Noun
fast company (uncountable)
Companions of either gender who do morally questionable things.
After James fell in with fast company he started doing drugs and sleeping around.
After leaving Random House in 1997, he was an executive of The Daily News in New York, U.S. News & World Report (in a second stint), The Atlantic Monthly and the business magazine Fast Company. Source: Internet
According to Fast Company, brute-force password-hacking methods can churn through billions to hundreds of billions of passwords per second. Source: Internet
Fast Company put together an example of a Thanksgiving dinner in a 20-foot-by-20-foot room with 10 people inside. Source: Internet
Barry Kirk, a recognized expert and speaker in the loyalty and motivation industry, is the VP of Loyalty and Motivation at Bunchball, which was just recognized as one of the Top 10 Most Innovative gaming companies for 2012 by Fast Company magazine. Source: Internet
Biz Stone, one of Twitter's founders and a Beyond Meat backer, described the company's fake chicken to Fast Company as having a meaty mouth feel. Source: Internet
In an interview with Fast Company last October, right before the election, Ivanka Trump stood by her father—and her brand—and didn’t flinch. Source: Internet