www.fastcompany.com Open in urlscan Pro
151.101.129.54  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://mail.turing.com/api/analytics?ti=fcde3f336004618d75d9e381ff518f5355abe5448d1071e042b7bfa10a1c16181a728b4a0bfc2b3...
Effective URL: https://www.fastcompany.com/90600358/workplace-most-innovative-companies-2021
Submission: On October 31 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

FAST COMPANY

Follow
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

Login
 * Co.Design
 * Tech
 * Work Life
 * News
 * Impact
 * Podcasts
 * Video
 * Innovation Festival 360IF360
 * Subscribe
 * 
 * FastCo Works
    * AWS
    * Genpact
    * IBM


 * HOMEPAGE


 * CO.DESIGN


 * TECH


 * WORK LIFE


 * NEWS


 * IMPACT


 * PODCASTS


 * VIDEO


 * INNOVATION FESTIVAL 360


 * SUBSCRIBE

Help Center
fastco works


 * AWS


 * DELOITTE


 * DEPT


 * ELEVATE PRIZE


 * EY


 * IBM


 * KLARNA


 * VISA


 * FASTCO WORKS
   
   An award-winning team of journalists, designers, and videographers who tell
   brand stories through Fast Company's distinctive lens

FC Executive Board
collections


 * FAST GOVERNMENT
   
   The future of innovation and technology in government for the greater good


 * MOST INNOVATIVE COMPANIES
   
   Fast Company's annual ranking of businesses that are making an outsize impact


 * MOST CREATIVE PEOPLE
   
   Leaders who are shaping the future of business in creative ways


 * WORLD CHANGING IDEAS
   
   New workplaces, new food sources, new medicine--even an entirely new economic
   system


 * INNOVATION BY DESIGN
   
   Celebrating the best ideas in business

Newsletter
Events


 * INNOVATION FESTIVAL

Courses and LearningAdvertiseCurrent Issue
SUBSCRIBE
Follow us:

advertisement

 * 03-09-21
 * most innovative companies


THE 10 MOST INNOVATIVE WORKPLACE COMPANIES OF 2021


HAS THERE EVER BEEN A TIME THAT DEMANDED MORE WORKPLACE INNOVATION? THESE
BEST-IN-CLASS COMPANIES DEVISED NEW AND BETTER WAYS TO KEEP US WORKING
EFFECTIVELY THROUGHOUT A TUMULTUOUS YEAR.

[Icon: Assignment Studios]
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

More Like This
How Creators are Making an Inclusive Metaverse
How the next great leap in relationship building could shape the future of the
internet
How an event became a results-driven experience
By Fast Company Staff7 minute Read
THE WORLD’S 50 MOST INNOVATIVE COMPANIES
Wellness
AdvertisingArchitectureArtificial IntelligenceAugmented Reality & Virtual
RealityBeautyBrandingConsumer ElectronicsSocial ResponsibilityData
ScienceDesignDiningEducationEnergyEnterpriseFilm &
TelevisionFinanceFoodGamingHealthJoint VenturesLive
EventsLogisticsManufacturingMediaMusicNot-for-ProfitRetailRoboticsSecuritySmall
& MightySocial GoodSocial MediaSpaceSportsStyleTransportationTravelUrban
DevelopmentVideoWellnessWorkplaceNorth AmericaLatin AmericaEurope, Middle East,
and AfricaAsia-Pacific
Workplace
North America

From providing a road map for an effective remote workforce to building stronger
connections to offering tools that enhance productivity from home, these 10 Most
Innovative Companies offered workplace solutions that helped businesses continue
operations during the most disruptive year in modern times.



[Illustration: Zara Magumya]


1. ASANA

For helping teams meet their goals

The work-management platform is used by more than 89,000 organizations, along
with 3.5 million individuals who rely on the free version. The company launched
Asana Goals in July 2020, enabling teams to better track progress, and by the
end of the year had released more than 130 features, including integrations with
Microsoft Teams, Slack, and Zoom. While competitors focus workflow around a
single area or “container,” Goals, says Asana founder and CEO Dustin Moskovitz,
is cross-functional, allowing people to stay on task even while working on
broader assignments. “Most projects are actually collaborative across
departments,” he says. “The vision for the future is for individuals to have
fewer distractions in their work lives so they can have greater focus and flow.”


