Being energy efficient is probably the most impactful action you can take. Also we’re gonna need batteries. So. Many. Batteries.
Will it be move-in ready by 2030? Maybe!
President of Shopify, Harley Finkelstein, joins us to discuss Shopify's role in the renaissance of retail.
Nick Quah joins us to discuss the current state of the podcasting industry.
Aaron Levant, CEO of NTWRK, joins us to explain drop culture, the shortcomings of the current retail space, and livestream video shopping.
Scott Lynn, CEO of MasterWorks, tells us about art as an asset class and the process of investing in shares of famous artwork.
On this episode, we discuss what the passion economy is, how it differs from the gig economy, and what it means for the future of work.
Like this episode? Join host Kinsey Grant for a live watch party and discussion on Monday at 5 p.m. ET on Twitter at @bizcasualpod.
If you survived the 2019 IPO season, you learned two things: 1) Morning Brew’s tailgates rivaled D3’s finest and 2) the only guaranteed win was investing in software as a service (aka SaaS) companies.
What was the first thing you looked at when you woke up this morning? Chances are, it was a product from Facebook, Twitter, Google, or Apple. But who makes the rules for the very exclusive Big Tech club running our …
Like building something from Ikea or responding to an “are you in the right headspace to receive information that could possibly hurt you” text, getting insurance can be complicated. But does it need to be?
Let’s face it, no matter how many times you’ve unsuccessfully explained to your mom what bitcoin is, you probably don’t even *really* know yourself. Throw words like distributed ledger technology, initial coin offering, and blockchain in? Yeah, no.
Newsflash: By 2022, about $4.6 trillion will be managed by roboadvisors—super smart algorithms telling you when and what to invest. But can we trust the robots? Betterment CEO Jon Stein thinks yes—but there are limitations.
Breaking up Big Tech: everyone’s talking about it, but is anyone actually doing anything about it? Scott Galloway—NYU professor, NYT bestselling author, owner of the world’s most colorful vocabulary—has some ideas.