
The U.S. Census Bureau: An essential bookmark
You could literally spend days on this site and not scratch the surface of the wealth of data it contains. Are you covering an education
As Assistant Director of The Reynolds Center, Julianne Culey is responsible for coordinating the daily operations of the center as well as managing projects with other Reynolds Center staff, students, and outside creative professionals. She works closely with the center’s director to strengthen relations with organizational partners and implement goals for furthering the center’s mission.
First coming to Arizona State University in 2020, Julianne worked with The Center for Gender Equity in Science and Technology where she managed various communications and marketing efforts, such as a large-scale website migration, the development of a monthly newsletter, social media outreach, and the creation of weekly content. These efforts helped the center promote its research and programming initiatives throughout the state of Arizona.
Since joining The Reynolds Center in 2021, Julianne has lead the redesign of the Center’s branding, implemented a weekly newsletter, designed and produced the ebook Business Beats Basics, coordinated events, and collaborated with the center’s director to redevelop the James B. Steele Fellowship program.
Originally from Michigan, Julianne earned a bachelor of applied arts in marketing with a minor in women’s studies from Central Michigan University. She moved to Arizona for the sunshine after graduation, then went on to complete a master’s of arts in sociology at Arizona State University, with an emphasis in feminist theory and studies. Julianne is currently studying to earn her Doctorate in Sociology and expects to graduate in 2026.
Julianne is passionate about women’s rights, inclusion, and representation, and she continuously looks for ways to contribute to the creation of a more inclusive environment for women in business and beyond. She credits her drive and determination to her mother, who always insisted she could do anything her brother could.

You could literally spend days on this site and not scratch the surface of the wealth of data it contains. Are you covering an education

Throughout its history, the Supreme Court has decided numerous cases that deal with business matters. In that vein, the leaked draft decision is more than

Headline writing seems simple, but any journalist knows that it can be one of the most difficult skills in the writing process, because the importance

Every fall we welcome new ASU Cronkite graduate students to our center and each spring we bid those students adieu as they leave our center

Burn rate is one of those important metrics that shareholders, CEOs, investors, and others use to evaluate how well a company – particularly a start-up

The precipitous rise in gas prices over the past few weeks has spurred even more interest in electric vehicles (EVs). Carmakers have gotten the message

Just last week, in a historic move, Amazon workers at a Staten Island warehouse in New York voted to unionize – a move the online shopping giant

In honor of Women’s History Month, we have been highlighting a female business journalist every day this month on Twitter that you should definitely know

We spend a lot of time in business coverage talking about the big companies: Amazon, Starbucks, Apple, Walmart, etc. This is in large part because

Vague, unclear, wordy, and gibberish are all words you do not want associated with your business writing. With so many consumers reading their news on

With the first day of spring right around the corner, this is a common time of year for people to go through their homes and

So, you pitched a killer story idea and an editor wants to assign it. Time to get cracking, right? Not so fast. Before you start
Two Minute Tips
Every Tuesday we send out a quick-read email with tips for business journalism. Sign up now and get one Tuesday.