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Tag: Returns

  • Why Saying ‘No Returns’ Is Not Profitable, According to Rebel Founder Emily Hosie

    Every entrepreneur faces waste, whether it is inventory, time, or money lost in the shuffle of doing business. Rebel founder and CEO Emily Hosie built North America’s largest returns re-commerce platform by asking how she could turn that waste into profit. This was one of the shocking things I have learned—saying “no returns” is not profitable.  

    Emily’s company partners with retailers to reprocess and resell returned and overstocked items that would otherwise become waste. To date, Rebel has kept more than 25 million pounds of goods out of landfills each year while creating a new source of revenue for its partners. Returns aren’t just a cost of doing business; they can become your next source of profit. 

    On a recent episode of The Big Idea from Yahoo Finance, I sat down with Hosie to explore how she turned one of retail’s biggest headaches into a sustainable and scalable business. Her experience offers practical lessons for any founder who wants to turn setbacks and inefficiencies into growth. 

    Spot the opportunity in waste 

    When Hosie began, she noticed retailers had no efficient way to handle returns. Investors understood excess inventory, but few realized the massive cost of returns. In 2024, U.S. retailers processed $890 billion worth of returned merchandise. Hosie said that figure is expected to reach $1 trillion by the end of 2026. 

    Hosie explained that at first, no company wanted to admit its returns were being thrown away. Her breakthrough came when a large retailer on the brink of bankruptcy finally acknowledged the problem and asked if Rebel could help process its discarded inventory. That moment, she said, proved the model could work at scale. 

    For small business owners, the lesson is to look for inefficiency hiding in plain sight. Know your return rate, audit your return policy, and explore creative ways to resell or repurpose unsold inventory. You might list returned products in your website’s clearance section or move them through a warehouse sale. Waste is rarely just waste. It is often an overlooked resource waiting for someone to manage it better. 

    Educate and build trust 

    Creating a new category required educating three audiences: investors, retailers, and consumers. Investors needed to understand how returns differ from factory overstock. Retailers had to admit they needed a better solution. Consumers needed clarity on what “open box” means and why it offers value. Open-box items are products that were purchased and returned but never used. 

    Hosie built credibility by showing results and using early successes to bring others along. Once one partner trusted the platform, her team used that proof to win the next. When you are selling something new, proof of performance is your best marketing. Teaching your market what problem you solve and showing measurable results builds trust faster than any pitch. 

    Turn risk into resilience 

    Hosie launched Rebel in unusual conditions and kept moving. “It started in our basement,” she recalled. “We had transport trucks dropping pallets of returns on the sidewalk in downtown Toronto.”  

    The timing was far from ideal. Hosie was pregnant, and the pandemic lockdown had just started. “I think there’s never a right time,” she said. If an idea does not work, “then you’ll just go back and get another job.” 

    Her experience shows that flexibility matters more than timing. Founders who start before conditions are perfect learn faster, pivot sooner, and build resilience by necessity. 

    Build loyalty through returns 

    Hosie treated returns as a growth tool rather than a nuisance. “Over 50% of [customers] are discovering a brand for the first time,” she said, describing how open-box pricing introduces shoppers to labels they might not buy at full price.  

    She also found that shoppers who make a return often “buy triple the amount” during the visit. A strong return policy can be part of a healthy customer retention strategy. It keeps people engaged and builds goodwill long after the initial purchase. 

    Hosie’s story shows how rethinking waste can unlock new revenue, new customers, and a healthier business. The lesson is simple: Look where others see loss, educate the market with proof, make your move before conditions feel perfect, and use returns to build loyalty. 

    Elizabeth Gore

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  • ‘Alien: Isolation’ Turns 10, ‘Tomb Raider’ Returns, and ‘Metaphor: ReFantazio’ Gets GOTY Buzz

    ‘Alien: Isolation’ Turns 10, ‘Tomb Raider’ Returns, and ‘Metaphor: ReFantazio’ Gets GOTY Buzz

    Netflix

    Ben and Justin discuss ‘Alien: Isolation,’ with author Andy Kelly later joining in on the conversation. Then Steve Ahlman and Matt James pop by to give their impressions of ‘Silent Hill 2’ and ‘Metaphor: ReFantazio.’

    Ben and Justin Charity tiptoe through the halls of Sevastopol to discuss the 10-year anniversary of Alien: Isolation and their experiences with the cult classic. Then they bring on Andy Kelly, author of Perfect Organism: An Alien: Isolation Companion, to discuss the game’s legacy, horror credentials, innovative AI system, and impact on Alien, as well as what they hope to see from the newly announced ‘Isolation’ sequel (15:49). After that, Ben and Charity talk about Netflix and Amazon’s big bets on a Tomb Raider revival, the history of the franchise, and Ben’s impressions of the new Netflix series Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft (56:58). Finally, Steve Ahlman and Matt James pop in to give their impressions of Silent Hill 2 and Metaphor: ReFantazio (84:32).

    Host: Ben Lindbergh
    Guests: Justin Charity, Andy Kelly, Steve Ahlman, and Matt James
    Producers: Devon Renaldo and Eduardo Ocampo
    Additional Production Supervision: Arjuna Ramgopal

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

    Ben Lindbergh

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  • The Return of Hannibal Lecter, the Trump Hack, and a ‘Hard Knocks’ Check-In With Alan Siegel

    The Return of Hannibal Lecter, the Trump Hack, and a ‘Hard Knocks’ Check-In With Alan Siegel

    Hello, media consumers! Bryan welcomes The Ringer’s own Hollywood bureau chief, Alan Siegel. They both share some of their lukewarm takes on the media and the following subjects:

    • Donald Trump’s love affair with Hannibal Lecter (01:31)
    • The Donald Trump hack: documents sent to Politico emails (8:42)
    • A sports documentary check-in on Hard Knocks and Receiver (18:15)
    • The essence of cable news (28:01)
    • Australian B-girl Raygun breaks her silence (37:26)
    • Alan closes out with a few of his only-in-journalism words (43:22)

    Plus, David Shoemaker Guesses the Strained-Pun Headline.