2. ZOOM

For providing socially distanced workers and students the tools to connect with
one another

advertisement



The ubiquitous video conferencing platform reported $777.2 million in Q3
revenue, up 400% year over year, and it expects to quadruple its revenue year
over year again in the fourth quarter. The company now has 433,700 subscribers
with more than 10 employees, up from 370,200 last quarter, and it grew the
number of customers delivering more than $100,000 in revenue over the prior year
to nearly 1,300, from around 1,000. The communication company has met the
increasing demand for its products with smart and timely products meant to
secure Zoom as essential workplace infrastructure. That has meant security
updates, including a user experience to fortify password protection and increase
the security such as through two-step authentication, along with developing
conference devices (Zoom for Home) and new hardware (Zoom Room and Zoom Phones).




3. SLACK

For expanding lines of communication for a locked-down distributed workforce

At the beginning of the U.S. coronavirus outbreak in the spring, the messaging
and communication platform added nearly 2.5 million simultaneous users over 15
days in March. The company also worked to make the platform easier and safer to
use for heavily regulated industries, as well as updating its in-platform
“channels” to function more like email threads. During the summer of the
coronavirus pandemic, the company added additional features to make
communication on the platform easier, including Slack Connect, a secure platform
for communication, which operates similar to email but without the threat of
phishing and spam messages. Other initiatives include building information walls
between teams (such as putting up privacy barriers between traders and
investment bankers at an investment firm), and international expansion for data
storage, which comes in handy for teams operating outside of the U.S.




4. GITLAB

For showing us how to work remotely, providing extensive documentation and best
practices

GitLab is a software company focusing on every step of the DevOps cycle. The
largest company with a distributed workforce, it created a comprehensive guide
to remote work, which has been downloaded tens of thousands of times since the
beginning of the pandemic. The company has also begun consulting with businesses
struggling to manage their suddenly distributed workforces. In October, GitLab’s
“head of remote” transformed the company’s guide into a Coursera class aimed at
high-level managers and executives, covering everything from onboarding a new
employee remotely and communication best practices to how to shut down your
offices and transition to a distributed workforce without too much disruption.
So far, more than 11,000 people have taken the class. To add To that, in June
2020 the company’s complete remote-work content, including a weekly web show and
a newsletter, netted 143.6 million impressions.


5. ATLASSIAN

For improving collaboration with tools that streamline tracking, planning, and
management



Atlassian is a Sydney-based workforce software behind Jira, Trello, and
Confluence. In conjunction and on their own, these tools help streamline team
collaboration. Jira’s tracking and planning capabilities go hand-in-hand with
Confluence’s project management use. Trello, acquired in 2017, focuses on
large-scale visualization of projects. The suite of collaboration of tools is
used by 180,000 companies; Jira alone is used by more than 65,000 companies,
including the nonprofit Cancer Research UK and Cochlear, the maker of the
hearing implant. In 2020, Atlassian generated nearly $1.6 billion in revenue (up
33% from the previous year).


6. CHIEF

For connecting female executives at all levels for coaching, mentorship, and
support

A network for high-ranking professional women to develop connections with other
VP and executive-level leaders, Chief prides itself on its “Core” groups, which
organizes members into smaller groups of similar professional rank. These Core
groups provide a space for community and learning, via leadership coaching. The
company cheekily calls these smaller groups “personal board of directors.” Chief
currently has 3,000 members who work across 1,000 different companies. In the
last year, the company has expanded into four new cities and the company’s
waitlist has grown to 8,000. This year, Chief launched a proprietary and private
app to members in order to make connection-building easier during the pandemic’s
shutdowns.




7. CULTURE AMP

For building an HR platform that uses data analytics to increase employee
engagement

Offering an HR platform that uses data analytics to improve employee engagement,
the company aims to enhance manager’s understanding of what is good management,
as well as develop leadership skills. During the pandemic, Culture Amp
introduced a new set of tools for managers to connect more with employees and
improve overall company culture. A new beta development of the platform smooths
the manager process to provide feedback and coaching, through a series of
skills-building micro-sessions that are just frequent and short enough not to
overwhelm leaders. Through its library of content, Culture Amp gives managers
the tools to deliver effective feedback and communicate more clearly with
individual workers.


8. TURING

For placing remote developers at firms across the globe via an AI-powered
vetting process



Turing is an international hiring platform that brings together remote software
developers to work on small and large companies. In today’s remote environment.
The Palo Alto-based company is well-positioned to cater to a distributed
workforce by vetting and hiring remote software developers, who can work from a
small town or from a studio apartment in a crowded urban center. The founders
distinguish their platform by using an AI-based vetting process that tests
developers’ skills but also how they work in groups and teams. The developers
remain contractors to Turing, who built a secure virtual environment for outside
contractors to work within. And in a mutually beneficial move—when a Turing
developer gets hired, the company receives a fee. Since its general launch about
a year ago, Turing has gone from $17,000 to $10 million in annualized revenue.
Today, the company has a body of contractors of 170,000 working from over 50
different countries. The company shares it has added about 10,000 new developers
to the platform each month.


