industryterm:retail

  • ‘Meanwhile spaces’: the empty shops becoming a creative force across the country | Life and style | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/may/02/meanwhile-spaces-the-empty-shops-becoming-a-creative-force-across-the-c

    From hat-makers to carpenters, art centres to gift boutiques, new life is coming to properties abandoned in the retail slump

    Aida Edemariam

    Thu 2 May 2019 10.59 BST

    Photography students from the Northern School of Art preparing for a show of their work at Empty Shop in Hartlepool.
    Photography students from the Northern School of Art preparing for a show of their work at Empty Shop in Hartlepool. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer

    Meanwhile seems such a bland word. Ostensibly, it is a scrap of time between one event and another. But in every hard-boiled thriller, it is where the real excitement lies: meanwhile, our hero shimmied down the drainpipe; meanwhile, on the other side of town …

    … there’s an empty shop. Businesses have gone bust. They haven’t been able to pay business rates; they haven’t been able to compete with Amazon; the way we make and buy things has changed so radically, so fast, and they haven’t been able to keep up. Or a shopping centre has opened not far away and the trade has moved there or collapsed because of the competition. Or a developer has bought the space but has not figured out what to do with it or is awaiting planning permission. Whatever the reason, it’s empty.

    According to a recent report on empty space in London, more than 20,000 commercial units have been empty for at least six months, and 11,000 for more than two years. And planning permission for development has been granted for 2,700 hectares (6,672 acres) of land – the equivalent in size to the London borough of Lambeth – but construction has yet to start.

  • Robert Reich: Here’s everything you need to know about the new economy – Alternet.org
    https://www.alternet.org/2019/04/robert-reich-heres-everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-new-economy

    The biggest economic story of our times isn’t about supply and demand. It’s about institutions and politics. It’s about power.

    The median annual earnings of full-time wage and salaried workers in 1979, in today’s dollars, was $43,680. The median earnings in 2018 was $45,708. If between 1979 and 2018, the American economy almost tripled in size, so where did the gains go? Most went to the top.

    Now this is broadly known, but there is less certainty about why.

    1. The Conventional View

    Conventional wisdom attributes the widening economic divide to globalization and technological change – the “inevitable” result of the invisible hand of the so-called “free market.”

    Simply put, as the American economy merged with the rest of the globe, American workers had to compete with foreign workers willing to toil for a fraction of American wages. And as technology advanced, American workers also had to compete with software and robots that were cheaper to employ than Americans.

    So, according to this conventional view, the only realistic way to raise the wages of most Americans is to give them more and better education and job training, so they can become more competitive. They can thereby overcome the so-called “skills gap” that keeps them from taking the jobs of the future – jobs and opportunities generated by new technologies.

    2. A Deeper View of the American Political Economy

    The conventional story isn’t completely wrong, and education and training are important. But the conventional view leaves out some of the largest and most important changes, and therefore overlooks the most important solutions.

    To understand what really happened, it’s critical to understand that there is no “free market” in nature. The term “free market” suggests outcomes are objectively fair and that any “intervention” in the free market is somehow “unnatural.” But in reality, markets cannot exist without people constructing them. Markets depend on rules, and rules come out of legislatures, executive agencies, and courts. The biggest political change over the last four decades is the overwhelming dominance of big money in politics – influencing what those rules are to be.

    3. The Decline of Countervailing Power

    Now, go back to the first three decades after World War II – a period that coupled the greatest economic expansion the world has ever seen with the creation of the largest middle class the world has ever witnessed. The great economic thinker John Kenneth Galbraith asked at the time: Why is capitalism working so well for so many?

    His answer was as surprising as it was obvious: American capitalism contained hidden pools of what he called “countervailing power” that offset the power of large corporations, Wall Street, and the wealthy: labor unions, state and local banks, farm cooperatives, and small retail chains, for example. All of these sources of countervailing power had been fostered by the New Deal. They balanced the American economic system.

    But since the late 1970s, these sources of countervailing power have been decimated, leading to an unbalanced system and producing widening economic inequality and stagnating wages. The result has become a vicious cycle in which big money – emanating from big corporations, Wall Street, and the wealthy – determine the rules of the economic game, and those rules generate more money at the top.

    Consider, for example, the ever-expanding tax cuts or loopholes for large corporations, the financial sector, and the wealthy. Contrast them with increases in payroll taxes for average workers.

    Or look at the bank and corporate bailouts but little or no help for homeowners caught in the downdraft of the Great Recession.

    Finally, look at the increasing barriers to labor unions, such as the proliferation of so-called “right-to-work” laws and the simultaneous erosion of antitrust and the emergence of large concentrations of corporate power.

    The public knows the game is rigged, which is why almost all the political energy is now anti-establishment. This is a big reason why Trump won the 2016 election. Authoritarian populists through history have used anger and directed it at racial and ethnic minorities and foreigners.

    It’s also a big reason why the only alternative to authoritarian populism is progressive populism – countervailing the moneyed interests with a democracy that reorganizes the market to benefit the many rather than a small group at the top.

    How do we build a new countervailing power and move toward a new progressive economics?

    4. Economics and Political Power

    The choice isn’t between a free market and government. The question is who has the power to organize the market, and for whom.

    Stagnant wages, job insecurity, widening inequality, and mounting wealth at the top are the result of political choices. The system is rigged and must be un-rigged.