    Host: Bryan Curtis
    Guest: Alan Siegel
    Producer: Brian H. Waters

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Bryan Curtis

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  • The Bento Box Returns After a Fire — and the Pandemic — Closed The Bucktown Restaurant

    The Bento Box Returns After a Fire — and the Pandemic — Closed The Bucktown Restaurant

    A sea of restaurants has been lost since the pandemic’s start in March 2020 and it was presumed the Bento Box was one of the vanquished as Rick Spiros’ Asian restaurant ceased operations in Bucktown. But COVID’s complications were just one of the Bento Box’s concerns. A fire, just days before Gov. J.B. Pritzker ordered restaurants to close their dining rooms to curb the spread of the disease, made it feel like fans would never again sample Spiros’ signature egg rolls or red curry Singapore noodles.

    Spiros, who is Greek American, has a fondness for global cuisines and cooks an assortment of cuisines. With his restaurant closed, he again focused on catering and his personal chef business. The latter became popular as diners kept away from restaurants during COVID. He began working at Trogo Kitchen & Market in Logan Square, the restaurant and cafe space inside the Green Exchange, a building overlooking the northbound Kennedy Expressway’s Diversey exit. Trogo was one of the locations where crews filmed kitchen scenes for the pilot episode of The Bear. He befriended owners Lolita Sereleas and Cian O’Mahony and serves as the chef in residence. Legendary Chicago chef Jimmy Bannos of Heaven on Seven fame has also done gumbo drops at the restaurant as he preps to open a new restaurant in suburban Skokie.

    While hosting pop-ups, Spiros says he was greeted by Bento Box regulars who weren’t subtle in their praise for the old restaurant. Their enthusiasm struck him “like a thunderbolt” and led him to mount a comeback.

    “I had very little idea how much people loved the restaurant, how much it was missed,” Spiros says.

    And so, starting on Wednesday, August 7, the Bento Box returned, open Wednesday through Friday at Trogo, giving Spiros room to continue his personal chef business, and Trogo the space to flex programming if a rare opportunity (say Jeremy Allen White and company want to film more scenes) presents itself. There will be one seating to start — around 6 p.m. Reservations will allow diners to book until around 6:30 p.m.; Spiros doesn’t care if everyone is served their meals at once. It’s a three-course prix fixe: egg rolls, green curry mussels, and red chili chicken Singapore noodles. Takeout and delivery are also available a la carte. Spiros wants to eventually add a lemongrass creme brulee for dessert.

    The last four years away from the daily operations of a restaurant have been restorative for Spiros. As they sorted through the fire’s aftermath, it became clear that he could not return to the Bento Box’s original Bucktown location, 2246 W. Armitage Avenue. It didn’t feel right trying to reopen. He didn’t even have the right equipment, like his beloved flattop that he was accustomed to using: “It came to the point where I just didn’t know if I wanted to do this right now,” Spiros says.

    Chef Rick Spiros
    The Bento Box

    The world of restaurants has changed since Bento Box debuted in 2010. It’s not the first time he’s been asked, but what is a white guy doing cooking Korean, Chinese, Indian, and Japanese food? Spiros says many of his clientele are Indian and Korean, and he’s always happy to hear praise from those groups, especially from elders. One reason for his success is that he’s respectful of origins: “I’m not going to put sesame oil in something where it doesn’t belong,” Spiros says. “We’re not a fusion restaurant.”

    “To be honest with you, I think that’s part of what makes this country awesome,” he adds. “We can have all these different cultures here and people can have an interpretation of it.”

    Spiros likens his efforts to a cover band saying that even if a band plays another group’s song “note for note,” there will be differences: “There’s still something different in the way Led Zeppelin plays Stairway to Heaven or how someone else does it.”

    He’s also here to offer something different. A dive serving a large menu might not have someone who can make handmade noodles. Making noodles is a labor-intensive act and it’s not cheap — an order of noodles at Bento Box costs more than $20. In the past, some have questioned Bento Box’s prices. Spiros recalls a customer complaining that he could buy similar food “for a fraction of the price” down the street. But then he returned with an apology, happy with Bento Box’s quality.

    “The guy came back and said he was wrong,” Spiros says.

    Bento Box at Trogo Kitchen & Market, inside the Green Exchange, 2545 W. Diversey Avenue, open 6 p.m. on Wednesday through Saturday, reservations via OpenTable. Carryout and delivery also available.

    Ashok Selvam

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  • Phaedra Returns! Plus, ‘New Jersey’ and ‘Orange County.’

    Phaedra Returns! Plus, ‘New Jersey’ and ‘Orange County.’

    Rachel Lindsay and Callie Curry begin today’s Morally Corrupt by sharing their reactions to the recent news that Phaedra Parks will be making her return to The Real Housewives of Atlanta (1:24). Then Rachel and Callie break down Season 14, Episode 12 of The Real Housewives of New Jersey and give their season finale predictions (4:34). Finally, Chelsea Stark-Jones joins Rachel to discuss The Real Housewives of Orange County Season 18, Episode 4 and determine whether or not Katie is in fact obsessed with Heather (17:36).

    Host: Rachel Lindsay
    Guests: Callie Curry and Chelsea Stark-Jones
    Producer: Devon Baroldi
    Theme: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

    Rachel Lindsay

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  • Inside SmallBar 2.0: Logan Square’s Itty-Bitty Neighborhood Tavern Returns

    Inside SmallBar 2.0: Logan Square’s Itty-Bitty Neighborhood Tavern Returns

    SmallBar, a cherished neighborhood watering hole inside a 118-year-old tavern space in Logan Square, is back in business after a brief hiatus after new owners took over in February. After four months of interior upgrades, the team welcomed back the bar’s many thirsty adherents in late May.

    A new Hamm’s sign is among several minor upgrades.

    Fans of the cozy (read: 500 square feet) drinking spot buzzed with concern over potential changes in January when restaurateur Ty Fujimura (Arami), his brother Troy, and co-owner Jesse Roberts agreed to sell the business to Footman Hospitality, owners of Quality Time, Sparrow, and Bangers & Lace. Footman co-founder Jason Freiman, a longtime regular at SmallBar, sought to put concerned adherents at ease at the time with a pledge to keep “the soul of SmallBar intact and reestablish it for its next decade and beyond.”