9. BLUESCAPE

For organizing remote tech tools into a single centralized and integrated hub

By collecting disparate tech tools, from Zoom to the G-Suite, in one place
Bluescape makes it easier for remote teams to visualize and share content. The
company’s hub-like capabilities brings together disparate tools in one central
location. Since March 2020, the collaborative software company has grown by
300%. And since 2019, 1 million users have created workspaces on Bluescape.
Through Bluescape’s integrated format, companies can access a variety of video
conferencing tools, like Zoom and Webex, so chatting and taking notes becomes
less of a pain. The company’s exponential growth is reflected within its ranks:
Bluescape has increased its number of employees by 60% since the beginning of
the pandemic.




10. HUGO

For enhancing documentation through an integrated note-taking tool

Launched in 2018, Hugo is a meetings note-taking tool that makes meetings more
productive by helping employees prepare agendas, take and share notes (with
people inside and outside of the company), assign follow-up tasks, and
disseminate takeaways. The platform, which integrates with nearly two dozen
major workplace tools, from Asana to Zoom, takes the knowledge sharing that
happens in meetings and transports it seamlessly throughout a team, company, and
beyond. In an era of remote work, where online meetings take on even more
significance, the platform is growing quickly. In June, Hugo released a Chrome
extension, allowing users to set meeting agendas and take notes while on a video
call or navigating their calendar for the week. Between February and May 2020,
Hugo blew past their past user number early in the pandemic by more than
doubling daily active users.




Recommended for you


IOS 16 RELEASE TIME: HERE’S WHEN YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE IPHONE’S NEW OPERATING
SYSTEM WORLDWIDE TODAY


THE BEST UX DESIGN OF 2022


7 COMMON RESUME MISTAKES TO AVOID

A version of this article appeared in the March/April 2021 issue of Fast Company
magazine.

advertisement



FEATURED VIDEO

How to prepare for the future of work
Fast Company writer Pavithra Mohan discusses a few things companies can do to
prepare for the workplace of the future.
More Videos


0 seconds of 2 minutes, 17 secondsVolume 0%

Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
Keyboard ShortcutsEnabledDisabled
Play/PauseSPACE
Increase Volume↑
Decrease Volume↓
Seek Forward→
Seek Backward←
Captions On/Offc
Fullscreen/Exit Fullscreenf
Mute/Unmutem
Seek %0-9
Next Up
4 habits to make you more efficient while you work from home
02:07
Settings
OffFB_Mon_6.29.en_US
Font Color
White

Font Opacity
100%

Font Size
100%

Font Family
Arial

Character Edge
None

Background Color
Black

Background Opacity
50%

Window Color
Black

Window Opacity
0%

Reset
WhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyan
100%75%50%25%
200%175%150%125%100%75%50%
ArialCourierGeorgiaImpactLucida ConsoleTahomaTimes New RomanTrebuchet MSVerdana
NoneRaisedDepressedUniformDrop Shadow
WhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyan
100%75%50%25%0%
WhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyan
100%75%50%25%0%
facebook twitter Email
Linkhttps://content.jwplatform.com/previews/x6e2UvTw
Copied
Auto180p1080p720p406p270p180p
Live
00:00
02:17
02:17








 


HOW TO PREPARE FOR THE FUTURE OF WORK

advertisement


Today's Top Stories:
01

technology
Looking for Twitter alternatives? Here’s how to use Mastodon
02

magazine
Bored Ape Yacht Club tell all: The untold story of the $4 billion crypto startup
03

technology
Hello, Elon. Goodbye, the Twitter we once knew
04

ideas
Everybody poops, but not everybody’s poop gets spontaneously combusted under
water
05

technology
A new Lenovo report identifies a major thinking gap—and what we can do to shrink
it
More Top Stories:
PLAY Fast Company Top Articles: Video Settings Full Screen About Connatix
V194304 Read More Read More Read More Read More Read More Read More
Most Americans think democracy is at risk. Here’s 6 ways corporations can combat
that
READ MORE
Most Americans think democracy is at risk. Here’s 6 ways corporations can combat
that 1/1 Skip Ad Continue watching after the ad Visit Advertiser websiteGO TO
PAGE




