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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


Traffic Lights: The System That Keeps Cities Moving Without Agreement
At a busy junction in London, cars stop, pedestrians cross, buses turn, cyclists wait, and then everything moves again. No one negotiates. No one speaks. There is no visible coordination between strangers, yet the flow works. The system behind that moment is simple on the surface — red, amber, green — but what it enables is far more complex. It turns potential chaos into predictable movement. At its core, a traffic light is a coordination device. It assigns priority in time
1 hour ago


Afrobeats: From Local Sound to Global System of Culture, Capital, and Influence
Afrobeats did not start global. It emerged from specific places, shaped by local culture, language, rhythm, and lived experience. Studios in Lagos, clubs in Accra, and producers working with limited resources built a sound that reflected everyday life. What exists now — global tours, chart success, brand partnerships — is the result of a system that expanded far beyond its origin. At its core, Afrobeats is a cultural product that travels through multiple channels at once. Mus
1 hour ago


Recruitment: Why Hiring Looks Simple but Runs on Filters, Signals, and Timing
Recruitment is often described as matching people to jobs. In practice, it is a layered system that filters, signals, and selects under pressure. A candidate in London submits a CV online and waits. A hiring manager reviews a shortlist generated by software. An agency presents a “strong fit” candidate to a client. The same role moves through multiple lenses before a decision is made. What appears to be a straightforward process is shaped by how those lenses are designed. At i
1 hour ago


Nihilism: When Meaning Breaks Down and Systems Keep Running
Nihilism does not arrive as a philosophy first. It shows up as a feeling. A sense that effort does not connect to outcome, that values are flexible, that meaning is optional. A graduate in London sends out hundreds of job applications and hears nothing back. A worker in Tokyo follows structure and routine without a clear sense of purpose. The system continues to operate, but the connection between action and meaning weakens. At its core, nihilism is the erosion of shared mea
1 hour ago


Sports Data: From Performance to Prediction, How Numbers Now Shape the Game
Sport used to be judged by what people could see. A goal scored, a race won, a pass completed. Now, behind every visible moment sits a layer of data that measures, predicts, and influences what happens next. A player running on a pitch in Manchester is being tracked in real time — distance covered, sprint speed, positioning, decision-making. What looks like instinct is increasingly analysed, quantified, and optimised. At its core, sports data turns performance into measurable
1 hour ago


Israel: Where Constraint Drives Innovation and Systems Scale Under Pressure
Israel operates within tight boundaries — geographically small, resource-constrained, and surrounded by complex regional dynamics. Yet it consistently produces outsized impact in technology, defence, and innovation. The explanation is not a single advantage. It is a system where pressure, necessity, and structure combine to drive outcomes. In Tel Aviv, startups, investors, and global companies cluster in a way that reflects both ambition and constraint. The environment is not
1 hour ago


Maize: From Ugali to Industrial Scale, How One Crop Feeds Systems and Markets
Maize is one of the most widely grown crops in the world, but it does not behave like a single product. It operates as multiple systems at once. In one setting, it is daily survival. In another, it is industrial input. A plate of ugali in Nairobi and a processed corn product in Chicago come from the same crop, but sit in completely different economic structures. The grain is the same. The system around it is not. At its core, maize is a staple. In large parts of Africa, it fo
2 hours ago


Landlocked Countries: When Geography Turns Into Dependency and Strategy
A country without direct access to the sea operates under a different set of rules. Movement becomes negotiation. Trade becomes coordination. What looks like a simple geographic fact shapes how goods flow, how costs build, and how opportunities scale. A shipment leaving Zambia does not go straight to global markets. It moves through neighbours, across borders, through ports that are not its own. Every step adds friction, cost, and dependency. Geography sets the starting point
2 hours ago
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