    As Freiman promised, the alterations at SmallBar are relatively minimal. A new Hamm’s sign hangs outside and workers fixed up the patio just in time for porch-pounder season in Chicago. Siren Betty selected new light fixtures and integrated vintage aesthetic touches into the decor. Beverage staples remain, like draft signature beers and ciders, joined by an expanded cocktail lineup and a broader selection of spirits. There’s a limited food menu of smash burgers, grilled cheese, fries, and cheese curds from the specialists at Patty Please, who plan to expand their offerings over the coming months.

    A long wooden bar with green upholstered stools inside SmallBar.

    The Chicago bar group behind Quality Time and Bangers & Lace bought SmallBar in February.

    A boozy lemonade cocktail with blueberry garnish on a wooden table.

    New cocktail options include blueberry lemonade (vodka, Manzanilla sherry, Sicilian lemonade).

    Whether or not longtime regulars find the same unpretentious charm that made SmallBar a hit for 22 years in Logan Square remains to be seen. Take a look around the space in the photographs below.

    SmallBar, 2956 N. Albany Avenue.

    A hand holds a glass of beer over a patio table laden with bar food and a beer bottle.

    Draft beers and ciders are still staples at SmallBar.

    A green corner bar space with a Hamm’s sign hanging outside.

    SmallBar is one of the tiniest watering holes in Chicago.

    Black picnic tables with red umbrellas on a brick outdoor patio.

    The 50-seat patio is more than twice the size of the bar’s interior.

    Hands in black gloves place a bun on top of a large burger with bacon and a fried egg.

    The opening menu features two types of smash burgers.

    A cozy bar interior with two small booths.

    SmallBar’s new owners tapped Siren Betty Design to spruce up the tavern.

    Mismatched wall art inside SmallBar.

    This image contains sensitive or violent content

    Tap to display

    Designers aim to maintain a cozy dive bar aesthetic.

    A tight corner inside SmallBar with a red door that reads “restroom.”

    A narrow booth inside SmallBar.

    A row of narrow booths inside SmallBar.

    Two people toast with a glass mug of beer and a can of Hamm’s at SmallBar.

    Naomi Waxman

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  • 3 Major Mistakes Companies Are Making With AI That Is Limiting Their ROI | Entrepreneur

    3 Major Mistakes Companies Are Making With AI That Is Limiting Their ROI | Entrepreneur

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    I was talking to a friend recently who serves as the CTO at a mid-sized company and was struck by his sudden change in perspective on AI. Despite initial skepticism, he now believes artificial intelligence (AI) will revolutionize his industry. Yet, his main challenge has been convincing the rest of his executive team to adopt an AI roadmap. This scenario isn’t isolated.

    In the last year, we’ve seen a contracted hype cycle around AI, which has caused many leaders to question if an investment in AI can truly yield proportional returns. These concerns aren’t without merit. VC firm Sequoia Capital recently estimated the AI industry spent $50 billion on Nvidia chips to train AI models last year, yet only yielded $3 billion in revenue.

    Despite that disparity in investment, Sequoia went on to hypothesize AI is likely “the single greatest value creation opportunity” mankind has ever known, comparing its impact on business to that of the cloud transition. Unlike the cloud, however, which replaced software, AI has the potential to replace services, which the VC firm estimated has a total addressable market in the trillions. It’s the reason tech giants like Microsoft and Amazon continue to double down on AI investment.

    Related: What Is Artificial Intelligence (AI)? Here Are Its Benefits, Uses and More

    With so many competing narratives around the future of AI, it’s no wonder companies are misaligned on the best approach for integrating it into their organizations. The problem is most leaders are still looking at AI in its limited capacity as a software or tool rather than its ability to operate in a human-like capacity. Here are three common mistakes I see companies make when it comes to implementing an AI roadmap.

    Underestimating and limiting AI’s potential

    AI is widely viewed as a tool or software, but because it can create and reason, it has the ability to interact in a human-like capacity. Much like a junior employee who gets better at their job with experience, AI has the ability to learn from its interactions and refine its methods to improve its output and take on more work overtime.

    For this reason, leaders who think of leveraging AI as “smart people” rather than software are better positioned to harness its full potential. Think about a company’s organization chart. If you were to write down the skills and tasks associated with each employee, then you can start to visualize where AI can be trained to augment or automate these tasks.

    AI already outperforms humans in areas such as image classification, visual reasoning, and even English understanding, according to Stanford University’s recently published AI Index report. As of 2023, the report showed AI has surpassed human-level performance on several benchmark tasks, succeeding in helping workers become more productive and produce better-quality work. Another study out of the University of Arkansas showed AI outperformed humans in standardized tests of creative potential.

    Unlike humans, however, AI scales up effortlessly as business demands increase, handling workloads without the physical and mental limits of humans. Adopting AI in this way means rethinking our team structures and workflows. It involves training teams to work alongside AI to enhance their roles and drive innovation.

    This perspective shift is crucial because it allows leaders, who may not be accustomed to deploying technology themselves, to innately understand how to best leverage AI across their entire organization.

    2. Trying to mimic another company’s AI use case

    The more you start thinking of AI as smart people, the more you realize how individual every organization’s approach to building an AI roadmap should be. I like to think of AI implementation as the onboarding of new team members who need to fit within the specific dynamics of your company.

    Take human resources for example — one company might have 10 people there; another only three, even if they’re the same size. This difference isn’t just about company size or revenue. It’s about how these companies have evolved.

    Each business has its own unique structure, culture and needs. In order to realize generative AI’s full potential, PwC reported, businesses must take advantage of its capacity to be customized to a company’s specific needs and avoid the use-case trap.

    Of course, general use cases for AI exist, particularly when it comes to enhancing customer service or sales. But, when you’re looking at a deeper integration of AI into a company’s operations, the approach needs to be custom-built, not copied and pasted from outside case studies.

    Related: I Tested AI Tools So You Don’t Have To. Here’s What Worked — and What Didn’t.