    Conventional economics posits that the most important goals are efficiency and economic growth. But policies can be “efficient” by making the rich even wealthier as long as no one else is worse off – and that won’t remedy what’s happened. Economic growth is meaningless if the gains from growth keep going to the top and nothing trickles down.

    Stop assuming that all that’s needed is better education and job training. Sure, Americans need access to better schools and skills, but the basic problem isn’t simply a “skills gap.” It’s a market that’s organized to push more income and wealth toward the top, rather than distribute it broadly.

    Stop aiming to “redistribute” from richer to poorer after the market has distributed income. Instead, change the organization of the market so that a fair pre-distribution occurs inside it.

    Stop thinking that the goal is only to create more jobs. America’s real jobs crisis is a scarcity of good jobs.

    The American economy cannot generate widespread prosperity without a large and growing middle class whose spending fuels the economy.

    5. Building a Multi-racial, Multi-ethnic, Coalition of the Middle Class, Working Class, and Poor.

    Don’t let the moneyed interests divide and conquer along racial and gender lines. Racism and sexism are very real issues within our economic system, and they are often exploited to keep us from realizing the power we can have when we stand together. All are disempowered by the moneyed interests, and all have a stake in rebuilding countervailing power.

    6. Offering a Compelling Set of Ideas about What Should be Done with Countervailing Power.

    For example:

    — A guaranteed basic income so no one is impoverished,

    — A guaranteed job so everyone can get ahead,

    — A progressive wealth tax to pay for these and other basics,

    — Stronger unions so workers have more bargaining power,

    — New forms of corporate organization so workers have more voice,

    – A Green New Deal so workers can get better jobs while fighting climate change.

    — Reinvigorated antitrust so concentrations of economic power are broken up,

    — Election finance reforms to get big money out of politics and end the revolving door,

    — Voting reforms so votes cannot be suppressed.

    7. Building the leadership for this new countervailing power.

    You can help lead the way. You can be a leader of this movement. How?

    For one, you can run for office – in your community, say, city council or school board. Or run for state office. Or even national office.

    Don’t be intimidated by politics. We need good people to run. And don’t worry that you’ll be beholden to a handful of rich donors. These days, smaller donors are more active than ever.

    So, what’s the secret? Tell it like it is and be yourself. And then, as I’ve said, talk about economics in terms of political power and understand the 7 principles. Build countervailing power through a multi-racial, multi-ethnic coalition. And offer a compelling set of ideas about what can and should be done.

    But you don’t need to hold formal office to be a leader.

    You can be a leader by organizing and mobilizing people: Your co-workers – to form a union. Your friends and neighbors – to push for better roads and schools, and fairer local taxes. People at your church or synagogue or mosque – to demand better treatment of the poor, the elderly, children, immigrants. You can link your group up with other groups pursuing similar ends, and create a movement. That’s how we got the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts. How we got marriage equality. It’s how we get good people elected.

    The key to organizing and mobilizing is creating a leadership team, and then reaching out systematically to others, giving them tasks and responsibilities, starting small and gaining a few victories so people can feel their power, and then growing from there.

    You’ll need to be patient and steadfast. Keep people together and focused. And be careful not to burn out. Organizing and mobilizing is hard, but once organized and mobilized, there’s no end to what people can accomplish.

    You can also be a leader by uncovering critical information, fighting lies, spreading the truth. Core responsibilities of leadership are revealing the facts about widening inequalities of income, wealth, and political power – and uncovering their consequences.

    A century ago they were called “muckrakers.” More recently, investigative reporters. I’m talking about courageous journalists who speak truth to power.

    But this form of leadership isn’t limited to reporters. It includes whistleblowers, who alert the public to abuses of power. And here courage is also required because when you blow the whistle on the powerful, the powerful sometimes strike back.

    This form of leadership also includes researchers, who dig up new sources of data and analyze them in ways that enlighten and motivate.

    In other words, there isn’t just one path to leadership. Whether you seek formal authority by running and gaining public office, or you organize and mobilize people into being effective advocates, or you discover and spread the truth – you are creating and developing countervailing power to spread the gains of the economy and strengthen our democracy.

    These are worthy and noble objectives. They are worth your time. They can be worth a lifetime.

    #Robert_Reich #Politique_USA #Economie #Indignez_vous

  • Can #binance’s Initial Exchange Offering (IEO) Platform Lead the Next Crypto Wave?
    https://hackernoon.com/can-binances-initial-exchange-offering-ieo-platform-lead-the-next-crypto

    The success of Binance issuing the first Initial Exchange Offering (IEO) should not be understated. It can potentially be a game changer for the crypto space. Some attributed the booming ICO market in 2017–2018 as the main reason why Cryptocurrencies were so popular to retail investors. The amount of money that ICOs have raised over the last two years is truly astonishing. Thanks to Cointelegraph, we know that in 2017, ICOs raised a total of $5.6 billion. The number increased to $11.4 billion in 2018! However, arguments show that ICOs were one of the main reasons for Crypto Winter.An article by Bitcoinist offers key insights on why Ethereum suffered a huge drop and it was because of ICO projects liquidating their ETH. Therefore, like every innovative idea, there needs to be some (...)

