For our cover story, to show how widespread the labor shortage is, photographer Michelle Gustafson shot 125+ different signs for a range of industries, in 3 languages, across 2 states, over 7 days, from July 22-27, 2021. The numbers speak for themselves.
Collage by yours truly.
The scarcity of fresh water is rapidly emerging as a global economic threat that could disrupt businesses, crimp profits, and jeopardize growth. In this issue:
I got the COVID-19 vaccine today! My wing is feeling a little sore, but it'll give my body an extra protective boost that keeps me and others healthy.
Ms. @EricaRHill even said I’ve been getting vaccines since I was a little bird. I had no idea!
For this week's cover story, Barron's sent photographer Spencer Lowell in a helicopter to document the cargo-ship congestion at the Port of Los Angeles, where 88 ships are backed up in the harbor. Love this photo and the perfect type design. ❤️🙌
Folks, do NOT buy the iPhone 13!
They developed it in just 1 year. The first iPhone took billions of years to make… how can we trust an iPhone which was developed so fast?!
Remote Workers Are on the Move. What It Means for the Housing Market. Words by @ShainaMishkin Photographs by Angie Smith.
https://t.co/pmMnKxTEFq via @BarronsOnline
“It’s taken me nearly six months to fully confront, but I lost a best friend last year….friends simply didn’t—or for their own reasons—show up in the ways they used to.” https://t.co/br060SQm13
I’m hiring for a new initiative here at @barronsonline. Please reach out if you’re interested!
Digital Editor: https://t.co/IGDV5L245K
Visuals Editor: https://t.co/3oZSoEAv6K
Digital Producer: https://t.co/PxXsPYGCEL
@ONA@SABEW@WritersofColor@NAHJ@NABJ@aaja@nlgja
Cover story this week about the struggle employers face in getting workers to return, new perks offered, and stocks to watch.
📸: @sarahanneward 👏
👔: Kristin Paquette/Ether Artists👏
🙌 @samkellyyyy
With nearly three-quarters of U.S. workers fully vaccinated, many companies are trying to get workers back in person—but the office of the future is still taking shape as Covid cases rise across the country. In this week's issue:
@lander You seem to be concerned with two issues, primarily wording. I will agree it is awkward perhaps poorly-phrased wording.
I won’t agree that a landlord can’t be struggling, excuse the double negative. If your business is to rent things and the rent stops coming, you can be.
@lander Using the main frame of reference I have: Prop houses rent props. You can rent cameras. Lights. I wouldn’t tell any of those owners who rented me those things they didn’t have a job. But, that’s me. Don’t a huge percentage of people lease phones? Cars?
@lander That’s strange wording, but not because it isn’t a job. I’ve heard many say they lost livelihood, and they have. They built a business renting out spaces for tent bars, and the tenants couldn’t pay. Same as any rental equipment company if customers couldn’t pay.
@lander Not everyone goes to school for that. It’s not necessary to go to school for that. It doesn’t diminish their workload or the services they provide.
@lander If you ask any landlord, you’ll learn how much work it is. Many landlords occupy role of property manager and owner. They have to deal with advertising and filling vacant spaces, caring for property, business law, parking ratios, ensuring all is up to code, hiring contractors,etc