    3. Buying off-the-shelf products — not tailoring AI solutions to your needs

    There are some great off-the-shelf AI products like ChatGPT, Dalle, and translation tools that solve specific problems within a company. The challenge with investing in a boxed solution for AI is that many leaders fail to see how AI can enhance operations at a systemic level.

    The true power of AI lies in its ability to fundamentally transform your operations, not just perform isolated tasks. PwC’s 2024 AI predictions report states that many companies will find attractive ROI from generative AI. Still, few will succeed in achieving transformative value from it — the biggest barrier being the inability of leaders to think beyond boxed solutions and reimagine the way they work with AI.

    When building an AI roadmap, leaders must first conduct a thorough assessment of their company’s processes. This means identifying areas with redundancies, recognizing outsourced tasks that could be automated, and pinpointing where the company invests heavily in human capital. By understanding these dynamics, leaders can tailor AI solutions to their company’s needs and transform how they work.

    The more I talk to company leaders about integrating AI into their businesses, the more apparent it becomes that we leaders need to shift our perspective. When we view AI not just as a technological upgrade but as the onboarding of smart people, we’re better able to integrate it into our internal operations, enhancing performance and human ingenuity along the way.

    Chris Stegner

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  • Explosive ‘devil comet’ returns for 1st time in 71 years during April 8 eclipse, NASA says

    Explosive ‘devil comet’ returns for 1st time in 71 years during April 8 eclipse, NASA says

    A rare and massive comet with a devilish nickname is set to pass by Earth for the first time in 71 years and may be visible during the highly anticipated April 8 total solar eclipse, according to NASA.

    Officially named comet 12P/Pons-Brooks, the cryovolcanic comet is known as the “devil comet” due to its formation of two “horns” made up of ice and gas and periodic explosions.

    Comets are made up of dust, frozen gases, ice and rocks bound together following the formation of the solar system, NASA says.

    The devil comet is heading for its next perihelion passage, when it will reach its closest point to the sun and shine the brightest, on April 21, according to NASA. The agency says this astronomical event coincides with the April 8 total solar eclipse in North America, which will shadow parts of the United States from Texas to Maine when the moon passes between the sun and the Earth.

    In the abrupt absence of sunlight during totality, NASA said skywatchers will have a view of the vast sky, dark enough to observe stars, planets and perhaps 12P/Pons-Brooks as it travels through the solar system.

    “Comet 12P’s April 21 perihelion passage will be only two weeks after the April 8 total solar eclipse, putting the comet in planet Earth’s sky along with a totally eclipsed sun,” the agency said.

    Continuing its route through the solar system, 12P/Pons-Brooks will make its closest approach to Earth on June 2, offering another opportunity to see the devil comet, however, its distance from the sun will make it less visible than during the eclipse, experts previously told ABC News.

    Likened to Halley’s comet, which has an orbit of 76 years around the sun, 12P/Pons-Brooks is a short-period comet, meaning one that has an orbital period of between 20 and 200 years. The devil comet travels on an orbital period of 71 years and was last seen in 1954.

    Scientists have estimated the devil comet has a diameter of at least 17 kilometers, or 10.5 miles, according to the American Astronomical Society.

    The comet’s periodic explosions or “outbursts” make it brighter, easier to spot with telescopes and, in some cases, “something people can see from their backyard,” Dr. Theodore Kareta, a postdoctoral researcher at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, previously told ABC News.

    12P/Pons-Brooks experienced a major outburst in July 2023, when it suddenly became 100 times brighter, and continued to have periodic explosions on Oct. 5, Nov. 1, Nov. 14, Dec. 14 and Jan. 18, 2023, respectively, according to Space.com.

    “These outbursts … [have] brought this object from being dim enough that you can only really see it with big professional telescopes to, in a couple of cases, something people can see from their backyard,” Kareta said.

    “There aren’t that many comets that have outbursts, these sudden increases in brightness, that are so strong, and even fewer that have them a couple of times during one orbit. It seems like Pons-Brooks … is just really active,” he continued.

    Dr. Eliot Herman, a retired professor at the University of Arizona and an amateur astronomer who has captured images of 12P/Pons-Brooks with a remote telescope, encourages viewers to keep an eye out for the devil comet in the coming months.

    “People have historically looked up at the sky since people first became self-aware, and being amazed at the events that occur above us is something that goes back far before civilization,” he previously told ABC News. “The events in the sky touches all, I think, in a very historic way. The universe is a big place and a lot of amazing things are occurring all around us. It’s worth getting out there and just looking at it and be awestruck.”

    Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures.

    ABCNews

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  • Billy Dec Returns as Sunda New Asian Opens a Fulton Market Location

    Billy Dec Returns as Sunda New Asian Opens a Fulton Market Location

    Three years after Billy Dec’s announcement, the second Chicago outpost of Sunda Fulton Market, the former nightlife magnate’s Southeast Asian restaurant, will open tonight — Monday, February 26 — on the ground floor inside the headquarters of prolific developer Sterling Bay.

    It’s been 15 years since Sunda New Asian debuted in River North. Dec and his crew have been quiet about the opening, quietly sinking significant resources into the design, trying to keep pace with other area restaurants, a collection including newcomers like Cocina Tulum and Fioretta. The restaurant presents a return to home turf for Dec, a Chicago native and co-founder of downtown nightlife pioneer Rockit Bar & Grill. With co-owner Brad Young, Dec opened Sunda River North in 2009, where a continent-traversing menu from late Chicago chef Rodelio Aglibot and a lively see-and-be-seen atmosphere made it one of the city’s hottest spots, attracting luminaries like Michelle Obama, Barbara Streisand, and Vanilla Ice.

    In the Philippines, capiz shells were used for window panes before glass became available.
    John Stoffer/Sunda New Asian

    After splitting with Rockit’s co-owner and hanging onto Sunda, Dec and his team have opened Sunda outposts in Nashville and Tampa, Florida, but deep down, “you can’t take [Chicago] out of me,” he says. “To me, [Sunda] is a Chicago-born concept — we’re based in Chicago, it’s a Chicago company and creation… I want to keep reinvesting in the city and being a contributor in some fashion.”

