items of unique content as reasons for reading the FT. The Answers: All the office questions you never dared to ask was published in paperback in late 2007.

In 2010, Kellaway published the novel In Office Hours. The book focused on the ill-advised love affairs of two women working for a large oil company. Like much of Kellaway's work, it focused on office mores, but also displayed an emotional range that surprised some readers who were more used to the pure parody of Martin Lukes. In Office Hours was serialised on BBC Radio 4's Book at Bedtime and described as "funny, truthful and cracking satire" by The Sunday Times. It was favourably reviewed in The Observer.

Other activities

In 2006 she was appointed a non-executive director of the insurance company Admiral Group. On 20 July 2012, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Essex.

Lucy Kellaway is a regular contributor to the BBC World Service programme Business Daily. For BBC Radio 4, she wrote and presented a series of ten daily 15-minute programmes on the History of Office Life in 2013, and the series The Joy of 9 to 5 in 2015. She has podcasted her FT columns since 2007.

In November 2016, it became known that Kellaway is leaving the Financial Times. From summer 2017 she will work as a maths teacher in a "challenging" London secondary school. She will still write 12 articles a year for her old paper.

Private life

She is married to David Goodhart, the former editor of Prospect; the couple separated in 2015. She has four children. Her sister is the critic and The Observer writer Kate Kellaway.

Selected publications

  • Sense and Nonsense in the Office. Prentice Hall, 1999. ISBN 0273645099
  • Martin Lukes: Who Moved My BlackBerry? Penguin, 2005. ISBN 0241952204
  • The Answers: All the office questions you never dared to ask. Profile Books, 2010. ISBN 1846680395
  • In Office Hours. Penguin, 2011. ISBN 0141039884
  • References

    Lucy Kellaway Wikipedia