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download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewThis as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Geneviève Laforce, a 24-year-old content creator from Montreal, whose partner grew up wealthy. We've learned that managing a relationship with someone who grew up so differently requires constant compassion and open communication. I've been able to broaden her worldview and provoke a deeper sense of compassion for those who are struggling. If money complicates your relationship and you want to tell your story, please email Tess Martinelli at tmartinelli@businessinsider.com.
Persons: , Geneviève Laforce, It's, We've, isn't, I've, she's, They've, Tess Martinelli Organizations: Service, Business Locations: Montreal, tmartinelli@businessinsider.com
Jae Kim has come to terms with driving over 700 miles each week to get to work. He decided to make the move and figure out his work situation once his family was settled. Eight years later, he's still driving about five hours there each week to get to the office and five hours back home. BI previously spoke to Dennis Dabney, a Gen X dad who flies weekly from Texas to Arizona for work. He recommends that anyone considering a long commute go into it "with eyes wide open" because it's not for every family situation.
Persons: Jae Kim, Kim, he's, I've, there's, I'm, Dennis Dabney, Dabney, it's Organizations: Service Locations: Auburn , Alabama, South Carolina, Alabama , South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Arizona
"Everyone is thinking they deserve a tip," Pam — who asked to go by her first name for privacy, but whose identity has been verified with Business Insider — said. Advertisement"I just don't think tipping is a good thing to do," Sandberg told BI. AdvertisementFor instance, Sandberg doesn't see tipping as necessary if he's buying something himself because "there's no extra service." "If I have to stand up to order my food or to buy my product, you're not getting a tip," Sandberg said. AdvertisementMeanwhile, there are services Pam doesn't tip for and ones she does.
Persons: , Pam, Pam —, It's, Ted Rossman, Rossman, I'm, Xers, culture's, it's, Pam isn't, Michael Sandberg, shouldn't, Sandberg, Tipping, Uber Organizations: Service, Pew Research, Business, Pew Research Center Locations: gratuities
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. I worked my way up in my first company quickly and began earning a six-figure salary when I was 30. I felt really isolated, and it affected my mental health. I felt like my hard work went unappreciatedI tried to move to Chicago last year, but it didn't work out. It's been such a relief already, and the possibilities feel endlessJust making the decision helped my mental health — particularly my anxiety.
Persons: , Rachel Stolba, I'm, I'd, unappreciated, didn't, Chicago wouldn't, I've, It's, it's, Lauryn Haas Organizations: Service, Business, Culver City, lhaas@businessinsider.com Locations: Los Angeles, America, New York, LA, Chicago, Morocco, Madrid, Mexico, Spanish, Culver, Central America, Costa Rica, San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua, Sayulita
However, the average $1,907 Social Security check often isn't enough for many boomers to afford basic necessities. But, according to the Social Security Administration, their benefits will be lower than if they waited until their official retirement age — which varies by birth year. But, while some extra money would help supplement her paycheck, she's confident in her choice to wait for Social Security. "If I can fight it out until full retirement age at 67, I can fight it out until I'm 70. Are you an older adult waiting to collect Social Security?
Persons: , Diane Williams, I'm, Williams, doesn't, She's, I've Organizations: Service, Business, Social Security, Social, Social Security Administration, SNAP Locations: North Babylon, Long
Amazon is also using AI to create highlights about how clothing fits, the quality of the fabric, and other aspects based on buyer reviews. aims to reduce the number of damaged or incorrect products Amazon sendsAn Amazon warehouse. MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP via Getty ImagesAmazon has cut down on packaging waste — think about those times you've gotten something tiny in a huge box — using AI. The approach means that Amazon can ship products using less cardboard and other packaging materials by using them more efficiently. AI can give you recommendations on Amazon's Fire TVAmazon isn't just using AI for shopping.