    #ieo #initial-exchange-offering #changpeng-zhao #trx

  • Top 8 #iot market trends to look out for in 2019
    https://hackernoon.com/top-8-iot-market-trends-to-look-out-for-in-2019-8ec15fc997db?source=rss-

    It is estimated that there will be over 30 billion IoT devices by 2020. With the increasing trends of IoT devices and its implementation in industries, it is imperative to take note of which trends could influence your business.Looking at the pace of IoT market trends and its wide range of applications, it is expected to affect industry verticals such as retail to health-care. As a marketer, you can’t overlook the importance of IoT Trends that can help you achieve sustainable, and long-term growth.While there are innumerable trends in IoT emerging in the world today, let’s dive deep into the eight we trust will most affect consumers and business in 2018.1. Retail will be Flooded with IoT IdeasYou will see the retail industry changing its whole way of doing business. Some of the IoT (...)

    #internet-of-things #smart-home #iot-platform #iot-security

  • Who says ICOs are dead? It’s not dead, it’s evolving.
    https://hackernoon.com/icos-arent-dead-theyre-evolving-linix-5-second-ieo-5fd3f6c4ebfc?source=r

    Who Says ICOs are Dead? It’s Not Dead, It’s Evolving.The #ieo Streak Continues: LINIX Sells Out in Mind-Blowing Five Seconds. Meanwhile, ICOs continue to decline.The traditional method of raising funds through ICOs are undoubtedly becoming less and less attractive. In fact, there has been a steady decline in funds raised through traditional ICOs since March ’18 — the numbers don’t lie.Courtesy of ICOBench: Funds Raised Through ICOs the Past YearThis dramatic decline in retail interest in ICOs have forced projects to adapt and remodel their fundraising techniques in various ways. There are a handful of trends that our #ico Specialists at Lunar Digital Assets have taken note of:Projects pushing back their crowdsale dates indefinitely until the market turns bullishProjects pushing back their (...)

    #korean-blockchain #blockchain #cryptocurrency

  • The Software That Shapes Workers’ Lives | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/science/elements/the-software-that-shapes-workers-lives

    How could I know which had been made ethically and which hadn’t?

    Answering this question can be surprisingly difficult. A few years ago, while teaching a class about global labor at the University of California, Los Angeles, I tried assigning my students the task of analyzing the “supply chain”—the vast network of factories, warehouses, and shipping conduits through which products flow—by tracing the components used in their electronic devices. Almost immediately, I hit a snag: it turns out that even companies that boast about “end-to-end visibility” and “supply-chain transparency” may not know exactly where their components come from. This ignorance is built into the way supply chains work. The housing of a television, say, might be built in a small factory employing only a few people; that factory interacts only with the suppliers and buyers immediately adjacent to it in the chain—a plastic supplier on one side, an assembly company on the other. This arrangement encourages modularity, since, if a company goes out of business, its immediate partners can replace it without consulting anyone. But it also makes it hard to identify individual links in the chain. The resilient, self-healing quality of supply chains derives, in part, from the fact that they are unsupervised.

    When people try to picture supply chains, they often focus on their physical infrastructure. In Allan Sekula’s book “Fish Story,” a volume of essays and photographs produced between 1989 and 1995, the writer and photographer trains his lens on ports, harbors, and the workers who pilot ships between them; he reveals dim shipboard workspaces and otherworldly industrial zones. In “The Forgotten Space,” a documentary that Sekula made with the film theorist Noël Burch, in 2010, we see massive, gliding vessels, enormous machines, and people rummaging through the detritus around ports and harbors. Sekula’s work suggests the degree to which our fantasy of friction-free procurement hides the real, often gruelling, work of global shipping and trade.

    But supply chains aren’t purely physical. They’re also made of information. Modern supply-chain management, or S.C.M., is done through software. The people who design and coördinate supply chains don’t see warehouses or workers. They stare at screens filled with icons and tables. Their view of the supply chain is abstract. It may be the one that matters most.

    Most of the time, the work of supply-chain management is divided up, with handoffs where one specialist passes a package of data to another. No individual is liable to possess a detailed picture of the whole supply chain. Instead, each S.C.M. specialist knows only what her neighbors need.

    In such a system, a sense of inevitability takes hold. Data dictates a set of conditions which must be met, but there is no explanation of how that data was derived; meanwhile, the software takes an active role, tweaking the plan to meet the conditions as efficiently as possible. sap’s built-in optimizers work out how to meet production needs with the least “latency” and at the lowest possible costs. (The software even suggests how tightly a container should be packed, to save on shipping charges.) This entails that particular components become available at particular times. The consequences of this relentless optimization are well-documented. The corporations that commission products pass their computationally determined demands on to their subcontractors, who then put extraordinary pressure on their employees. Thus, China Labor Watch found that workers in Heyuan City, China, tasked with producing Disney’s Princess Sing & Sparkle Ariel Bath Doll—retail price today, $26.40—work twenty-six days a month, assembling between eighteen hundred and twenty-five hundred dolls per day, and earning one cent for each doll they complete.

    Still, from a worker’s point of view, S.C.M. software can generate its own bullwhip effect. At the beginning of the planning process, product requirements are fairly high-level. But by the time these requirements reach workers, they have become more exacting, more punishing. Small reductions in “latency,” for instance, can magnify in consequence, reducing a worker’s time for eating her lunch, taking a breath, donning safety equipment, or seeing a loved one.

