Domino's Pizza looks to hire 350 in metro Detroit as sales remain strong
Domino's Pizza Inc. is looking to hire 350 people across metro Detroit in a national push for more employees as diners continue to turn toward takeout and delivery options during the monthslong COVID-19 pandemic.The Ann Arbor-based pizza giant has 20,000 job openings across the country, from…
Life without football will trounce college-town economies
It's hard to overstate the importance of football to America's college towns.So far, two of America's so-called Power Five athletic conferences — the Big Ten and Pac-12 — have nixed their fall football seasons over coronavirus worries, although they're considering restarting in spring…
Postal union officials: 10 mail-sorting machines removed in Michigan
The U.S. Postal Service has removed at least 10 automated mail-sorting machines throughout Michigan facilities this summer, lowering first-class mail-processing capacity by more than 300,000 letters per hour, postal worker union leaders told Crain's.At least three bar code sorting machines have…
Americans Want Homes, but There Have Rarely Been Fewer for Sale - WSJ
Buyers are rushing to get more living space as the pandemic continues. But many potential sellers are keeping their homes off the market, resulting in the worst drought on record of previously owned homes for sale.
Subscription-based businesses profit as shopping habits change amid pandemic
While the COVID-19 pandemic has negatively affected the bottom line of a variety of industries, the subscription-based business model has remained popular and profitable as shopping habits have changed."Obviously you've had people who in the past would have just worked 9 to 5, come home to eat…
What Covid-19 toilet paper shortages tell us about supply chains | Financial Times
FT Trade Secrets writer Aime Williams goes on a mission to find toilet roll. The coronavirus outbreak has emptied supermarket shelves. But why can't manufacturers just divert the unused office paper?
COVID-19 hit the hotel industry hard. Here’s how hotels are pivoting in the new reality - MarketWatch
The COVID-19 pandemic shook the lodging industry particularly hard, and turned many hotel businesses upside down. But, like a shaken snow globe, the...
Metro Detroit housing market continues late sales surge; prices rise as inventory falls
The delay of the spring buying season prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic continues to fuel home sales into the colder months that are typically slower for the housing market. Data from Farmington Hills-based Realcomp Ltd. II released this week shows yet another consecutive month of year-over-year…
Time crunch: Michigan's surge in absentee voting to test capacity of election workers
The 2000 presidential election was defined by dimpled, hanging and pregnant chads — tiny holes punched in paper ballots that became the focal point of the Florida recount that decided the presidency.The 2020 presidential election may be remembered for the time-consuming process of Michigan…
2020 Nobel Prize For Economics Goes To Stanford's Paul Milgrom And Robert Wilson : NPR
Stanford's Paul Milgrom and Robert Wilson are honored for their "inventions of new auction formats." Auctions are now used to price Internet ads, wholesale electricity and fishing permits.
Denver has one of America's most competitive housing markets
Denver is experiencing its most competitive housing market in history, largely driven by the new work-from-anywhere culture of the coronavirus pandemic.
Amazon complicates auto industry's worker-shortage challenge
As if it hasn't been hard enough recruiting work forces over the past couple of years, with booming sales and low unemployment, before the coronavirus pandemic. Now, as business slowly creeps back to normal, automotive companies face a new challenge: Amazon. The online marketplace plans to…