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Starbucks founder says company needs to refocus on coffee as sales struggle
The coffee giant said revenue dropped 2% in the January-March period as store traffic slowed around the world. It was the first time since 2020 that the company saw a drop in quarterly revenue.
Employees increasingly taking legal action over office mandates
As more companies across the United States take a hard-line stance on office mandates, an increasing number of workers are elevating their complaints to court and federal labor agencies.
Who votes? Here’s who decides Indiana’s elections
It’s a small percentage of people, particularly in Indiana, which ranked second-last in the country for turnout in the 2022 election.
IBJ Podcast: Explaining the Indy Eleven stadium, MLS soccer bid drama
Less than two weeks ago, everything that we had assumed about the future of pro soccer in Indianapolis and the creation of a publicly owned downtown stadium for the Indy Eleven soccer team received a swift kick between the stitches.
As U.S. moves to reclassify marijuana as less dangerous, could more states legalize it?
Advocates for marijuana legalization hope a federal regulatory shift could eventually change the minds—and votes—of some state policymakers who have been reluctant to embrace weed.
Tiffany Sauder: Dare to stand apart: Transforming your brand strategy
Standing apart in a crowded marketplace requires a bold departure from the status quo.
Made in Indiana: Candles by Antique Candle Co.
How it started: Brittany Whitenack was “disillusioned” with her traditional workplace job in retail management. So she quit and started looking for another job, picking up a few hobbies along the way that included candle making. “Instead of heading back to the traditional workforce, I wondered if I could potentially work back up to the […]
Cecil Bohanon and John Horowitz: Freedom—and control—of seas still matters
Mahan wrote in the late 1800s and early 1900s during the first period of globalization and viewed access to the ocean commons as crucial to a global economy.
Patients on hunt for diabetes, obesity and weight-loss drugs
Lilly’s newest obesity and diabetes medicines, widely known as GLP-1 drugs, are drawing rave reviews from doctors, researchers and patients for their ability to safely and effectively control blood sugar and take off weight.
Eleven Fifty Academy putting AI at core of revamped curriculum
More than a year after its acquisition by Marion-based Indiana Wesleyan University, Indianapolis-based Eleven Fifty Academy is rolling out big, future-focused changes.
With Indy’s soccer future in balance, city to go all-in on MLS
The April 25 announcement that the city is pursuing a Major League Soccer franchise followed more than three months of secret phone calls, emails and other interactions between city leaders, MLS officials and a longtime soccer executive named Tom Glick.
How the city’s negotiations with Keystone over Diamond Chain site broke down
City officials say the decision to walk away from the Eleven Park development was in taxpayers’ best interest. But the Keystone Group says the move was driven by misplaced ambitions and a lack of interest in discussing specifics of the project’s finances.
Indiana 250: Max Siegel
Max Siegel has been CEO of Indianapolis-based USA Track & Field—the national governing body for track and field, long-distance running and race walking—since 2012. Additionally, he’s been the owner of Rev Racing since 2010 and has led NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program. Locally, he’s a trustee at Martin University and Brebeuf Jesuit High School. First […]
Mickey Kim: Risk and failure indispensable to your investment success
Risk is the permanent loss of capital invested or loss of purchasing power from inflation.
Editorial: Don’t give away your vote
Boycotting a race doesn’t help a candidate understand why a particular voice or a particular group of voices is important. It doesn’t do anything to help a candidate appreciate and empathize with a voter’s story or concerns. It doesn’t build a relationship.
Hale Crumley: Fair housing statutes need to be expanded
The Fair Housing Act made significant strides toward rooting out long-standing discriminatory housing policies and practices. But some discrimination is still perfectly lawful.
Jason Shelley: Let’s encourage kids to explore a career in architecture
A pathway to an architecture career exists right here in Indiana. Several universities—Indiana University, Ball State University, Notre Dame University—offer nationally recognized programs with internships and job placement services. Indiana’s architecture firms work locally, nationally and internationally, leaving a worldwide legacy.
Letters: Addressing teen violence starts at home
Bad behavior on the part of young people and being disrespectful is a problem that starts in the home. It’s the parents’ responsibility to correct that behavior when they see any semblance of it from their kids—be it at home, in school or in public.