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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


Africa’s Electricity Gap: The Infrastructure Challenge Beneath the Headlines
Electricity is one of the few infrastructures people only fully notice when it disappears. A power cut instantly changes the rhythm of life. Lights go out, refrigerators warm, internet routers fail, traffic systems collapse, hospital equipment becomes vulnerable and businesses slow down. Entire cities begin behaving differently within minutes. Yet when electricity works consistently, it becomes almost invisible. People stop thinking about the wires, substations, transformers,
1 hour ago


Table Tennis: The Small Table Inside a Global System
Table tennis is often treated as a lightweight sport. People associate it with school halls, office break rooms, youth clubs, holiday camps and basement recreation tables. Compared to football, basketball or tennis, it can appear small, informal and almost accidental. Yet table tennis is one of the most globally distributed sports on Earth. It exists simultaneously as Olympic competition, diplomatic tool, factory pastime, urban recreation, national obsession, school sport and
1 hour ago


Tomatoes: How One Fruit Entered Nearly Every Kitchen on Earth
The Tomato is one of the most ordinary things in modern life. It sits quietly in supermarket aisles, takeaway burgers, salads, pizzas, curries, sandwiches, pasta sauces and street-food stalls across the world. It is sliced in Lagos, crushed in Naples, blended in Mumbai, grilled in Istanbul, diced in Mexico City and packed into industrial sauces in California and China. People rarely stop to think about it because the tomato has become invisible through familiarity. Yet few fo
1 hour ago


The Atlantic: The Ocean That Connected the Modern World
The Atlantic Ocean is often imagined as empty space separating continents. On maps it appears blue, open and silent, a vast gap between land masses. But the Atlantic has never really been empty. It is one of the busiest systems in human history — a moving network of trade, empire, migration, warfare, energy, finance, culture, food and communication. The modern world was not simply built beside the Atlantic. In many ways, it was built through it. The visible entry point is the
2 hours ago


The Gambia: The Atlantic Gateway Hidden Inside West Africa
The The Gambia is often described through its size. It is the smallest country on mainland Africa, a narrow strip of land wrapped around the Gambia River and surrounded almost entirely by Senegal. On a map, it can appear fragile, almost accidental, as though geography squeezed a country into the shape of a corridor. But the shape itself explains much of the country’s reality. The Gambia is not simply a small nation. It is a system organised around movement: river movement, co
2 hours ago


Automation: The Business of Turning Human Work Into Repeatable Systems
Automation is often described as a story about machines replacing people, but that is only the surface. Beneath every automated checkout, warehouse robot, airport gate, call-centre chatbot, hotel booking system or factory arm sits a deeper question about how work is organised. Automation is the process of taking something once dependent on human attention and turning it into a repeatable system. Sometimes that creates speed. Sometimes it creates accuracy. Sometimes it creates
2 hours ago


“Mind the Gap” to “See It. Say It. Sorted.”: The Business of Recorded Announcements
Most people barely notice public announcements anymore. A train arrives. A calm voice says “Mind the gap.” A metro system announces the next stop. An airport warns passengers not to leave baggage unattended. A supermarket announces a closing time. A hospital calls for a doctor. A shopping centre reminds customers about parking restrictions. The words blend into the background through repetition. Yet beneath these short phrases sits an enormous hidden system involving safety,
2 hours ago


Horror Films: Why Societies Keep Returning to Fear
Horror films occupy a strange position in global culture. Millions of people voluntarily pay to feel uncomfortable, anxious, shocked, disturbed, or frightened for entertainment. Audiences scream in cinemas, watch through their fingers, and talk about films that unsettled them for days afterwards — only to return and do it again. At surface level, horror appears to be a genre built around fear. But beneath that visible reaction sits a much deeper system involving psychology, s
3 hours ago
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