Persons: , you've, there's, they're, Rufus, Rufus chatbot, Amazon, Sean Gallup, MARCO BERTORELLO, Smalls, Alexa, Maestro Organizations: Service, Business, Amazon, Apparel, Getty, Workers, Amazon's, Fire, Amazon Music, Foods Locations: Amazon, AFP
I spent up to $2,000 a month to fund a drinking habit that I believed was helping me. I started drinking in college to soothe my anxietyI'll never forget the first time I got drunk. Every extra dime went to funding my drinking habitsRent took up most of my paycheck, but the rest went directly to drinking. Related storiesAfter a year of deeply contemplating sobriety, I took my final sip of alcohol in October 2021. Cutting out alcohol and the sneakily expensive lifestyle that surrounded me saves me $1,000 a month.
Persons: , Katie Butler, It's, I'm, Uber, would've, Tess Martinelli Organizations: Service, Business Locations: Dallas, tmartinelli@businessinsider.com
Eyes closed, she listened as the Mercato Partners cofounder Greg Warnock stepped into the living room of his houseboat. Before starting Mercato, Warnock bought a large stake in a chemical-distribution business and made his first few millions in the acquisition. For an aspiring investor in Silicon Slopes, Mercato Partners seemed the place to be. They say the complaints from female Mercato employees are emblematic of religious and social norms that place women in the home. Mercato Partners no longer promotes Savory Fund or Prelude on its website following an organizational shake-up.
Persons: Powell, Elizabeth Moore, Greg Warnock, Moore, Warnock, Melia Russell, Jim Dreyfous, Paul Ahlstrom, Mercato, Emma Jackson, Elizabeth Moore's, Lake Powell, Mr, Staci, McCubbins, feely, David Bateman, Bateman's, Josh James, James, machismo, David McNew, Alan Hall, Jackson, wouldn't, Matthew Ashton, something's, massages, Melissa Walred, Walred, Greg, There's, gleeful Warnock, he'd untangle, Joe Kaiser, Ryan Sanders —, Savory, Warnock's, Davis Warnock, Davis, Victor Charlie, Larry H, TMRS, Staci McCubbins, Rosalie Chan Organizations: Mercato, Business, Lambda, Mercato Partners, BI, Opportunity, Thermal, vSpring, Beehive State, Getty, Pelion Venture Partners, Miller Company, Missouri State Employees, System, Nationwide Insurance, Family Insurance, Los, Employees, Association, Saudi Aramco, Google, Facebook Locations: Utah, Mercato, Lake, Coachella, Powell, Beehive, Silicon Slopes, Salt Lake City, Cottonwood Heights, Tibet, Missouri, Texas, Los Angeles, Saudi
On June 23, when the Fever faced off against the Sky in Chicago, the average ticket price was around $250 — the most expensive average ticket price ever for a WNBA game — according to the ticket resale marketplace TickPick. It's not uncommon for star athletes like Clark to drive soaring ticket prices when they play away from home. If two arenas have the same level of ticket demand, the one with more seats could, in theory, have lower ticket prices. Tickets cost less in smaller marketsThings tend to cost more in cities like New York than they do in Indianapolis, including ticket prices. It's possible that, to some degree, Fever home ticket prices have been kept in check by the Indianapolis market.
Persons: , Caitlin Clark, Clark, LeBron James, Victor Matheson, Matheson, hasn't, Indianapolis —, Clark — Organizations: Service, Indiana Fever, Fever, Sky, Ticketmaster, Business, Chicago, Indianapolis, Cleveland Cavaliers, NBA, Cavaliers, College of, University of Iowa, WNBA, NBA's Indiana Pacers, Washington Mystics, Entertainment, Sports Arena, New York Knicks, Indiana Pacers, Knicks, Pacers, New York Liberty Locations: Chicago, Indianapolis, New York, York, Indianapolis's
Read previewBefore his 2019 death in jail, Jeffrey Epstein spent hours being interviewed on camera by Steve Bannon. AdvertisementAlexandra Preate, a spokesperson for Bannon, told BI in December 2021 that the documentary about Epstein would be screened "probably around Labor Day." In the 2000s, Trump and Jeffrey Epstein fought over Trump's purchase of a Palm Beach mansion that Epstein coveted. Mark Epstein said Jeffrey Epstein told him he wasn't subpoenaed for any depositions at that time. "You were the only person I was afraid of during the campaign," Bannon told Epstein, according to Wolff's book.
