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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 Business of Getting Funded: How Startups Turn Ideas into Investable Assets
For many founders the moment of “getting funded” looks like a single dramatic event. A pitch is made, an investor writes a cheque, and a new company begins its journey. In reality, startup funding is a layered financial system involving several stages, each designed to transform a raw idea into something that investors can price, scale, and eventually exit. Behind the headlines about venture capital lies a structured pipeline that moves companies from informal backing to glob
51 minutes ago


Why Do Startups Matter So Much to Modern Economies?
Startups often appear in the news as stories about young founders, venture capital, and breakthrough technology. Headlines focus on funding rounds, billion-dollar valuations, and the occasional spectacular failure. Yet behind these narratives sits a deeper system that explains why governments, investors, universities, and cities invest so heavily in startup ecosystems. Startups are not simply new companies. They are mechanisms through which economies experiment, renew industr
55 minutes ago


A Simple Strap That Powers Industries: The Hidden Systems Behind Belts
Belts appear deceptively simple. A strip of leather or fabric wrapped around the waist, fastened with a buckle. In clothing they are seen mainly as accessories—items that hold trousers in place or add a touch of style. Yet the belt is one of those everyday objects whose importance extends far beyond fashion. Across multiple industries and systems, belts play roles in clothing, machinery, safety, transport, and manufacturing. Few objects move so quietly between culture and inf
59 minutes ago


The Most Versatile Vehicle Ever Built: How the Bicycle Connects Work, Cities, and Sport
The bicycle is one of the simplest machines ever invented. Two wheels, a frame, pedals, and a chain. Yet few technologies have travelled so widely across cultures and economic systems while serving so many different roles. In some places the bicycle is a working tool that moves goods and income. In others it is a symbol of sport, health, or environmental consciousness. From banana transporters in Rwanda to elite racing events in Europe, the bicycle sits inside a surprisingly
1 hour ago


Four Wheels That Reshaped the World: How Cars Became Transport, Status, Sport, and Liability All at Once
At first glance cars appear to be simple machines designed to move people from one place to another. Yet over the past century they have evolved into something far larger: a system touching infrastructure, manufacturing, urban design, finance , culture, sport, and law. The global car industry is not merely about vehicles—it is about how societies organise movement, status, and risk. To understand cars properly, they must be viewed as a network of systems rather than a single
1 hour ago


Why Do Trains Shape Entire Economies? The Hidden Systems Behind Rail Networks
At first glance trains appear to be simply another way to move people and goods. They run on tracks, stop at stations, and connect cities. Yet railways have historically done far more than transport passengers. They shape economic geography, determine which cities grow, influence industrial development, and often act as the backbone of national infrastructure systems. Few technologies have had such lasting structural influence on how countries organise themselves. The railwa
1 hour ago


Why Did Water Become a Branded Beverage? The Global Business of Sparkling and Flavoured Water
For most of human history water was simply water . It came from wells, rivers, springs, or public fountains and was consumed without branding, packaging, or marketing. Today water sits at the centre of a global beverage industry worth billions. Supermarkets across the world sell sparkling water, flavoured water, mineral water, alkaline water, vitamin water, and dozens of other variations. What appears to be the most basic substance on earth has been transformed into a highly
1 hour ago


Why Do Countries Create National Parks? The Hidden System Behind Protected Landscapes
National parks are often presented as simple conservation spaces—vast areas of wilderness set aside to protect wildlife and natural beauty. Visitors see forests, mountains, rivers, or savannah landscapes and assume these areas exist primarily for recreation or environmental protection. In reality, national parks sit at the intersection of several powerful systems: conservation policy, tourism economics, land management, cultural identity, and global environmental governance.
1 hour ago
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