    Sunda fans will recognize much of the Fulton Market menu from executive chef Mike Morales, which touches on dishes from a wide swath of countries including China, Thailand, Japan, Vietnam, and the Philippines, including longtime hits like spicy tuna crispy rice (masago, chives, sriracha, serrano) and truffled chicken siu mai (shiitake, hon-shimeji, hot mustard). It follows the same format as its predecessors, with one-third devoted to Japanese dishes, one-third to Chinese, and the remaining third set aside for options from the Philippines and other nearby countries.

    A table of colorful cocktails.

    Ube espresso martinis add a Filipino boost to the trendy cocktail.
    Sunda New Asian

    A plate of nigiri.

    Former Sushi Wabi chef Ise Matsunobu is back to serve Chicago diners.
    Sunda New Asian

    Dim sum and sushi feature prominently, and through a series of unlikely encounters, Dec managed to track down chef Ise Matsunobu, formerly of longtime Chicago favorite Sushi Wabi, to helm the sushi bar. “When we opened Sunda [in 2009], Sushi Wabi was closed so I looked all over for [Matsunobu] but couldn’t find him,” says Dec, who heard through the grapevine that the Japanese chef had returned to Tokyo. In the meantime, Dec moved to Nashville and was struggling to find the right staff members for his restaurant. “In walks [Matsunobu] on a random Nashville street on a random day — we had a slo-mo run-hug. Now, here we are, he’s back in Fulton Market and we’re so happy to be back where we started.”

    Sunda Fulton Market was initially pegged to launch in spring 2022, but the delay may ultimately prove fortuitous as that exact timeframe saw a surge of Filipino restaurants in Chicago, including Michelin-starred Kasama in West Town and smash-hit Boonie’s Filipino Restaurant in Lincoln Square. Dec, who is Filipino American, is quick to point out that Sunda has always served Filipino cuisine but a heightened spotlight on the country’s food has welcomed more fans into the fold. “I knew once [more people] gave Filipino food a chance, they’d be incredibly excited and mesmerized,” he says.

    The main dining room inside Sunda Fulton Market.

    The island bar seats 26.
    John Stoffer/Sunda New Asian

    Well-regarded Chicago design firm Studio K Creative has woven Dec’s heritage into the design at Sunda Fulton Market, installing a jaw-dropping sculpture made with thousands of pearlescent Filipino capiz shells above the 26-seat island bar where customers can find new cocktails like an ube espresso martini (1800 reposado, coffee liqueur, ube milk) and Low Thai’d (Tanduay Silver, strega, hopped pineapple, Thai basil, white peppercorn). The design team has also layered the walls with traditional woven pamaypay hand fans — a preferred accessory for Dec’s lola, or grandmother — to create a distinctive organic texture. Bamboo wall treatments juxtapose neatly with sleek, contemporary furniture seen throughout the 146-seat main dining room and 18-seat sushi bar.

    Those details contain great meaning for Dec, who recently starred in Food Roots, a documentary film that followed him on a trip through the Philippines in pursuit of his family’s stories and recipes. The film is now making its way through the festival circuit.

    Sunda New Asian Fulton Market, 333 N. Green Street, Open 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday; 5 p.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday.

    Naomi Waxman

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  • Porsha’s Returns! Plus, ‘Miami,’ ‘Vanderpump Rules,’ and ‘Beverly Hills.’

    Porsha’s Returns! Plus, ‘Miami,’ ‘Vanderpump Rules,’ and ‘Beverly Hills.’

    Bravo

    Rachel, Callie, and Jodi join together to talk about this week’s Bravo news

    ‌On today’s Morally Corrupt, Rachel Lindsay kick off the show with Callie Curry and the Bravo news of the week (1:16), then jump into a recap of The Real Housewives of Miami Episode 16 (14:00). Then, Jodi Walker joins Rachel to discuss the third episode of Vanderpump Rules (30:22) and the penultimate episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (52:45).

    Host: Rachel Lindsay
    Guests: Callie Curry and Jodi Walker
    Producer: Devon Manze
    Additional Production: Ashleigh Smith
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

    Rachel Lindsay

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  • Why Amazon, Zara and H&M Are Gambling Away Their Customer Loyalty — and Paying a Very Costly Price. | Entrepreneur

    Why Amazon, Zara and H&M Are Gambling Away Their Customer Loyalty — and Paying a Very Costly Price. | Entrepreneur

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Why risk obliterating customer trust for a few dollars? That’s the high-stakes gamble that’s plaguing the business landscape as companies increasingly implement return fees. In a bid to curb a burgeoning problem of product returns, businesses have inadvertently stepped into a loyalty minefield. The trend, prevalent yet contentious, warrants scrutiny through the lens of behavioral science to grasp its long-term ramifications.

    So, here’s the conundrum: businesses are hemorrhaging money on returned goods. Happy Returns, a logistics company, released a survey that found 81% of retailers have implemented some form of return fee in the past year alone. On the surface, charging return fees seems like a logical step. It’s a move aimed at deterring frivolous returns, and according to many companies, it’s working.

    Amazon, H&M, and Zara, retail giants in their own sectors, are among many that have started charging return fees and are promoting in-store returns. Amazon levies a $1 fee for shipping returns through United Parcel Service, while H&M charges $5.99 for returns sent through the U.S. Postal Service. Zara takes $3.95 off your refund for mailed returns.

    Related: Amazon Is Now Charging a Fee For Some UPS Store Returns

    On one hand, these fees are modest, but they are potent enough to disrupt the shopping experience. Consumers are savvy; they calculate the entire cost of shopping, including the hassle and expense of potential returns. Happy Returns also found that about a third of companies surveyed lost customers due to these new fees. According to their survey, more than 80% of consumers check a retailer’s return policy before making a purchase with a retailer for the first time and 55% of the consumer population surveyed have abandoned a shopping cart if the return policy wasn’t convenient.

    Blue Yonder, a supply-chain software provider, further substantiates this in a different survey, revealing that 59% of consumers are deterred from making a purchase if they’re faced with tighter return policies. So, while you might stop the bleeding in the short term by charging return fees, you’re creating a less hospitable shopping environment that drives customers away in the long term.