    Could S.C.M. software include a “workers’-rights” component—a counterpart to PP/DS, incorporating data on working conditions? Technically, it’s possible. sap could begin asking for input about worker welfare. But a component like that would be at cross-purposes with almost every other function of the system. On some level, it might even undermine the purpose of having a system in the first place. Supply chains create efficiency in part through the distribution of responsibility. If a supervisor at a toy factory objects to the production plan she’s received, her boss can wield, in his defense, a PP/DS plan sent to him by someone else, who worked with data produced by yet another person. It will turn out that no one in particular is responsible for the pressures placed on the factory. They flow from the system—a system designed to be flexible in some ways and rigid in others.

    #Algorithmes #SAP #Droit_travail #Industrie_influence

  • 9 Digital Identity Trends That Will Make or Break Businesses in 2019
    https://hackernoon.com/9-digital-identity-trends-that-will-make-or-break-businesses-in-2019-f5c

    1. Payment Fraud MultipliedIn 2019, retail sales via smartphones in the United States will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 18% and will affect more than $1 trillion trillion in revenue at some point in the customer’s journey, according to Forrester research.Credit card numbers and related identity information are priced at couple of dollars on the black web, due to ongoing data breaches.2. Enterprises leaning towards SaaSAccording to research conducted by an analyst from Gartner, 2019 will be the year of the SaaS market, growing by 17.8%, with a total value of $85.1 billion.With SaaS as the largest share of the cloud market, Craig Roth, Gartner’s VP of research department, said this was partly because companies wanted to move their content platforms to SaaS. All signs are (...)

    #enterprise #digital-identity #business #cybersecurity #identity-management

  • The Connection Between Crypto And Fiat Is Closer Than You Think
    https://hackernoon.com/the-connection-between-crypto-and-fiat-is-closer-than-you-think-aa6a2ea1

    Don’t keep your money siloed from the 21st century! Photo courtesy canva.comMoney has come a long way from dusty ledgers, oversized check-books and waiting in long lines at the bank.In fact, consumers are so frustrated with “Big Banks” failure to innovate that one in three of us believe traditional banks will cease to exist in 5 years.Most people don’t even use physical money anymore. The mobile-payment market has made cash a relic in Asia, with 1.4 billion monthly users on China’s two biggest platforms (or roughly 18% of the world’s population). Though mobile payments are growing, there’s something even more revolutionary to the traditional banking sector:The introduction of #cryptocurrency as a real alternative for payment.In South Korea, consumers can use crypto to pay at thousands of retail (...)

    #crypto-and-fiat #crypto-fiat-connection #bitcoin #stable-coin

  • #Ghost_Towns | Buildings | Architectural Review

    https://www.architectural-review.com/today/ghost-towns/8634793.article

    Though criticised by many, China’s unoccupied new settlements could have a viable future

    Earlier this year a historic landmark was reached, but with little fanfare. The fact that the people of China are now predominantly urban, was largely ignored by the Western media. By contrast, considerable attention focused on China’s new ‘ghost towns’ or kong cheng − cities such as Ordos in the Gobi desert and Zhengzhou New District in Henan Province which are still being built but are largely unoccupied.

    By some estimates, the number of vacant homes in Chinese cities is currently around 64 million: space to accommodate, perhaps, two thirds of the current US population. However, unlike the abandoned cities of rust-belt America or the shrinking cities of Europe, China’s ghost cities seem never to have been occupied in the first place. So to what extent are these deserted places symbolic of the problems of rapid Chinese urbanisation? And what is revealed by the Western discourse about them?

    Characterised by its gargantuan central Genghis Khan Plaza and vast boulevards creating open vistas to the hills of Inner Mongolia, Ordos New Town is a modern frontier city. It is located within a mineral rich region that until recently enjoyed an estimated annual economic growth rate of 40 per cent, and boasts the second highest per-capita income in China, behind only the financial capital, Shanghai.

    Having decided that the existing urban centre of 1.5 million people was too crowded, it was anticipated that the planned cultural districts and satellite developments of Ordos New Town would by now accommodate half a million people rather than the 30,000 that reputedly live there.

    Reports suggest that high profile architectural interventions such as the Ai Weiwei masterplan for 100 villas by 100 architects from 27 different countries have been shelved, although a few of the commissions struggle on.

    It seems that expectations of raising both the region’s profile (at least in ways intended) and the aesthetic esteem of its new residents have failed to materialise. Instead, attention is focused on the vacant buildings and empty concrete shells within a cityscape devoid of traffic and largely empty of people.

    Estimates suggest there’s another dozen Chinese cities with similar ghost town annexes. In the southern city of Kunming, for example, the 40-square-mile area of Chenggong is characterised by similar deserted roads, high-rises and government offices. Even in the rapidly growing metropolitan region of Shanghai, themed model towns such as Anting German Town and Thames Town have few inhabitants. In the Pearl River Delta, the New South China Mall is the world’s largest. Twice the size of the Mall of America in Minneapolis, it is another infamous example of a gui gouwu zhongxin or ‘ghost mall’.

    Located within a dynamic populated region (40 million people live within 60 miles of the new Mall), it has been used in the American documentary Utopia, Part 3 to depict a modern wasteland. With only around 10 of the 2,300 retail spaces occupied, there is an unsettling emptiness here. The sense that this is a building detached from economic and social reality is accentuated by broken display dummies, slowly gliding empty escalators, and gondolas navigating sewage-infested canals. The message is that in this ‘empty temple to consumerism’ − as described by some critics − we find an inherent truth about China’s vapid future.

