top of page

How Do Business Decisions Shape Everyday Life?
From housing and healthcare to food, travel, and technology, Stories of Business examines the systems and incentives behind the things we take for granted.

Business. The Real World. Connected
Stories exploring how business shapes communities, systems, and everyday life - locally and globally.
Latest Stories


The Economics of Fruit Stalls and Shops Inside Hospitals
A fruit stall inside a hospital looks benign. Even wholesome. Fresh oranges near the entrance. Smoothies beside the pharmacy. Yet retail activity inside medical environments is not incidental. It is part of a carefully structured economic ecosystem built around predictable human flow. Hospitals are not only sites of care. They are high-footfall, high-dwell infrastructure nodes where emotion, waiting time and constrained movement create a unique commercial environment. Conside
14 hours ago


School INSET Weeks and the Economics of Half-Term Inflation
When a school clusters all its INSET days into a single week to allow families to travel during cheaper periods, it looks like an act of empathy. In reality, it is a small intervention into a powerful pricing system built on synchronized demand. The economics of school holidays are not accidental. They are structured around predictable behavioural concentration. When millions of families are released into the travel market simultaneously, price inflation becomes rational, not
14 hours ago


Supermarket Delivery and the Profitability Puzzle
Supermarket home delivery looks like a convenience feature. Economically, it is a margin experiment layered onto one of the lowest-margin industries in the world. Grocery retail typically operates on thin net margins, often between two and five percent. Introducing delivery inserts additional costs — picking labour, fuel, routing software, packaging, failed deliveries — into a system already optimised for cost control. The question is not whether customers value delivery. The
14 hours ago


The Economics of Large Event Venues: Why Cities Build Spaces Like ExCeL London
Large event venues are often presented as civic pride projects or neutral gathering spaces. In reality, they are economic engines designed to compress global trade, capital and influence into highly concentrated bursts of activity. A venue such as London’s ExCeL is not simply a collection of exhibition halls. It is a fixed-cost infrastructure asset whose viability depends on orchestrating international demand, hotel capacity, transport connectivity and sector clustering into
14 hours ago


Antiques as Inflation Hedge — Myth or Reality?
Whenever inflation accelerates, the same narrative resurfaces: tangible assets protect wealth. Gold, property, art — and often, antiques. The logic appears intuitive. A Georgian chest of drawers cannot be printed. A Qing dynasty porcelain vase is finite. Scarcity, the argument goes, must translate into protection. Yet the relationship between antiques and inflation is far less straightforward than collectors and dealers often suggest. The belief persists not because it is con
15 hours ago


How Local Tour Guides Can Build a Sustainable Business
As referenced in our previous piece, When Local Knowledge Becomes a Livelihood , local expertise is not simply narrative flair. It is economic capital. When interpreted, structured and delivered consistently, local knowledge becomes a revenue-generating system rather than a casual side activity. This guide builds on that structural insight and translates it into a practical operating framework for local tour guides. Local guides are not merely walking encyclopaedias. They ar
16 hours ago


Contract Versus Pay-As-You-Go: The Business System Behind Phone Deals
In mobile telecoms, “contract” versus “pay-as-you-go” is not primarily a consumer preference. It is a segmentation system for risk, identity, and cashflow. The two models exist because operators face a basic problem: network infrastructure is expensive and fixed, while customers’ ability to pay is uneven and often unstable. Contracts monetise predictability and formal identity. PAYG monetises flexibility and informal cashflow. The phone deal you choose is rarely just about mi
16 hours ago


Chocolate as Cultural Currency
Chocolate is not merely consumed. It is exchanged, gifted, ritualised and staged. Across cultures, it operates less like a snack and more like a social instrument. Its portability, shelf stability and universal recognisability allow it to function as a form of soft currency — a low-denomination luxury that signals care, status, romance or obligation without the awkwardness of cash. In that sense, chocolate occupies a rare position in global commerce: it is both commodity and
17 hours ago
bottom of page