    The intricacies of cognitive biases in return fee decisions

    While financial metrics and logistics often dominate corporate decisions about return fees, cognitive biases play an underrated but influential role in this complex equation. Recognizing these biases not only sheds light on why businesses might opt for such fees but also offers insights into how these choices can adversely affect customer behavior.

    First, consider the cognitive bias of hyperbolic discounting. This bias explains our natural propensity to opt for immediate rewards over future benefits. When a business is dealing with the costly logistics of managing returns, the immediate relief provided by implementing a return fee can be overwhelmingly tempting. It’s a quick fix that shows immediate results, thereby satisfying shareholders and seemingly tightening up a leaky supply chain process. However, by focusing so intently on the here and now, companies often overlook the long-term consequence, which is the gradual erosion of customer loyalty.

    Next, let’s delve into the empathy gap. This cognitive bias refers to the difficulty of understanding and predicting the emotional states of ourselves and others in situations that are different from the present. When board members discuss implementing a return fee, they may find it challenging to fully comprehend the emotional toll such a fee takes on consumers. Often encapsulated in corporate bubbles, decision-makers may not grasp that for many consumers, the fee is not just an economic cost but an emotional one. It feels like a betrayal, a breaking of the tacit trust between consumer and brand.

    Finally, we must discuss the anchoring effect, where we grow used to a certain anchor and feel that it’s the normal and appropriate state. For years, many consumers have grown accustomed to a no-fee return policy, viewing it almost as a retail standard. When they’re suddenly confronted with return fees, even seemingly nominal ones, their reactions can range from surprise to betrayal. This anchoring effect — where customers have mentally pegged their shopping experience to the absence of return fees — means that the introduction of such fees creates cognitive dissonance and a negative emotional response.

    This form of customer anchoring can have significant repercussions. Not only are these customers likely to reconsider future purchases, but their overall perception of the brand may also shift negatively. They may even become vocal critics, sharing their displeasure in reviews or across social networks, thereby influencing potential customers. Brands need to recognize that they’re not just introducing a new fee; they’re deviating from a consumer expectation that has long been anchored to a no-fee experience. This pivot can create ripples that extend far beyond a single transaction, eroding hard-won customer loyalty and affecting long-term profitability.

    By taking the time to understand these cognitive biases, businesses can arm themselves with the nuanced insight necessary to make better decisions about implementing return fees. It serves as a reminder that decision-making, especially on matters that affect customer trust and long-term loyalty, should never be taken lightly or made in a cognitive vacuum.

    Related: Want to Return Clothes? At this Fast Fashion Retailer, It Will Cost You

    The case for dropping return fees

    By analogy, consider Southwest Airlines. I love flying with them. Perhaps I’m revealing my age, but I started flying when airlines didn’t charge bag checking fees for less than two checked bags. When other airlines started to charge fees, I felt a real reluctance to fly with them. I tried to take Southwest everywhere it flew, not even checking other airlines if I had a decent option with Southwest. And I’m not alone. Many travelers like myself became anchored to no bag checking fees and won’t even consider other airlines if Southwest flies to their desired destination. Sometimes they – and I – end up paying more for a Southwest ticket, but the absence of baggage fees and the added layer of trust make all the difference. Southwest stands as a vivid example of how a company can benefit by not nickel-and-diming its customers.

    So, what’s a future-forward retailer to do? In a world where brand loyalty is the golden ticket, consider zigging while others zag. Instead of aligning with the immediate benefit of return fees, invest in enhancing the overall customer experience. In doing so, you’re not just retaining a customer for one transaction; you’re retaining them for life. Understand that businesses don’t merely sell products; they sell experiences. And you’ll steal the customers pissed off at the Amazons of the world who nickel-and-dime them over return fees.

    Conclusion

    In the relentless race to maximize immediate profits, companies charging return fees risk long-term loyalty, the cornerstone of sustainable business. While the initial numbers might seem favorable, they mask an undercurrent of consumer dissatisfaction that could eventually morph into a full-fledged backlash. In a landscape punctuated by volatile consumer sentiments, the question businesses need to ask themselves is simple: Is the immediate monetary gain from charging return fees worth the irreversible damage to customer loyalty? Southwest Airlines already has its answer. What’s yours?

    Gleb Tsipursky

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  • Famitsu Review Scores: Assassin’s Creed Mirage, Detective Pikachu Returns, and Lords of the Fallen Rated – Latest Updates

    Famitsu Review Scores: Assassin’s Creed Mirage, Detective Pikachu Returns, and Lords of the Fallen Rated – Latest Updates

    Famitsu Review Scores: Assassin’s Creed Mirage, Detective Pikachu Returns, and Lords of the Fallen Rated – Latest Updates – Top Buzz Trends


    Brian Cooper

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  • The Last Airbender Returns in Live Action on Netflix in 2024: A Promising Adaptation

    The Last Airbender Returns in Live Action on Netflix in 2024: A Promising Adaptation

    The Last Airbender to Return in Live Action on Netflix in 2024

    Nickelodeon’s popular series, Avatar: The Last Airbender, will be making a comeback in 2024 in an exciting new Live Action version, with Netflix taking the reins. After the disappointing 2010 film adaptation, this latest adaptation looks promising, as Netflix has released images of the characters from the Land of Fire. The story follows a young boy who is the last Airbender and future Avatar, tasked with restoring order between the four nations of Fire, Air, Water, and Earth. When the previous Avatar died, the Fire Nation seized control, disrupting the peace. Now, the last airbender must discover a way to restore balance. Fans can expect this highly anticipated series to release next year, aiming to stay faithful to the original material.

    Netflix’s Commitment to Staying True to the Source Material

    Netflix has assured fans that they will use the original material as a guide to create the Live Action adaptation. The platform aims to give a fresh visual dimension to the 2005 animated series. This is not the first time Netflix has revived an anime, as they previously produced a successful live action version of One Piece. For those eager to revisit the world of Avatar: The Last Airbender, the animated series is currently available on the SVOD platform.

