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Human-centred storytelling that helps explain how complex systems shape everyday life


Work Commuting: The Daily Journey That Shapes Cities
Work commuting looks ordinary because it happens every day. People leave homes, catch trains, sit in cars, board buses, cycle through traffic, walk to stations, squeeze into underground carriages, wait at junctions, scan ticket barriers, and arrive at workplaces often before the workday has emotionally begun. But commuting is not just travel. It is one of the deepest systems connecting housing, employment, transport, class, health, family life, urban design, climate, and time


The Maldives and the Business of Paradise
The Maldives is often presented as the ultimate escape. White sand islands. Overwater villas. Turquoise lagoons. Honeymoons. Luxury resorts floating above the Indian Ocean. Social media helped turn the country into one of the most recognisable symbols of tropical perfection on Earth. But beneath the paradise imagery lies a far deeper story about geography, tourism dependency, climate vulnerability, labour migration, luxury economics, infrastructure isolation, and the global b


Mental Health and the Systems Beneath Human Strain
Mental health is often discussed as an individual issue. Anxiety, depression, burnout, trauma, loneliness, addiction, panic, grief, stress, or emotional resilience. The language usually points inward, toward the person who is struggling. But mental health is never only personal. It is shaped by work, housing, family, technology, poverty, culture, healthcare, education, war, migration, climate, social media, loneliness, and the pace of economic life itself. A society’s mental

How Do Systems 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.

The Hidden Systems Behind Everyday Life
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Washing Machines and the Automation of Laundry
The washing machine is often treated as an ordinary household appliance. Something expected to exist quietly in the background of daily life. But few inventions transformed domestic life, labour systems, gender roles, urban infrastructure, and human time allocation more profoundly than the washing machine. It did not simply clean clothes. It automated one of the most repetitive and physically exhausting tasks in human history. Before mechanised laundry systems, washing clothe


Personalised Gifts and the Industrialisation of Emotion
Personalised gifts are often marketed as thoughtful gestures. Mugs with names printed on them. Custom jewellery. Photo books. Engraved watches. Monogrammed bags. Birthday cushions, anniversary frames, Spotify plaques, personalised storybooks, pet portraits, and custom hoodies. At first glance, the industry appears sentimental and highly personal. But beneath the emotional surface lies a remarkably sophisticated global system built around identity, memory, relationships, digit


Moisturiser: The Business of Dry Skin
Skin moisturiser is often presented as a cosmetic product. A lifestyle product. A beauty aisle decision. Something associated with self-care, fragrance, smoothness, glow, or appearance. But in reality, moisturiser sits at the intersection of biology, climate, chemistry, psychology, medicine, marketing, ageing, urban living, and industrial capitalism. Entire global systems quietly depend on human skin becoming dry enough to require intervention. Human skin was never designed f


How Click and Collect Changed the Geography of Shopping
Click and collect looks simple on the surface. A customer orders online, travels to a store, collects the item and leaves. But underneath that convenience sits a major transformation in retail systems, logistics, consumer behaviour and urban infrastructure. The model emerged because modern shoppers increasingly wanted two things at the same time: the convenience and product range of online shopping, combined with the immediacy of physical retail. Traditional e-commerce solved


Mental Health and the Systems Beneath Human Strain
Mental health is often discussed as an individual issue. Anxiety, depression, burnout, trauma, loneliness, addiction, panic, grief, stress, or emotional resilience. The language usually points inward, toward the person who is struggling. But mental health is never only personal. It is shaped by work, housing, family, technology, poverty, culture, healthcare, education, war, migration, climate, social media, loneliness, and the pace of economic life itself. A society’s mental


The Business of Human Teeth
Teeth are often treated as isolated health issues. Cavities, braces, whitening, fillings, gum disease, veneers, bad breath, sensitivity, or cosmetic appearance. But teeth are far more than biological tools for chewing food. They sit at the intersection of nutrition, class, healthcare systems, beauty standards, industrial food production, ageing, employment, psychology, genetics, marketing, and even national identity. Few parts of the human body reveal the structure of society


Cancer Is Not One Disease, But One of Humanity’s Biggest System Battles
Cancer is often spoken about as if it is one enemy. People say someone “has cancer” as though the word describes a single condition with one logic, one treatment path and one emotional meaning. In reality, cancer is a vast family of diseases connected by one terrifying pattern: cells stop obeying the ordinary rules of the body. They grow, divide, invade and sometimes spread, turning the body’s own biological systems against itself. That is what makes cancer so difficult. It i


Why So Many People Need the Gym
Gyms are officially places for exercise, but that description barely captures what they became in modern society. Gyms now sit at the intersection of health, insecurity, discipline, ageing, loneliness, identity, social media, masculinity, self-improvement and urban life. People walk into gyms carrying far more than weights and workout plans. They carry stress, ambition, heartbreak, anxiety, routine and the feeling that modern life slowly pushes the body in the wrong direction


Maps and the Human Need to Organise Space
Maps appear objective. Neutral. Scientific. Helpful. They sit quietly inside phones, classrooms, dashboards, airports, delivery systems, and navigation apps as if they simply describe reality. But maps are far more than tools for finding directions. They are systems for organising power, movement, trade, memory, ownership, war, identity, and human understanding itself. Civilisation depends heavily on the ability to simplify physical space into manageable information. At the m


Canals and the Architecture of Trade
For most people, canals appear as old infrastructure from another era. Tourist boats in Amsterdam. Narrowboats moving slowly through the English countryside. Romantic waterways beside cafés in Venice. But canals are not historical decoration. They are one of the clearest examples of how human civilisation repeatedly redesigns geography itself in pursuit of trade, power, food security, industrial growth, military reach, and urban expansion. A canal is ultimately an attempt to


Motor Accidents Turn Ordinary Days Into Crisis
A motor accident lasts seconds, but the systems surrounding it stretch across infrastructure, psychology, medicine, insurance, policing, engineering, law and public policy. A crash is never only two vehicles colliding. It is the visible surface of much deeper systems interacting at speed. Modern societies normalised road danger to an extraordinary degree. Millions of people drive daily surrounded by heavy machinery moving at speeds capable of killing instantly, yet most journ


Why Hong Kong Became One of the World’s Most Intense Cities
Hong Kong became one of the most extraordinary urban systems in modern history because it compressed finance, trade, migration, capitalism, geopolitics and extreme density into a small strip of territory sitting between China and the global economy. Few places transformed as dramatically in such a short time. At first glance, Hong Kong is often described through its skyline. Towers, neon lights, packed streets and dense apartment blocks became globally recognisable symbols of
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