    Anting German Town Shanghai

    The main square of Anting German Town outside Shanghai. One of the nine satellite European cities built around the city, it has failed to establish any sense of community. The Volkswagen factory is down the road

    Pursued through the imagery of the ghost town, the commentary on stalled elements of Chinese modernity recalls the recent fascination with what has been termed ‘ruin porn’ − apocalyptic photographs of decayed industrial structures in cities such as Detroit, as in the collection The Ruins of Detroit by Yves Marchand and Romain Meffe. These too dramatise the urban landscapes but seldom seem interested in enquiring about the origins and processes underlying them.

    In his popular work Collapse, Jared Diamond fantasised that one day in the future, tourists would stare at the ‘rusting hulks of New York’s skyscrapers’ explaining that human arrogance − overreaching ourselves − is at the root of why societies fail. In Requiem for Detroit, filmmaker Julian Temple too argues that to avoid the fate of the lost cities of the Maya, we must recognise the ‘man-made contagion’ in the ‘rusting hulks of abandoned car plants’. (It seems that even using a different metaphor is deemed to be too hubristic.)

    In terms of the discussion about Chinese ghost cities, many impugn these places as a commentary on the folly of China’s development and its speed of modernisation. Take the Guardian’s former Asia correspondent, Jonathan Watts, who has argued that individuals and civilisations bring about their own annihilation by ‘losing touch with their roots or over-consuming’. Initial signs of success often prove to be the origin of later failures, he argues. In his view, strength is nothing more than potential weakness, and the moral of the tale is that by hitting a tipping point, civilisations will fall much more quickly than they rise.

    In fact, China’s headlong rush to development means that its cities embody many extremes. For example, the city of Changsha in Hunan Province recently announced that in the space of just seven months it would build an 838 metre skyscraper creating the world’s tallest tower. Understandably, doubts exist over whether this can be achieved − the current tallest, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, took six years to build. Yet such is the outlook of a country with so much dynamic ambition, that even the seemingly impossible is not to be considered off-limits. At the other end of the scale, it was recently revealed that 30 million Chinese continue to live in caves − a reflection of under-development (not an energy efficient lifestyle choice).

    In the West, a risk averse outlook means that caution is the watchword. Not only is the idea of building new cities a distant memory, but data from the US and UK betrays that geographical mobility is reducing as people elect to stay in declining towns rather than seek new opportunities elsewhere. By contrast, China is a country on the move − quite literally. In fact the landmark 50 per cent urbanisation rate was achieved some years ago, driven by a ‘floating population’ of perhaps 200 million people, whose legal status as villagers disguises the fact they have already moved to live and work in cities.

    If cramming five to a room in the existing Anting town means easy access to jobs then why move to Anting German Town, accessible via only a single road, and surrounded by industrial districts and wasteland? But it is also clear that China is building for expansion. The notion of ‘predict and provide’ is so alien to Western planners these days, that they are appalled when particular Chinese authorities announce that they will build a new town with three-lane highways before people move there. How absurd, we say. Look, the roads are empty and unused. But in this debate, it is we who have lost our sense of the audacious.

    When assessing the ghost cities phenomenon, it seems likely that in a country growing at the breakneck speed of China, some mistakes will be made. When bureaucratic targets and technical plans inscribed in protocols and legislation are to the fore, then not all outcomes of investment programmes such as a recent $200 billion infrastructure project will work out. And yes, ghost cities do reflect some worrying economic trends, with rising house prices and the speculative stockpiling of units so that many apartments are owned but not occupied.

    But these problems need to be kept firmly in perspective. The reality is that meaningful development requires risk-taking. The ghost cities today may well prove to be viable in the longer term, as ongoing urbanisation leads to better integration with existing regions, and because by the very virtue of their creation, such areas create new opportunities that alter the existing dynamics.

    #chine #urban_matter #villes_fantômes #architecture

  • How to Boost Employee Engagement with #ai: A Guide to HR Managers
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-boost-employee-engagement-with-ai-a-guide-to-hr-managers-3b6a797e

    When companies are recruiting, they are, in fact, selling themselves to potential employees. This means that attracting the best talent is a matter of presenting your offer most competitively and customizing your message so that it resonates with the target audience.However, HR departments in most organizations use the same decades-old recruitment methods. The problem with this approach is that people are becoming more and more used to personalized approach that they see in retail. In a world where Amazon knows exactly what kind of socks you would like, a potential employer that has no idea what package of benefits they should offer you, falls short.The first thing they need to let go of is the idea that one size fits all. Currently, there can be up to four different generations in a (...)

    #artificial-intelligence #machine-learning #human-resources #employee-engagement

  • #blockchain #adoption Could Be Closer Than We Think
    https://hackernoon.com/blockchain-adoption-could-be-closer-than-we-think-e68bebaebca4?source=rs

    What does it mean when we say blockchain adoption? In 2017, it was all about how initial-coin-offering could disrupt the traditional means financing or fundraising. Couple that with astronomical growth in all major cryptocurrencies, everyone was over the moon with their investments in this coin and that coin.Then came 2018, the year that has been dubbed Crypto Winter. There were panic, tears and disgusts raging in both the retail camp and institutions. It was apparent on social media. Anyone who had invested in late 2017, would be underwater in their investments. As quickly as it came, the hype was gone and talks of getting rich from Crypto died (or rather postponed).The focus shifted from making money to the adoption of the underlying #technology: Blockchain. In 2017/early 2018, any (...)

