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“82% of consumers prefer to support businesses that give back to their community.”
– Edelman Trust Barometer
Local businesses aren’t just part of the economy — they’re the heart of their communities. Whether it’s a bakery in Nairobi or a bookstore in Manchester, business has the power to build connection, wellbeing, and belonging.

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


Does “Who You Know” Still Get You a Job?
In cities like Omaha, finding work has never been purely transactional. Jobs move through conversations. Through churches, colleges, old employers, family friends. Someone knows someone. Someone hears something before it’s public. Someone gives a quiet nudge. That system still exists. But it no longer lives only in people. It lives in platforms. The local job market never disappeared — it reorganised Omaha isn’t Silicon Valley. It’s not a place where people reinvent themselve
1 day ago


When an Empty Bottle Is Worth More Than Loose Change
In many parts of the world, an empty bottle isn’t rubbish. It’s something you keep. Something you return. Something you don’t casually throw away. In places like Uganda, returning an empty beer or soda bottle isn’t a virtuous act. It’s a practical one. Shops often won’t sell you a new drink unless you bring one back. The bottle has value — not symbolic value, but usable value. In countries like Austria and Denmark, that same logic is formalised. Bottles carry a deposit. Machi
1 day ago


Why Some Towns Like Killarney Stay Local — Even When the World Keeps Visiting
For readers unfamiliar with it, Killarney is a small town in the south-west of Ireland that receives millions of visitors each year. It sits beside a national park, anchors the Ring of Kerry, and functions as a gateway to some of the country’s most recognisable landscapes. Tourism isn’t an add-on to Killarney’s economy — it is the economy. On paper, this should make it fertile ground for national and international chains. High footfall. Global visitors. Predictable demand. A
1 day ago


Is Handmade a Product — or a Relationship?
When people buy something handmade, they rarely describe it as a transaction. They talk about supporting someone.They talk about connection .They talk about care . The object matters, but it isn’t the whole story. What’s being exchanged often feels larger than the thing itself. That raises an uncomfortable question: when we buy handmade, are we buying a product — or entering a relationship? Handmade carries expectations that mass production doesn’t A mug bought from a superm
1 day ago


Who Actually Makes Money from Making People Laugh?
Stand-up comedy is often described as one of the purest creative trades. A microphone.A room.A person trying to make strangers laugh. From the outside, it looks meritocratic. If you’re funny, you rise. If you’re not, you don’t. The laughs decide. But when you look more closely, comedy behaves less like an art form and more like a layered business system — one where laughter is necessary, but rarely sufficient. Between the pub circuit and the global special lies an uneven econ
1 day ago


When Has a Cuisine Really “Arrived” — at the Restaurant or the Supermarket?
When people talk about a cuisine “arriving” in a city, they usually point to restaurants. A new opening. A visible chef. Media attention. A sense that something once peripheral has now been recognised. But that framing assumes influence starts with visibility. In reality, visibility often comes last. Cuisines rarely arrive through dining rooms. They arrive through labour, repetition, and logistics. The supermarket is simply where that process becomes legible to everyone else.
1 day ago


When Does Fitness Stop Being a Habit and Start Becoming an Identity?
For a while, fitness looks like something you do . You fit it in around work. You negotiate with yourself about timing. You tell people you’re “trying to be more consistent.” A gym session is an activity, not a marker of who you are. Then, somewhere along the way, something shifts. You stop deciding whether to go. You start deciding how to prepare. Your bag gets packed the night before. You notice small inefficiencies. You care about grip, comfort, setup, recovery. Not beca
1 day ago


Do Online Reviews Punish Variance More Than They Reward Consistency?
There’s a moment many people recognise. You leave a negative review — not a rant, just an honest account of something that went wrong. Within hours, sometimes minutes, the business reaches out. Apologetic. Urgent. Keen to resolve it. Not because your experience was catastrophic.But because that one review matters disproportionately . It nudges the average down. It threatens visibility. It signals risk. That reaction tells us something important about how review systems really
2 days ago
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