Persons: , Jeffrey Epstein, Steve Bannon, Bannon, Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein —, Donald Trump's, He's, Kevin McCarthy, Alexandra Preate, Preate, Trump Bannon, Mark Epstein, Jeffrey Epstein's, Donald Trump, Melania Knauss, Jeffrey, Trump, Bannon's, Steve Bannon's, Jacob Shamsian, wasn't, would've, Brett Kavanaugh, Kavanaugh, he's, Mike Lindell, I've, It's, Guo Wengui, Guo —, Ho Wan Kwok, Miles Guo —, Guo, Leon Black, Black, Epstein's, David Bossie, Bobbi Sternheim, Gloria Allred, Arick Fudali, didn't, David Schoen, Brad Edwards, Emma, Jo Morris, Hunter, Morris, Michael Wolff, Wolff, Julie K, Brown, Alexander Acosta, Acosta, Ehud Barak, Reid Weingarten, Rachel Maddow, Gayle King, King, Patrick Semansky, he'd, Diana, Jean Carroll, Bergdorf Goodman, Carroll Organizations: Service, New York, Business, Global, Victory Films, Trump, Capitol, Labor, Daily, Miami Herald, Davidoff, BI, Voting Systems, Apollo Global Management, White, Citizens United, Office, Southern, of, New, Trump White Locations: Manhattan, Paris, Palm Beach , Florida, Mexico, Danbury , Connecticut, Palm Beach, New York, jshamsian@businessinsider.com, JacobShamsian, York, Miami, Florida, Trump
Read previewThe Biden administration's new process to help student-loan borrowers get rid of their debt in court is working. On Wednesday, the Justice Department released an update on bankruptcy for borrowers following new guidance it released in 2022. "Our clear, fair, and practical standards are helping struggling borrowers find relief that was previously out of reach," Under Secretary of Education James Kvaal said in a statement. "This data should puncture the myth that struggling borrowers cannot discharge their student loan debt through bankruptcy," he continued. AdvertisementThe Justice Department did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for the total number of borrowers who have received discharges through this process.
Persons: , Biden, Education James Kvaal, Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Benjamin Mizer Organizations: Service, Justice Department, Business, Education, Justice, Department of Justice, Student Defense, Democratic
He cofounded the startup Aviato and raised $1 million while still at high school aged 15. I then joined Stanford's Online High School community and met some impressive people. I would attend those cold Zoom meetings from my high school bathroom and pitch to investors. At one point, I was spending about five hours a day in the bathroom taking meetings. AdvertisementI haven't graduated from high school yet and I started taking online classes instead a few months ago after I got suspended for taking meetings in the bathroom.
Persons: , Eric Zhu, Tom Preston, Werner, We've, we're, I've, It's Organizations: Service, Business, Stanford's, School, Bachmanity, Bloomberg Locations: Carmel , Indiana, San Francisco
Some job applicants may withdraw their candidacy without saying so, disappearing in the middle of the hiring process. Knowing why they do so can help companies address issues in the hiring process to better attract, hire, and retain talent. The biggest reasons job candidates said they ghost prospective employers have to do with bad experiences with talent acquisition, according to a report published Monday by FlexJobs and MyPerfectResume. With any application, "the outcome might not be getting the job or offering the job," Frana added. But letting a candidate or prospective employer know before you go is "at least is a more positive end than just dropping communication altogether."
Persons: , ghosting, FlexJobs, Toni Frana, Frana Organizations: Service, Business Locations: United States
Read previewThe pay and benefits of a full-time job aren't always enough to sustain an employee's lifestyle and monetary goals. From 9-to-5, she worked a remote marketing job, and from 5 to 10, she worked a low-lift customer service job. AdvertisementIn September 2022, she left her full-time job and created a job-juggling system to avoid legal and professional consequences. If it ever does come up, I make it seem like the dates overlap less than they did," McGill told BI. AdvertisementDespite the risky overlaps and long hours, McGill said she was happy with her choice.
