YEC  is an invitation-only, fee-based organization comprised of the world's most successful entrepreneurs 45 and younger."> YEC is an invitation-only, fee-based organization comprised of the world's most successful entrepreneurs 45 and younger.
Nobody knows everything when they start their first business. Even if you take the time to educate yourself on potential challenges and seek mentorship from more experienced entrepreneurs, there are still some lessons you'll only learn in hindsight.
Quite a lot has been going on:
US, China sign historic phase one trade deal | Fox Business
President Trump signed a landmark trade agreement with China, heralding a period of detente in a trade war between the world's two largest economies fueled by decades of complaints that Beijing was manipulating its currency and stealing trade secrets from American firms.
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The pact, detailed in a 94-page document, is only the initial phase of a broader deal that Trump has said may come in as many as three sections.
"Together, we are righting the wrongs of the past," Trump said in a pomp-filled signing ceremony. "It doesn't get any bigger than this."
Covetrus to sell off an animal health business, merge another with Spanish firm - CentralMaine.com
Covetrus Inc. plans to sell off an animal diagnostics subsidiary and merge another business unit with a Spanish company to expand operations there.
The Portland-based veterinary technology and services company has signed an agreement to sell Scil Animal Care Co., a global health analytics producer it owns, to Heska Co., based in Loveland, Colorado, for $125 million, Covetrus said in a news release issued Wednesday.
The sale would be Covetrus’ first public step to shed some of the business units acquired when it was created by a merger between Portland’s Vets First Choice and New York-based Henry Schein Animal Health last year. Proceeds from the sale would be used to pay down debt and for other business needs, it said.
Business groups wary as Murphy's State of the State sets familiar tone - NJBIZ
Gov. Phil Murphy's second annual State of the State address on Jan. 14 struck a business-as-usual tone with many of those within the statewide business community.
Gov. Phil Murphy delivers his State of the State address in Trenton on Jan. 14, 2020. – AARON HOUSTON
The exception, of course, was Murphy's promise to overhaul the "culture" in Trenton, which he said prioritized "well-connected and entrenched special interests" and a culture of "misogyny" that allowed for widely pervasive sexual harassment against women in New Jersey politics.
Many things are taking place:
Building Success: Behind the Business
Why people in India are protesting Amazon's $1 billion investment - Business Insider
When Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos announced on Wednesday that the e-commerce giant would invest $1 billion in India to bring some small businesses online, he was met with protesters who said Amazon would "destroy small retailers."
The protesters said Amazon offered deep discounts that small and medium businesses in India just can't compete with.
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This criticism from small-business owners came as India's antitrust regulator, the Competition Commission of India, said it would investigate whether Amazon and Walmart's Flipkart gave discounts to "preferred sellers."
Business Insider grew in 12 years to a monster digital enterprise.
Henry Blodget, co-founder and CEO of Business Insider/Insider Inc., summoned his staff last Thursday for a start-of-the-new decade meeting and laid on them three heavy growth targets for the next five years:
Wildly ambitious? Maybe. But in a conversation with me last week, Blodget shared that Business Insider has come along steadily from the proverbial garage, musing on a blog concept with a pair of partners (on a loading dock actually), to a diversified enterprise in the top rank of digital publishers.
Court rules the infamous Lincoln Towing can stay in business - Chicago Tribune
Lincoln Towing Service may be off the hook for years of alleged towing violations after a Cook County judge Wednesday reversed the state's decision revoking its license.
"We prevailed and we're happy that the judge made the correct ruling," Allen Perl, an attorney representing Lincoln, said Wednesday. "All we want to do is continue to relocate vehicles within the laws of the Illinois Commerce Commission."
The ICC voted unanimously in September 2018 to revoke Lincoln Towing's license in the wake of a 2016 investigation that found 831 alleged violations over an eight-month period. It ordered Lincoln to immediately cease towing operations and park its fleet of trucks.
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