Categories
Selected Articles

Lithuania convicts teen for IKEA arson attack on behalf of Russian security services

Spread the love

The perpetrator pleaded guilty to the crime. Prosecutors said he acted “in the interests of the military structures and security services of the Russian Federation.”

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Hearts Break As ‘Sweetest’ Shih Tzu Is Dumped at Park With All of His Stuff

Spread the love

“Imagine never seeing your family again and not knowing why you were left…” one user said.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Guy Fieri says quad ‘exploded’ mid-shoot, keeping him in a wheelchair for 8 weeks

Spread the love

The chef explained that he was in the middle of filming his new show, “Flavor Town Food Fight,” when the fall and surgery happened.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Trump Canceling GDP Report Comes Under Scrutiny

Spread the love

The canceled release of the third-quarter GDP advance estimate has fueled speculation about the state of the economy.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Workers are leaning into entrepreneurship as the job market’s Great Freeze marches on

Spread the love

A person with an
Ege Aksu, an economist at Revelio Labs, analyzed data on entrepreneurship and hiring.

  • Ege Aksu, an economist at Revelio Labs, looked at data on transitions into entrepreneurship.
  • Hiring has cooled from a 2022 peak, while moves into entrepreneurship have risen.
  • People looking to run a business should think about their finances and skills.

Instead of sending out résumés and job applications during the Great Freeze, it could be a good time to get a business plan in order.

Ege Aksu, an economist at workforce intelligence company Revelio Labs, analyzed shifts in US entrepreneurship and hiring over the past few years, using data from public professional profiles on platforms like LinkedIn posted between 2019 and this past June. Clear patterns emerged: when hiring fell, the share of job switchers transitioning into entrepreneurship tended to heat up.

Aksu told Business Insider that people may be starting businesses out of necessity. Despite better-than-expected job growth in September, job gains were pretty concentrated, and Indeed Hiring Lab economist Cory Stahle said the US still has a cooling job market. Job-search platform ZipRecruiter described the labor market’s prolonged period of both employers and employees staying put as a “Great Freeze.” Bureau of Labor Statistics data showed that quits, layoffs, and hiring have remained low.

“We’re seeing employers and job seekers both trying to wait out any of the uncertainty,” Nicole Bachaud, labor economist at ZipRecruiter, previously told Business Insider.

Self-employment in many different forms is on the rise. ADP Research found that the number of independent contractors — which can include a range of workers, from delivery work to gig economy freelancers — surged by 50% between 2019 and 2024.

“This growth accelerated in the second half of 2020 and first half of 2021, driven by pandemic-driven labor shifts, remote work, and the expansion of online platform-based services,” economist Łukasz Below wrote.

Aksu expects the share of job switchers transitioning into entrepreneurship to continue increasing because she doesn’t expect the hiring slowdown to quickly fade next year. Aksu expects more graduates to turn to business ventures because of the tough job market, too.

What to do before starting a business or pursuing self-employment

Sharon Miller, president of Business Banking at Bank of America, said aspiring business owners should consider whether their idea matches their skills and passion, and if there’s demand for it. She suggested researching the potential competition and identifying the target audience. She said they also need to be ready to resolve problems, pivot when need be, and already have a business plan.

“What is your operation going to look like? What is the competition? What is your mission of the company? All of those things are important to lay out,” Miller said. “You’ve got to revisit those often because things do change, whether it be the economy or trends.”

You could give your idea a go as a side hustle, depending on your workplace’s rules.

“You have to be careful that you’re not doing anything competitive or anything that would concern your primary employer,” Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate, previously told Business Insider.

Meghan Lim, who pivoted from a financial analyst job to self-employment, previously told Business Insider that people should start with just one side hustle. She also suggested having an emergency fund and waiting until your side earnings exceed your day job’s income for a few consecutive months.

“It’s also important to ask yourself why you’re doing it. Are you fulfilled with doing it? And do you see yourself doing this for the next few years?” Lim said.

Aksu said it may be easier for people to start their own businesses than in the past, with the help of AI tools and flexible work options.

“It’s maybe speaking to work culture and autonomy, flexibility that are more talked about in today’s job market,” Aksu said.

Did you make a career pivot into starting your own business? Reach out to this reporter to share at mhoff@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Rights groups slam Trump administration for ending Myanmar deportation protection as civil war rages

Spread the love

Rights groups slam Trump administration for ending Myanmar deportation protection as civil war rages [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Maria de la Rosa Dead: Latin Singer Killed in Ambush-Style Murder in LA

Spread the love

Police said the motive is unclear and no arrests have been made.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Asylum seekers to pay up to 40% of income to fund accommodation under new plan

Spread the love

It is one of a series of proposals Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan will bring to cabinet on Wednesday as efforts are made to tighten the rules around international protection.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Dublin City Council to raise social housing rents by up to 50% for some

Spread the love

The rise will affect up to 40,000 households rented out by the local authority or containing HAP recipients.

Spread the love
Categories
Selected Articles

Labour condemns Nigel Farage after he ducks calls for probe into potential Reform UK links to Russia

Spread the love

Farage says he will not carry out a wider investigation after last week’s sentencing of former Reform UK leader in Wales, Nathan Gill

Good morning. Yesterday Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, finally addressed the report published by the Guardian a week ago that quoted multiple people recalling him making racist or antisemitic comments when he was a pupil at Dulwich College in south London in the late 1970s and 1980s. Before publication, a Reform UK spokesperson told the Guardian the claims were “entirely without foundation”. But Farage adopted a slightly different line when he was questioned by Gareth Lewis, BBC Wales’s political editor, who was conducted a pooled interview (ie, one for use by all media outlets). Farage was still quite dismissive but, when pressed as to whether he ever racially abused other pupils at school, he replied: “Not with intent.”

There is a clip of the interview here, but this morning the Today programme played a fuller version (available here, from 7.16am) which is worth hearing. The questioning by Lewis was excellent.

Continue reading…


Spread the love