Persons: , aren't, Jane, I've, Kendall McGill, McGill, didn't, We've, Davrick Hayes, Hayes, Tess Martinelli, tmartinelli@businessinsider.com Organizations: Service, Business, BI, Apple, McGill Locations: LA, North Dakota
Read previewAs Amazon's Prime Day approaches, one delivery driver in Texas has a strategy for handling the coming avalanche of packages. Flex workers, meanwhile, are independent contractors who are paid per shift (or "block," as the workers call them) and use their own cars to work. Some Amazon delivery workers said they peed in bottles as they faced pressure to complete their routes, BI reported in 2018. "Amazon Flex delivery partners have the freedom to take breaks and run errands during their delivery window specified in-app," Branden Baribeau, an Amazon spokesperson, told BI. AdvertisementDo you work for Amazon Flex, Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh, or another part of Amazon's retail business and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , They're, she's, Branden Baribeau, Baribeau, Dhruv Grewal, Grewal Organizations: Service, Business, Amazon, Amazon ., Walmart, Target, Flex, Whole Foods, Babson College, Foods Locations: Texas, Alabama, Washington, Seattle
With digital price tags, big retailers, in theory, could do the same. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said that type of dynamic pricing is "incredibly important in our economy." AdvertisementSome experts agree, saying dynamic pricing practices could benefit consumers who are able to gain some understanding of the system and shop around. After customers complained online that those changes would surge prices, a spokesperson announced the company did not intend to implement surge pricing. How does dynamic pricing impact you?
Persons: There's, Uber, it's, Greg Cathey, Elizabeth Pancotti, Pancotti, Jerome Powell, Powell, John Zhang, Wendy's, Sen, Sherrod Brown, Zhang, Organizations: Service, Walmart, Business, Roosevelt Institute, Federal, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Democratic, SNAP
The delivery reckoning is here
  + stars: | 2024-07-15 | by ( Alex Bitter | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
Unlike employees, contractor delivery workers have to cover many of their own costs. "No one wins under this law, including delivery workers," the spokesperson said. Gig workers have had to get choosier about jobsThe dilemma isn't unique to the food delivery world. Timothy Turer, who has worked in rideshare and gig delivery in Florida since 2016, remembers the dirt-cheap fares that Uber and Lyft offered riders early on. But with many telling BI that the job has gotten less profitable for them lately, or setting up their own delivery services, or even begging food delivery customers for better tips, it's clear cracks are starting to show in the well-polished delivery system.
Persons: , Uber, that's, it's, Instacart wouldn't, Instacart, he's, you'd, They've, Timothy Turer, Lyft, I'm, Turer, hasn't, DoorDash Organizations: Service, Business Locations: California, North America, New York, Seattle, rideshare, Florida
So when the couple learned about the FIRE movement in their mid-20s, it was music to their ears. They then tried to apply some of that information to their financial strategies. Over the past several years, the couple has grown their combined net worth to more than $800,000, according to documents viewed by BI. To make more money, Arsenault said they've "aggressively pushed for additional income." When their strategies generate extra money, the couple invests as much as possible in their 401(k) plans and low-cost index funds.
Persons: , Chrissy Arsenault, Ryan, didn't, Arsenault, who've, hasn't, Chrissy Arsenault Arsenault, they've, They've, They're, We've Organizations: Service, FIRE, Business, Facebook, BI Locations: Colorado, Costco, Indiana, Monument , Colorado, Fishers , Indiana
Rebecca Cox, 27, hoped to take a summer break following her first year as a full-time fifth-grade teacher in Kentucky. Instead of taking a vacation, Cox has been working different gigs this summer, attending trainings, and decorating her classroom. Other young teachers like Cox take on summer jobs. AdvertisementCox is putting the money from her summer jobs toward savings and classroom items. What does your pay look like as a teacher, or are you working multiple jobs as a teacher or in a different job?