    #regulation #blockchain-adoption

  • 2018: Reflections on trying to start an internet business
    https://hackernoon.com/2018-reflections-on-trying-to-start-an-internet-business-9ba05e7e512d?so

    me, in my element.On the personal sideI interviewed at Facebook, first for front-end, then for full-stack. Considering the year Facebook has had, I’m okay with not getting the job.Roughly around the time I was interviewing at Facebook, I took up the #vanlife with my partner and toured through California in a purple van. When I came back home, I finally took the driving test and got a wagon to continue the #vanlife here in Australia.I then quit my job at Arup (building engineering consultancy) to go work at a Fintech startup aiming to revolutionise the retail investing space for Mum & Dad investors. After 3 weeks I quit the startup job, once we realised the job they advertised for and the job they wanted me to do weren’t exactly aligned with my skillset (I see myself as probably 75% (...)

    #software-engineering #graphql #startup-lessons #entrepreneurship #business-development

  • Legos have a surprisingly high price on the second-hand market - Vox

    https://www.vox.com/the-goods/2019/1/29/18202463/lego-resale-market-high-return-rate

    Comment je suis devenu un ultra-riche

    According to research from Russia’s Higher School of Economics, Lego boasts an extremely high value when sold secondhand — and it actually has a higher rate of return than gold, bonds, and stocks.

    The study, published last month by assistant professor Victoria Dobrynskaya, is titled “The Toy of Smart Investors.” Dobrynskaya studied 2,000 Lego sets that were released between 1980 to 2014. She then compared their retail cost to how much they’d yield on the secondhand market in 2015. Dobrynskaya was surprised to find that plenty of Lego sets yielded a return rate of 11 percent, while others could be flipped at a whopping 613 percent.

    #lego

  • 2018 was Good for STOs, but Challenging for ICOs & Bitcoin Tanks
    https://hackernoon.com/2018-was-good-for-stos-but-challenging-for-icos-bitcoin-tanks-ff240dff27

    InWara provides insightful analysis based on institutional-grade ICO/VC data to provide retail and institutional investors a clear assessment of the current trends and developments in this space.Disclaimer: This is not financial advice. For more details visit terms and conditions.Download full 40-page Annual ReportThe bull run lasting approximately until the end of 2017 generated an unprecedented amount of wealth for the founding teams who had already listed their ICOs in the crypto market space. Bitcoin price soared to an all-time high almost soaring close to mount $20K, a staggering growth of more than 2000% [check this number]. However, in 2018, the market corrected itself and lost about 60% of its total aggregate market cap in just one month [check this number].Amongst cries by (...)

    #cryptocurrency #sto #bitcoin-tanks #blockchain #ico-challenges

  • Building a Market Model for Your #startup’s Product
    https://hackernoon.com/building-a-market-model-for-your-startups-product-59943cf5b161?source=rs

    All successful startups have something in common — their product or service solves a problem or fills a business or retail consumer need. Thus an important part of identifying your startup’s space in the economy is understanding the market that you are targeting.This article is the first in a series examining how you can build a deeper understanding of your target market. From there, we’ll look at developing go-to-market strategies that will result in customer traction and ultimately drive the success of your startup.Defining a MarketA market definition is a set of characteristics that identify the group of businesses or consumers who would use your product or service, and could reasonably be expected to purchase the product or service within a given timeframe.The diagram below shows how (...)

    #startup-market-model #venture-capital #market-model #modeling

  • Top 5 #retail #technology #trends
    https://hackernoon.com/top-5-retail-technology-trends-4c260a1eb3f7?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3--

    Today, customers have multiple ways to buy products. While a majority of the millennials prefer shopping online, a significant other majority expects a personalized and hassle-free in-store shopping experience.It is of no surprise to see that the retail world is moving at breakneck speed to accommodate the growing consumer demands. The increasing shopping convenience has placed the retail industry in a highly competitive perspective.In this blog, let us analyze the top 5 disruptive trends that will shape the retail world in 2019.Top Retail Trends in 2019Trend 1: Internet of Things (IoT) & Internet of Experience (IoX)By 2020, retailers must have spent 2.5 Billion on IoT hardware and installation. Earlier, the pace of IoT adoption in retail was comparatively low. But towards the mid (...)

    #retail-technology-trends #retail-technology

  • Top #ecommerce Development Companies
    https://hackernoon.com/top-ecommerce-development-companies-c14d8c15f150?source=rss----3a8144eab

    Ecommerce is not the future of retail — it is its reality. According to a Pew Research Center survey, eight in ten Americans prefer shopping online, which means that online stores have become a powerful tool in the hands of go-getting business owners. This fact means that the idea of opening your own online store is not bad at all.But however bright the idea of your new online business, it needs to be turned into reality to start generating profit. And this is where ecommerce development companies come to the rescue: they analyze your business demands, design and develop the future ecommerce website, and provide technical support for it.There are hundreds of such companies, all of them claiming that they deliver the best services on the market. Without seeing the big picture, it might be (...)