advertisement

co-design
Exclusive: YouTube’s new redesign is built to feel more like TV
co-design
Why designers keep trying to kill the logo
co-design
Mark Zuckerberg might have already doomed his metaverse, but Neal Stephenson’s
vision is very much alive
co-design
Why can’t Adidas quit Yeezy?
technology
How we helped reboot a legendary Silicon Valley startup
technology
The 3 education brands taking clever approaches to shaping minds of all ages
ideas
Automakers like Audi claim this new technology will keep bikers safe. It won’t
technology
This simple system will streamline your jumble of apps, tabs, and email to boost
productivity
news
It took Amazon 5 years to make its first $1 billion, and only 2 days to make its
latest billion
ideas
These 18 brands grew business with their communities—and the environment—in mind
technology
How these brands have built advocacy into their businesses
co-design
The North Face is straddling a crevasse in branding, with a belay from Jimmy
Chin
co-design
Here’s why the Baltimore Ravens took Amtrak to their games against New York’s
teams
technology
Meet the 13 brands elevating everyday tasks, from washing dishes to banking
news
Why—and how—COVID-19 symptoms are changing right now
advertisement

advertisement

magazine
When Silicon Valley owns the American Dream
news
The dramatic rise in employer ghosting is—we’ll just say it—scary
ideas
Denver spent $4.1 million to get more people on e-bikes. It worked
ideas
These 19 brands are helping people sharpen their minds, look good, and improve
their health
news
The airline pilot shortage is dire. Here’s what major carriers are doing to fill
cockpits
ideas
Protected bike lanes can help cities cut emissions. Bogota’s $130 million
investment proves it
technology
What to expect from Twitter now that Elon Musk is officially in charge
technology
Netflix profile transfer: Did you get the email? Here’s what to understand about
the controversial feature
technology
5 tips to give a second life to your old laptop
co-design
What all cities can learn from New Jersey 10 years after Hurricane Sandy
leadership
How I Got My Dream Job Of Getting Paid To Watch Netflix
leadership
Leaders: You need this perspective to manage teams better
leadership
I’m an introvert and I’ve built a career around public speaking
ideas
How these 3 brands are shaping sports right now, from pro hoops to after-school
soccer
advertisement



TECH

Tech


WHAT HAPPENS IF TWITTER’S TOP ENGINEERS LEAVE THE COMPANY?

Tech


IF WE WANT BETTER INNOVATIONS IN HEALTH TECH, WE NEED MORE COMPETITION

Tech


AFTER TWITTER AND INSTAGRAM RESTRICTIONS, KANYE WEST SAYS HE PLANS TO BUY PARLER


NEWS

News


ROBLOX SHARES SKYROCKET 19%

News


OVER-THE-COUNTER HEARING AIDS ARE AVAILABLE TODAY. HERE’S WHAT TO KNOW

News


OLD-SCHOOL EMPLOYERS LIKE AT&T, CISCO, AND MICROSOFT MAY OFFER THE BEST CAREER
ADVANCEMENT


CO.DESIGN

Co.Design


I LOVE LENOVO’S NEW CRAZY LAPTOP DESIGN, AND I HATE MYSELF FOR IT

Co.Design


AIRBNB JUST INVESTED $10 MILLION IN 100 ABSURD BUILDINGS

Co.Design


THIS MOD ARMCHAIR SHARES DESIGN DNA WITH LONDON’S ICONIC RED BUSES


WORK LIFE

Work Life


WHAT WE MUST DO NOW TO TRULY DIVERSIFY THE FACE OF LEADERSHIP

Work Life


HERE’S THE ONE MAJOR DIFFERENCE BETWEEN GOOD AND GREAT COMPANIES

Work Life


HOW WORK-LIFE BALANCE STRUGGLES FOR WORKING MOMS HAVE CHANGED OVER THE LAST
GENERATION

 * Advertise
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms
 * Notice of Collection
 * Do Not Sell My Data
 * Permissions
 * Help Center
 * About Us
 * Site Map
 * Fast Company & Inc © 2022 Mansueto Ventures, LLC
 * 






search by queryly Advanced Search




WE USE COOKIES ON OUR WEBSITES TO SUPPORT TECHNICAL FEATURES THAT ENHANCE YOUR
USER EXPERIENCE AND HELP US IMPROVE OUR WEBSITE. BY CONTINUING TO USE THIS
WEBSITE YOU ACCEPT OUR PRIVACY POLICY AND TERMS OF USE.

Yes, I Accept