Joanne Lipman

She is also the inaugural Peretsman Scully Distinguished Journalism Fellow at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study [1] and a CNBC on-air contributor.

[2] Until December 31, 2017, Lipman was Chief Content Officer of publishing company Gannett,[3] and editor-in-chief of USA Today and the publications in its network, such as the Detroit Free Press, The Des Moines Register and The Arizona Republic.

The magazine was widely praised for its coverage leading up to and about the 2008 financial crisis, including its 2008 cover story by Michael Lewis that was the basis for his bestselling book, and subsequent film, The Big Short.

However, following the financial crisis, Condé Nast suffered from declining advertising revenue leading it to close a number of its magazines, including Portfolio in May 2009 after 21 issues.

The book contends that men must be mobilized to help close the gender gap at work, and offers strategies and solutions to help achieve workplace parity.

Through a combination of reporting, data and storytelling, Lipman illuminates case studies spanning Silicon Valley, the Enron scandal, Harvard Business School's attempt to wipe out bias, and Iceland's response to the 2008 financial crisis.

[19][20] The New York Times, in its review, called That's What She Said "eerily prescient in light of our current conversation about sexual politics in the workplace...revelatory" and named it an Editor's Choice.

The surprisingly fresh and clean design complements and furthers and section's distinctive voice as it charts the impact of business on society, culture, and politics.