Persons: Rebecca Cox, Cox, school's, we're, she's, I'm Organizations: Service, Business, Pew Research Locations: Kentucky
He works two or three days a week at a Walmart warehouse and cashes his monthly Social Security check, which he said is enough to finance his "simple" lifestyle. AdvertisementHe lives in Finleyville, Pennsylvania, a town 45 minutes south of Pittsburgh and receives $1,022 a month in Social Security, according to documents viewed by BI. Some are living paycheck to paycheck on Social Security, which could start shrinking by 2030 . The paychecks help supplement this Social Security income, and he said the job keeps him active and social. Are you an older adult living on Social Security?
Persons: , George Dziamniski, frugally, Dziamniski, doesn't Organizations: Service, Walmart, Social Security, Business, BI, Northwestern Mutual, Survey, SNAP, Medicare Locations: Finleyville , Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Finleyville
Read previewSheila Reed, 57, is no longer facing a lifetime of student-loan payments. 'I'm just glad it's over'Reed didn't know she would struggle so much to pay off her student loans. But with the relief, she can now begin to save money as she nears retirement and is grateful her student loans are in the rearview mirror. Advertisement"Now, when I do think about the student loans, I think of them being discharged," she said. Are you struggling with student-loan payments?
Persons: , Sheila Reed, Reed, I'm, Reed didn't, she's Organizations: Service, Westwood College, Business, BI —, Education Department, Westwood, Public, Corinthian Colleges, ITT Technical Institute, Republican
"It was love at first sight," said Lamar, who did not wish to provide his full name but goes by Lamar MK on YouTube. AdvertisementYouTuber Lamar MK with his first Cybertruck. YouTuber Lamar MK with his new Cybertruck, which broke a few weeks after he got it. After getting his new Cybertruck delivered, Lamar MK had it wrapped to give it a blue and yellow color scheme. Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, made outside normal working hours.
Persons: , hasn't, Lamar MK, Tesla, Lamar, YouTuber Lamar, Cybertruck, I'm Organizations: Service, Lamar, Business, YouTube, Tesla
But for one Amazon Flex delivery worker in Alabama, work started picking up this past week. The Flex worker, who made deliveries for Amazon during Prime Day in 2023, asked not to be identified by name, but Business Insider has verified her identity and work for Amazon. For many Amazon delivery workers, Prime Day has become one of the busiest times of the year. AdvertisementBut in the run-up to Prime Day, those higher offers come up sooner — even a full day before the shift, she said. Do you work for Amazon Flex, Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh, or another part of Amazon's retail operations and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , It's, she's, Branden Baribeau, Baribeau Organizations: Service, Business, Amazon, Whole Foods, Workers, deactivating, Flex, Foods Locations: Alabama
Corporations absolve their employees of responsibility by delegating decision-making to an algorithm or deferring to company policy. Sorry, it's company policyAccording to Davies, accountability sinks emerged over the past decades of privatization and technological innovation. In addition, middle management and customer service jobs were cut or outsourced as corporations prioritized profits, optimizing costs, and delivering strong quarterly earnings. It often looks like a customer service representative working within a system with limited options to help. Accountability sinks can range from customer service to decision-making at major corporations.
Persons: , you've, Dan Davies, It's, Davies, Milton Friedman, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Dave Calhoun, there's Organizations: Service, Business, Boeing, CNBC Locations: jtowfighi@businessinsider.com
Read previewHomeownership is helping some millennials get rich — but Gen Zers might have a hard time following in their footsteps. Some Gen Zers managed to get in on the fun — about a quarter of Gen Zers between the ages of 19 and 26 owned a home as of 2023, per Redfin. AdvertisementWhat's more, Silk said there's a larger reason Gen Zers shouldn't count on homeownership to boost their wealth. AdvertisementThese costs are already putting pressure on current homeowners, and by the time more Gen Zers buy homes, they could be even more burdensome. Their monthly payment is gone forever, and it has zero chance of providing an investment return.
Persons: , Zers, millennials, Gen Zers, Roger Silk, Silk, hasn't, It's, it's Organizations: Service, Federal Reserve, Business, World Bank
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