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    Sunday, June 16, 2019

    Business When American Airlines announced that it had negotiated raises for its pilots and flight attendants, the market punished it with a 5.2% share drop. Analysts explained: “This is frustrating. Labor is being paid first again. We are troubled by AAL’s wealth transfer to its labor groups.”

    Business When American Airlines announced that it had negotiated raises for its pilots and flight attendants, the market punished it with a 5.2% share drop. Analysts explained: “This is frustrating. Labor is being paid first again. We are troubled by AAL’s wealth transfer to its labor groups.”


    When American Airlines announced that it had negotiated raises for its pilots and flight attendants, the market punished it with a 5.2% share drop. Analysts explained: “This is frustrating. Labor is being paid first again. We are troubled by AAL’s wealth transfer to its labor groups.”

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 05:14 PM PDT

    Why the 737 Max should never fly again

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 08:07 AM PDT

    US Raises Concern Over Increasing North Korean Business Activities in Nepal

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 06:49 AM PDT

    Tennessee Workers Reject Union At Volkswagen Plant — Again

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 05:28 PM PDT

    Question for reselling stuff in highschool. Help please!

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 11:51 AM PDT

    So I'm 15, and school starts in 3 months. I have a job for this summer so I have money to get products. My plan: Cvs every once and awhile will do a 2 for 1 arizona tea sale, buy about 200 arizonas total from different stores in the area. Sell for $1 a piece at my highschool. In theory, double my money. The school has there shop, but sells these "peace teas" and nobody likes them as much as arizonas, that's why I'm interested in doing this. I plan to sell services like portable charging and things like that. My main question is if there are any recommendations for other cheap snacks I can resell and if this is a solid plan to follow. Some background: Very very wealthy city, I am not too wealthy myself. This kids will throw around money like nothing. I do have alot of connections to people since I used to sell not so legal things. I dont anymore. When I did, I made sure I was legit and actually didnt overcharge like a bitch, so some of these people really trust me. Any advice or suggestions? Thanks guy! Quick edit: 40% of kids come to school super high, so if any of you get bad munchies, what's your first snack you want?

    submitted by /u/Bumpclan03
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    Square one of my model

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 11:49 PM PDT

    My business model is that of becoming a middleman in the hopes of one day becoming a market place. My hardest problem so far has been finding the proper suppliers to get me to my first step, which is to get my first client. I already own a LLC and have a resellers license. I just don't know exactly the best place to get the goods I'd like to sell at a price where I can make money. I've contacted many suppliers and I simply don't have the capitol or storage to even consider buying their minimums. I am at a complete dead lock and im wondering what my first step should be to create my vision.

    submitted by /u/third_legatron
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    Walmart outsourcing means layoffs for nearly 600 employees in Charlotte

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 10:48 PM PDT

    When Dead Companies Don’t Die

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 10:47 PM PDT

    Why a Dashboard With Two Gauges Should Replace 80-Page CSR Reports

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 11:24 AM PDT

    Scaling a creative service business

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 09:18 PM PDT

    Hey all, looking for some resources on scaling a creative service based business. Right now, the people and their reputations are the bottleneck and limiting factor (i.e. they quit or die, business is done). Can you help name some industries, markets or businesses that have cracked the code on scaling this type of work?

    submitted by /u/CommanderChotch
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    Question: Typical agreement between founder and “money person” partner?

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 02:26 PM PDT

    Hi Everyone,

    I am curious what solutions people have been successful with when it comes to establishing the agreement between parties in a business venture. Since every situation can be unique, as I am realizing while reading this subreddit, I thought I would ask about the situation I have found myself in.

    Currently I am obtaining a land venture loan (land subdividing) and need to find a "co-principal" with sufficient assets plus the LTV or percent down is still unknown. Now I understand there is a number of people who invest in projects as just a "money person" essentially but, what is the agreement?

    Considering the loan being secured by real property and very little money (comparably) being used for the soft costs, it seems very low risk. What type of agreement is favorable to myself and another party?

    In this example the venture loan would not have periodic payments but a balloon payment due well after the parcel will be bought , divided, and sold.

    submitted by /u/DETvsAnybody
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    5 Animal-Product-Free Food Startups To Look Out For

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 01:16 PM PDT

    Foundation, Attitude, Lessons, & Growth

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 02:32 PM PDT

    Need Some Business Pitch Advice

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 05:59 PM PDT

    So I recently had an idea for a website that I frequent. I've been doing extensive research into the company and the idea and have put together a pitch with demos and what not.

    I have two questions:

    First is how do I go about contacting this company? They do not advertise their contact information due to the content they create. Would open them up for harassment by their fans and what not. I have no ties to this company or know anyone that has any contact with anyone so pretty big wall to get past it seems. However I do have a degree and several years of experience in the field that I am attempting to pitch to this company. The only idea I can come up with is LinkedIn but it seems that contacting people on this app is very unreliable.

    Second is that even if I do get a meeting what can I do to try and minimize the chances that the company turns down my idea and then starts working on their own version of it the second the door closes.

    Any info would be helpful!

    submitted by /u/DJWildebeest
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    Québec-French business online query

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 10:33 AM PDT

    Any insights or contacts on how to get an online business distribution sideline job? I live in Montreal, work in digital marketing and would like to offer online distributors the opportunity to develop business in Quebec. Advice on where and how to start are mostly welcome.

    submitted by /u/Sophiemedia
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    dealing with chargebacks

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 04:08 PM PDT

    Trying to get ahead of anything that might be an issue for the future, just curious how to deal with chargebacks and what process should be followed, this is what I have so far (feel free to critique)

    Step 1: contact paypal/stripe and respond to the charge back notice

    Step 2: show communication

    contact the customer and make the customer sign a contract before any work is performed stating that they agree to the service by x date for x amount (layout what will happen/ service to be performed) and agree that we will have access to the boat on x date.

    Step 3: show paypal/stripe a digital receipt/ contract/ video of before and after photos/ show gps location that diver was at the customers boat with date and time.

    anything else I should add?

    submitted by /u/the_jade_dragon
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    MOJO Day Trading Review - Trading Site Reviews

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 08:36 AM PDT

    basic question: can you charge for a service before the job has been done?

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 01:40 PM PDT

    so we (me and my cofounder) run a hull cleaning/ dive service business where the price is already known beforehand on what we're going to charge and we have regularly scheduled repeating clients. can we charge before the job has been completed or do we have to wait till the job is done before we invoice the customer. my cofounder seems to think that it's somehow illegal to charge them before the work has been performed (I don't see how it's a problem so long as the work is completed by the agreed upon date by the customer). if this isn't the case I'd rather charge them beforehand and not carry out the service at a loss if they choose not to pay and then go through the pain in the ass of reminding them, threatening mechanical leans against their property and then take them to small claims.(this has happened once before and i'd like to make it so that it doesn't happen again) we're in florida if location is a factor.

    submitted by /u/the_jade_dragon
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    Exelon's status as renewable power force teeters A major California bankruptcy could lead the Chicago-based power giant to lose most of its wind farms—and a huge solar power ranch—thanks to a decision two years ago to mortgage them for hundreds of millions.

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 09:01 AM PDT

    Temtum’s breakthrough technology

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 10:10 AM PDT

    No One Knows It But These 3 Industries Now Depend on AI

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 07:59 AM PDT

    If you’re looking to learn how to code, check out my latest article! It might help you get started!

    Posted: 15 Jun 2019 01:27 PM PDT

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