Justin Fox, an editor at large and business and economics columnist at Time magazine, has been hired as editorial director, a new position, at Harvard Business Review.
As editorial director, Fox will be responsible for ensuring that HBR identifies leading-edge content in key topic areas across all of HBR’s publishing platforms, including the magazine, the Website and books. He will be a key member of the editorial leadership team of the HBR Group, working closely with editor in chief Adi Ignatius and senior editors.
“Justin is a great thinker and writer, and he brings a remarkable depth of understanding of the business and economic landscape,” said Ignatius in a statement. “With his expertise, we’ll be better positioned to identify and develop the kind of important and practical business ideas that our global readers look to us for.”
At Time, Fox has written a weekly column and occasional longer articles for the magazine, and penned the Curious Capitalist blog, named one of the top 25 economics blogs this year by The Wall Street Journal. Before joining Time in 2007, he worked for more than a decade at Fortune, where he served as the magazine’s London-based Europe editor, did several tours of duty as editor of the front-of-the-book ‘First’ section, and wrote dozens of major feature stories.
He has also been a staff writer at the American Banker, the Birmingham News, and the (Tulare, Calif.) Advance-Register.
He is the author of the best-selling 2009 book, “The Myth of the Rational Market: A History of Risk, Reward, and Delusion on Wall Street.” Fox is a Princeton University graduate.
Read more here. Â