Allan Sloan is an American journalist and financial writer known for his work on business and economic topics. He has written extensively for major publications such as The Washington Post and Fortune magazine. Sloan's insightful analysis and reporting on financial matters have earned him recognition as a leading voice in journalism. His contributions to the understanding of business and economic issues are highly regarded in the field.

"Report, report, report. Dig, dig, dig. Think, think, think. Don't stop being a reporter because you've become a columnist."



"If the government decides to put your life under a microscope, do you think it won't find something? I suspect there's not an adult in the country who would walk away totally unscathed if every aspect of his or her life were investigated the way Stewart's ImClone trading was."



"The lesson that any thinking person draws from the Stewart saga is that when the government asks questions, run for your lawyer and don't say a word. Had Stewart kept her mouth shut, she'd be OK."



"I grew up in an environment of jokes and sarcasm and puns. I talk that way, so I write that way."



"Go for the gold: better one great column and some undistinguished ones than constant mediocrity."



"I wanted to be a columnist so badly that I took a huge pay cut to leave Forbes, which wouldn't give me a column, and join Newsday, which wanted my column for its Sunday business section."



"It's easy to write a good column if you've got good information. It's hard if you have to depend on style alone. I suppose there are people who can get away with styling on a regular basis. I'm not one of them. You're probably not, either."