    #ecommerce-development

  • Hundreds sacked after Bangladesh garment strikes - Channel NewsAsia
    https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asia/hundreds-sacked-after-bangladesh-garment-strikes-11130318

    The country’s US$30-billion clothing industry is the world’s second-largest after China. Its some four million workers at 4,500 factories make garments for global retail giants H&M, Walmart and many others.

    Protests by thousands of employees over low wages began earlier this month, prompting scores of manufacturers to halt production.

    One worker was killed and more than 50 injured last week after police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters in a key industrial town outside the capital Dhaka.

    The demonstrations died down this week after the government agreed to raise salaries, but many returned to work on Wednesday to discover they had been laid off.

    A top union leader said at least 750 workers at various companies in the manufacturing hub of Ashulia had found notices hanging on factory gates informing them of their dismissal along with photos of their faces.

    “This is unjust. The owners are doing it to create a climate of fear so that no one can dare to stage protests or demand fair wages,” the leader said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    “Police told me not to create trouble. Otherwise I’ll be disappeared.”

    Police and a senior factory manager gave a lower total of around 400 workers fired for damaging equipment during the strike - with more than half from one Ashulia plant called Metro Knitting and Dyeing.

  • Brand Presence and Visibility : Importance, Challenges, and Solutions ?
    https://hackernoon.com/brand-presence-and-visibility-importance-challenges-and-solutions-cec1f1

    Picture yourself walking down the aisle of a grocery store looking for the coffee section. You see it, it’s halfway down the aisle to your right. “Ok I see it now, there’s my favorite product…and there’s my brand, oh what’s that? Hmm…looks interesting”. Such a scenario, in a nutshell, is why you need to monitor your brand presence on #retail shelves or how well your brand stands out among the sea of similar products.The store shelf is the shoppers’ first point of interaction with your product. As a result, your brand presence or how your product looks at the retail shelf becomes almost imperative. When shoppers approach the shelf, their eyes are constantly scanning the shelf to see what else there is — this is the moment when another brand can catch the attention of the shopper and become part of (...)

    #market-research #artificial-intelligence #brand-presence #branding

  • Will #robots Take Your Job ?
    https://hackernoon.com/will-robots-take-your-job-96fa3d861f42?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    The rise of robots, #automation, and artificial intelligence captures our attention like nothing else. While some of us may be looking forward to automation in professional industries, others may be dreading it. But not all experts agree with one another when it comes to the true impact of automation — your job may be more secure than you think.Almost 50% of business leaders say that automation could lead to a reduction of their workforce by 2022. Within the next decade or two, jobs like retail workers, cooks and servers, even janitors and housekeepers could see millions of jobs replaced with automation. So what does it truly take to “robot-proof” your job? When it comes down to it, the soft skills of a human being can’t exactly be automated. Humanity will only become more valuable, in fact, (...)

    #infographics #artificial-intelligence #robots-take-your-jobs

  • E-Commerce seems to Be the One Industry #blockchain Hasn’t Managed to Disrupt (Yet)
    https://hackernoon.com/e-commerce-seems-to-be-the-one-industry-blockchain-hasnt-managed-to-disr

    Blockchain Hasn’t Taken Over the E-Commerce Industry Yet, What’s Holding it Back?As the global economy continues to embrace an online and ever-connected framework, there’s one sector growing year-over-year that can’t be ignored, e-commerce. Consumers are always on the lookout for new, innovative ways to complete their purchases and are doing more research than ever when going through the buying process. This means more time spent online and more goods being bought by users from the comfort of their home, rather than from a physical store.While the majority of retail shopping is still being done in-person in stores (a reality that Amazon is fully aware of and working to adapt to), e-commerce sales are growing steadily year-over-year and are finding deeper market penetration in retail (...)

    #us-e-commerce #ecommerce #tech #innovation

  • Is Marijuana as Safe as We Think ? | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/01/14/is-marijuana-as-safe-as-we-think

    A few years ago, the National Academy of Medicine convened a panel of sixteen leading medical experts to analyze the scientific literature on cannabis. The report they prepared, which came out in January of 2017, runs to four hundred and sixty-eight pages. It contains no bombshells or surprises, which perhaps explains why it went largely unnoticed. It simply stated, over and over again, that a drug North Americans have become enthusiastic about remains a mystery.

    For example, smoking pot is widely supposed to diminish the nausea associated with chemotherapy. But, the panel pointed out, “there are no good-quality randomized trials investigating this option.” We have evidence for marijuana as a treatment for pain, but “very little is known about the efficacy, dose, routes of administration, or side effects of commonly used and commercially available cannabis products in the United States.” The caveats continue. Is it good for epilepsy? “Insufficient evidence.” Tourette’s syndrome? Limited evidence. A.L.S., Huntington’s, and Parkinson’s? Insufficient evidence. Irritable-bowel syndrome? Insufficient evidence. Dementia and glaucoma? Probably not. Anxiety? Maybe. Depression? Probably not.

    Then come Chapters 5 through 13, the heart of the report, which concern marijuana’s potential risks. The haze of uncertainty continues. Does the use of cannabis increase the likelihood of fatal car accidents? Yes. By how much? Unclear. Does it affect motivation and cognition? Hard to say, but probably. Does it affect employment prospects? Probably. Will it impair academic achievement? Limited evidence. This goes on for pages.