    The First Reactions are Very Positive

    Since the release of the trailer, fans have taken to social media to express their excitement. Messages such as “Netflix, I trust you, don’t be wrong” and “Oh my God, this is so good. I can’t wait” flooded the official Netflix tweet revealing the Fire Nation actors. Currently, no further information about the story or additional cast members has been disclosed. However, Netflix has hinted that more details will be revealed during GeekedWeek 2023, which will take place from November 6 to 12.

    Alice Zampa

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  • Paytm Money launches bonds platform, making investing easier for retail investors

    Paytm Money launches bonds platform, making investing easier for retail investors

    One97 Communications Limited (OCL), which owns the Paytm brand, on Monday said that its wholly-owned subsidiary Paytm Money Limited has launched bonds platform for retail investors in India. 

    The company is making bonds more accessible for retail investors by offering three distinct types: government bonds, corporate bonds and tax-free bonds. 

    Varun Sridhar, CEO, Paytm Money  said, “This is just the start of bonds investing in India. We believe bonds are the best way for first-time investors to enter capital markets and every Indian should have a diversified wealth portfolio with bonds being a core part of it. We will continue to bring the best technology-driven features for investors with the safety and security they deserve”, he said.

    Bonds on the Paytm Money app presents investors with all relevant information in one place and convert everything to yield so that investors can analyse and understand the returns they can earn, Paytm has said.

    Now, investors will not have to go to different sources for information on coupon vs yield, clean price vs dirty price, coupon frequency, coupon record dates etc, and instead find it all on one dashboard on the Paytm Money app

    The company believes that investing in debt markets in India is still very new and the country has the potential to have 100 million investors, for whom bonds would be the best way to enter capital markets.

    Bonds are a safe option for investors who are looking at a steady income and fixed returns on their investments and can diversify their portfolio for good returns. One can invest in Government of India Bonds, with maturity ranging from 16 days to 39 years, giving investors flexibility in managing their investments across the tenors. The yield on these bonds are currently between 7-7.3 per cent per annum. Further, bonds can be sold at any time, without any premature penalty/lock in, giving investors flexibility in managing their investments.

    Tax free bonds are a great investment for Indians. One can invest in tax free bonds, issued by PSUs, like NHAI, IRFC, REC etc at yields of up to 5.8 per cent per annum, and maturity, ranging from 5 months to 13 years. 

    Investors, who wish to expand their portfolio, can also look at corporate bonds like Indiabulls Housing Finance, Edelweiss etc where depending on the credit profile of the company, and the maturity of the bond, one can earn up to 15 per cent per annum.

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  • Amazon Is Now Charging a Fee to Make Some Returns at UPS | Entrepreneur

    Amazon Is Now Charging a Fee to Make Some Returns at UPS | Entrepreneur

    Amazon built its business on customer service, believing everything would fall into place if the company made shopping easy and convenient. Case in point: Their return policy allows customers to return millions of items they don’t want free of charge.

    But that return policy is also wildly expensive. In 2021, a record $761 billion of merchandise was returned to retailers, according to the National Retail Federation.

    Now Amazon wants its customers to think twice before sending products back. The e-commerce giant has quietly implemented a new policy, charging customers a $1 fee if they return items to a UPS store instead of a Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh, or Kohl’s closer to their address, according to a report in The Information.

    Amazon owns Whole Foods and Amazon Fresh, and Kohl’s partners with the company.

    Amazon is also warning consumers about “frequently returned” items sold on their site. They recently introduced a badge that tells shoppers to check the product details and customer reviews on items with higher return rates in their product category.

    Related: San Francisco Whole Foods Closes To ‘Ensure Safety’ of Employees

    Amazon cutting costs

    The new return fee is the latest in a series of cost-cutting measures implemented by Amazon. Last month, the company announced it would be laying off 9,000 workers, following an earlier round of layoffs last year that saw pink slips handed out to more than 18,000 employees.

    While Amazon’s return fees are surprising, they’re not unprecedented. Other retail chains have recently done away with their free online return policy, including Abercrombie & Fitch (which charges $7), American Eagle, Foot Locker, Urban Outfitters, and Zara.

    If there is any good news to come out of these new return policies, it’s that they have a positive impact on the environment. Returns cause 16 million metric tons of carbon emissions and up to 5.8 billion pounds of landfill waste in the U.S. each year, according to Optoro.

    Less returns mean less waste — even if it may cost you a buck.

    Jonathan Small

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  • Trump’s tax returns are now public after long fight with Congress

    Trump’s tax returns are now public after long fight with Congress

    The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee released six years of former President Donald Trump’s tax returns on Friday.

    Experts will be looking closely at large business losses reported by Trump that significantly reduced his tax liability. For instance, he paid no federal taxes in 2020.

    “Trump paid miniscule income taxes in 2015-2020, and almost no income taxes for the prior three decades,” said Steve Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center in Washington, in an email.

    “We also have learned that, in the 1990s and 2000s, Trump claimed business losses of tens and sometimes hundreds of millions annually. I studied these a few years ago and found some real, and some fake,” he added.

    “It is still early to determine how much of Trump’s most recent losses were real or fake,” Rosenthal said.

    Read: Trump paid $0 taxes in 2020. He’s not alone

    Analysts are also going to pore over the documents for any details of Trump’s foreign business dealings.

    Some certified public accountants who looked at the documents say the returns show that the U.S. tax system has been written to “incentivize” real estate investing.

    Bottom line: In order to generate these kinds of losses, you need to be super rich. It’s not a poor man’s game,” said Jonathan Medows, managing member of Medows CPA PLLC in New York.

    Read: CPAs have questions about Trump’s tax returns

    David Cay Johnston, a Pulitzer Prize winning author and longtime Trump critic, in a post on his non-profit news organization DC Report, called the former president’s tax returns “a rich environment in which questionable conduct is found throughout the filings and needs only seasoned auditors to uncover fictional expenditures.”

    He said that Trump was warned by two New York state judges in trials about his 1984 taxes not to deduct huge expenses in businesses with no revenue.

    “That Trump persisted in using the same fraudulent technique in six years of recent tax returns is powerful evidence of criminal intent,” Johnston wrote.

    In a statement, Trump said his returns show “how I have been able to use depreciation and various other tax deductions as an incentive for creating thousands of jobs.”