    We need proper studies, the panel concluded, on the health effects of cannabis on children and teen-agers and pregnant women and breast-feeding mothers and “older populations” and “heavy cannabis users”; in other words, on everyone except the college student who smokes a joint once a month. The panel also called for investigation into “the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of cannabis, modes of delivery, different concentrations, in various populations, including the dose-response relationships of cannabis and THC or other cannabinoids.”

    Not surprisingly, the data we have are messy. Berenson, in his role as devil’s advocate, emphasizes the research that sees cannabis as opening the door to opioid use. For example, two studies of identical twins—in the Netherlands and in Australia—show that, in cases where one twin used cannabis before the age of seventeen and the other didn’t, the cannabis user was several times more likely to develop an addiction to opioids. Berenson also enlists a statistician at N.Y.U. to help him sort through state-level overdose data, and what he finds is not encouraging: “States where more people used cannabis tended to have more overdoses.”

    The National Academy panel is more judicious. Its conclusion is that we simply don’t know enough, because there haven’t been any “systematic” studies. But the panel’s uncertainty is scarcely more reassuring than Berenson’s alarmism. Seventy-two thousand Americans died in 2017 of drug overdoses. Should you embark on a pro-cannabis crusade without knowing whether it will add to or subtract from that number?

    Drug policy is always clearest at the fringes. Illegal opioids are at one end. They are dangerous. Manufacturers and distributors belong in prison, and users belong in drug-treatment programs. The cannabis industry would have us believe that its product, like coffee, belongs at the other end of the continuum. “Flow Kana partners with independent multi-generational farmers who cultivate under full sun, sustainably, and in small batches,” the promotional literature for one California cannabis brand reads. “Using only organic methods, these stewards of the land have spent their lives balancing a unique and harmonious relationship between the farm, the genetics and the terroir.” But cannabis is not coffee. It’s somewhere in the middle. The experience of most users is relatively benign and predictable; the experience of a few, at the margins, is not.

    The National Academy panel is more judicious. Its conclusion is that we simply don’t know enough, because there haven’t been any “systematic” studies. But the panel’s uncertainty is scarcely more reassuring than Berenson’s alarmism. Seventy-two thousand Americans died in 2017 of drug overdoses. Should you embark on a pro-cannabis crusade without knowing whether it will add to or subtract from that number?

    Drug policy is always clearest at the fringes. Illegal opioids are at one end. They are dangerous. Manufacturers and distributors belong in prison, and users belong in drug-treatment programs. The cannabis industry would have us believe that its product, like coffee, belongs at the other end of the continuum. “Flow Kana partners with independent multi-generational farmers who cultivate under full sun, sustainably, and in small batches,” the promotional literature for one California cannabis brand reads. “Using only organic methods, these stewards of the land have spent their lives balancing a unique and harmonious relationship between the farm, the genetics and the terroir.” But cannabis is not coffee. It’s somewhere in the middle. The experience of most users is relatively benign and predictable; the experience of a few, at the margins, is not.

    Late last year, the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, Scott Gottlieb, announced a federal crackdown on e-cigarettes. He had seen the data on soaring use among teen-agers, and, he said, “it shocked my conscience.” He announced that the F.D.A. would ban many kinds of flavored e-cigarettes, which are especially popular with teens, and would restrict the retail outlets where e-cigarettes were available.

    In the dozen years since e-cigarettes were introduced into the marketplace, they have attracted an enormous amount of attention. There are scores of studies and papers on the subject in the medical and legal literature, grappling with the questions raised by the new technology. Vaping is clearly popular among kids. Is it a gateway to traditional tobacco use? Some public-health experts worry that we’re grooming a younger generation for a lifetime of dangerous addiction. Yet other people see e-cigarettes as a much safer alternative for adult smokers looking to satisfy their nicotine addiction. That’s the British perspective. Last year, a Parliamentary committee recommended cutting taxes on e-cigarettes and allowing vaping in areas where it had previously been banned. Since e-cigarettes are as much as ninety-five per cent less harmful than regular cigarettes, the committee argued, why not promote them? Gottlieb said that he was splitting the difference between the two positions—giving adults “opportunities to transition to non-combustible products,” while upholding the F.D.A.’s “solemn mandate to make nicotine products less accessible and less appealing to children.” He was immediately criticized.

    “Somehow, we have completely lost all sense of public-health perspective,” Michael Siegel, a public-health researcher at Boston University, wrote after the F.D.A. announcement:

    #Santé_publique #Marijuana

  • The Future is Now: #ai for Evil vs AI for Good
    https://hackernoon.com/the-future-is-now-ai-for-evil-vs-ai-for-good-8e87093b148?source=rss----3

    The explosive growth in artificial intelligence capabilities is thanks to the ingenuity of human beings. Building machines to take over positions in service industries from construction to retail is a big step for technology and an even bigger step for mankind. But while some of us fear for our jobs, AI in the wrong hands may have more nefarious intentions, even putting lives at stake.In business settings, AI augmentation reduces the mundane and repetitive tasks we do on a daily basis, helping to free up our valuable creative energies. By 2021, this will generate almost $3 trillion for businesses and account for 6.2 billion hours of worker productivity. As a force for good, we look to AI to help us be safer, learn smarter, and work more efficiently — but not everyone has good motivations (...)

    #ai-for-good #infographics #artificial-intelligence #ai-for-evil