    Key words: Trump on release of his tax returns

    Some experts said they were going to look at the returns for details about Trump’s foreign sources of income. The documents show that Trump had foreign bank accounts while he was president.

    See: What could be learned from Trump’s tax returns

    Democrats on the Ways and Means Committee said they voted to release the Trump tax returns to help improve the tax laws. Republicans warned that the release would set a precedent where political parties routinely release the tax returns of their opponents.

    Another question is why the Internal Revenue Service failed to audit Trump’s tax returns as it routinely does for U.S. presidents.

    See: Trump taxes could rev up fight over IRS funding

    On Jan. 3, Republicans will take control of the House along with the tax-writing committee.

    Rep. Don Beyer, a Democrat from Virginia who is a member of the Ways and Means Committee, said the Trump tax returns “underscore the fact that our tax laws are often inequitable and that enforcement of them is often unjust.”

    Rep. Kevin Brady, the Republican from Texas who was the minority leader of the Ways and Means panel and is leaving Congress in January, said Democrats did not release the Trump tax records for any legislative purpose but wanted to “unleash a dangerous new political weapon” at the former president.

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  • Strategies to Optimize Returns in Franchise Digital Marketing

    Strategies to Optimize Returns in Franchise Digital Marketing

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Return on Investment (ROI). It’s what every wants from its dollar — money that’s often begrudgingly spent even though most brand leaders know they need to budget for it. Still, doing so isn’t like allocating money for research and development or human resources, where cost can be more easily measured against return. Now more than ever, digital marketing is a nuanced tool that can add tremendous value to a brand name.

    For the same reason, it can leave investors feeling like they aren’t getting their money’s worth. So, how do you measure its value? What criteria do you use, and how focused should you be in determining your franchise’s digital marketing ROI? Well, a lot depends on, well, a lot.

    The right partnership

    Getting a good read on your franchise marketing ROI should always start with establishing a clear and consistent baseline against which it can be measured. It should account for external factors that may impact a campaign’s success, like weather, seasonal trends, economic pressures (think pandemic) and more. Perhaps most importantly, it should consider the skill and experience of the person or the team doing its monitoring and measuring.

    These days, most consumers take their time before purchasing, partly because there are many ways that decisions can be influenced. The digital landscape is increasingly fragmented, and the buyer’s journey doesn’t always start at A and end at Z. A buyer’s digital experience is virtually limitless, which is why it’s essential that your team measures ROI holistically, not just channel — or platform-specifically — and that means it’s essential to partner with marketers who can see the big picture and help you see it, too.

    Related: The Importance of Seeing the Big Picture

    Think about it: we all rely on the advice of experts — accountants, plumbers, lawyers — and you should seek out a digital marketer with the same intention as a doctor or mechanic, as someone who can help you understand a complex scenario and guide you through choices. Good franchise digital marketing integrates many efforts — content, paid , social media, SEO, and more — and experienced franchise digital marketers know that ROI should be measured using a predetermined set of key performance indicators (KPIs), metrics that reflect your objectives. Common franchise development KPIs include cost per lead, click-through rate, organic traffic and more. An experienced franchise digital marketer can help you determine which KPIs are best to focus on, given your brand’s history and goals.

    Emerging vs. established brands

    Identifying what KPIs to focus on as a franchisor will very much depend on whether your brand is an emerging one — new to the industry with a lot to prove — or an established one with a reputation, one that’s either served you well or hasn’t (and here’s where reputation is critical. An experienced digital marketing agency can help you with that, too!). All franchisors measure success by the number of franchises they sell each year. Still, an emerging brand may have other criteria they’ll use in addition to sales, like whether or not they’ve articulated their story and purpose effectively, whether they’ve reached the best and broadest audience possible, and how clearly they’ve outlined their value against that of the competition. This will mean adopting a long-view that may take more time to measure.

    Related: Can’t Rush a Good Thing: Effective Franchise Digital Marketing Takes Time

    Conversely, an established brand with a good reputation will likely have very different goals that are a subset of the ultimate goal, which is to sell franchises. They may want to reach new personas, like multi-unit owners or veterans, the market for a specific territory or region, or focus on a particular competitive advantage. These goals are more precise and, therefore, may be more easily measured; they might also be more quickly realized because marketing strategies can be highly tailored to meet them. For brands suffering from poor reputation management or a history of dissatisfied customers, marketing efforts will take on a completely different tone and objective, one that looks to reestablish trust and reiterate worth, neither of which can happen overnight.

    The lifetime value of your brand

    As someone who’s been in the franchise marketing sphere for a decade, it’s my experience that whether you’re a franchisor or a franchisee, ultimately, the real return on investment depends on how you view your marketing dollar in the first place: is it an expense meant to deliver results quickly, or an investment, one made for long-term growth? You’d be wise to approach it from the latter perspective.

    All your marketing efforts should add to your brand’s equity or its lifetime value — the place it has in the hearts and minds of consumers and the public, people who include potential franchisees — and that almost always takes time to establish. Most investors want to align with brands they can believe in and trust, in other words, brands that have worth beyond what can be measured by KPIs and ROIs. A brand’s worth is built over time — often years — through creating awareness, articulating culture and values, delivering on promises, and encouraging loyalty; again, this means taking a long-view approach to your marketing strategies and determining ROI.

    Related: How to Vet Franchisors and Predict Your ROI on a Franchise Business

    Taking a long view is especially important in because it’s set up to reward patience financially. Hefty one-time franchise fees paid by new investors and ongoing monthly royalties (typically 5-8% of gross sales and the real bread and butter of a franchise brand) can add up and contribute tremendously to brand value. Every franchise that is sold adds to a brand’s inherent worth, and that growth can only happen if you commit your marketing dollars to work over time. Franchisees, too, should view their local marketing efforts as an investment in their presumably long future, one that’s meant to slowly and steadily grow their presence and value.

    In the end, ROI should always be gauged against the cost of not creating a budget for regular and comprehensive digital marketing. Your brand doesn’t exist in a vacuum and can’t grow unless you do what others want: believe and invest in it.

    Stephen Galligan

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