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Monday, November 30, 2020

‘Bleak Friday’ for Stores as Pandemic Pushes Holiday Shopping Online - The New York Times

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The 2020 edition of Black Friday did not offer the usual scenes of bustling stores and shoppers lined up outside discount chains and electronics retailers. Instead, most people bought online, if they bought at all.

Crowds at malls and city shopping districts were relatively sparse over the holiday weekend in the face of rising coronavirus cases and warnings from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to avoid large groups. Major chains closed on Thanksgiving, after years of being open that day. And many Americans did their shopping before the weekend even began, drawn by sales that began in October.

Analysts at Morgan Stanley estimated that retailers’ overall Black Friday sales fell 20 percent from last year, based on early reports of drops in store foot traffic and increases in online sales. Consumers spent $9 billion online on Friday, a 21.6 increase from last year and the second-biggest figure for online retailers ever, according to Adobe Analytics, which scans 80 percent of online transactions across the top 100 U.S. web retailers. The firm said online sales rose to $23.5 billion in the four-day Thanksgiving-to-Sunday period, up 23 percent from last year.

“This wasn’t a Black Friday, it was a bleak Friday in stores,” said David Bassuk, global co-head of the retail practice at AlixPartners, a consulting firm. “It is such a stark contrast to past years. The stores were really ghost towns.”

Image
Credit...Salgu Wissmath for The New York Times

The early results from the weekend, which has traditionally kicked off holiday shopping in the United States, show how the season is being upended by the pandemic. Major retailers started offering deals well before Halloween, a shift that was amplified by Amazon’s decision to hold its annual Prime Day event in the middle of October. Consumers have been encouraged to shop early to avoid shipping delays. Chains have replicated deals once limited to stores on their websites and canceled visits with Santa Claus to minimize crowds.

Americans were already spending online before the pandemic, but the crisis has accelerated the trend. About 59 percent of shoppers had started their holiday shopping by early November this year, the National Retail Federation said. Shopper foot traffic declined 52 percent on Friday, according to data from Sensormatic Solutions.

“The ability to pull the holiday forward may linger with us,” said Simeon Siegel, a retail analyst at BMO Capital Markets. “It’s been a long time since Black Friday was simply three hours in the morning on Friday. Black Friday was already stretched into early November, it just happened to make it into October as well.”

During earnings calls in November, several retail executives said they were uncertain about how much holiday shopping had actually been done in October and early November. Matthew Bilunas, chief financial officer at Best Buy, said that “it’s really difficult to predict exactly how much was pulled into” the third quarter.

Most retailers operate on a calendar where the fourth quarter starts in November and ends in January, in part to fully capture the holiday shopping season.

“We think it’s going to be a prolonged shopping season,” Brian Cornell, chief executive of Target, said on a separate call. “We’re going to see very different shopping patterns. We don’t expect to see those big spikes during Black Friday and on weekends.”

Credit...Gabby Jones for The New York Times

Sales on Monday — known as Cyber Monday since it was concocted in 2005 —  are expected to exceed those on Friday.

But while consumers have flocked to deals online, Mr. Siegel said, many retailers had carefully managed inventory and promotions and were largely holding the line on prices compared with 2019.

“People have become accustomed to doorbusters and ever-deeper promotions,” he said. “The reality is at most companies, the headline promotions are, at most, flat to last year.”

The bigger question for retailers is how the jump in online sales may eat into their profits, since they have to spend additional money on shipping and processing returns. Black Friday was traditionally considered the day that retailers went from being in the red to becoming profitable, or in the black, for the year.

“The idea of retailers moving into the black on Black Friday has also evaporated,” said Mr. Bassuk of Alix Partners. “Yes, there is more volume, but as that volume shifts to online, it becomes more costly for the retailers.”

Credit...Salgu Wissmath for The New York Times

While the number of shoppers visiting just about every store on Black Friday was down markedly from previous years, those who did venture out were not there to window-shop.

Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail research firm, said retailers experienced higher “conversion” rates, meaning more shoppers in the stores actually made purchases than in previous years.

“This is a trend we’re expected to see at this Covid Christmas,” Mr. Johnson said in an email.

While the results of this year have prompted some experts to portend the death of Black Friday, Mr. Siegel is among analysts who view 2020 as an outlier, anticipating that shoppers will return to stores once they feel it is safe to do so.

“The pandemic will leave us with a lot of new traditions but it’s not going to wipe away all of the prior,” he said.

The rest of the holiday shopping season will be closely watched as a barometer for the U.S. economy. Millions of people are still out of work or have been forced into part-time employment. Overall consumer spending, which drives as much as two-thirds of economic activity, has slowed in recent months along with the expiration of some emergency government spending programs.

The Link Lonk


December 01, 2020 at 05:27AM
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‘Bleak Friday’ for Stores as Pandemic Pushes Holiday Shopping Online - The New York Times

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Holiday

Green Holiday Giving - tulsakids.com

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The most wonderful time of the year does not have to be the most wasteful. Check out these fun ideas and tips for creating meaningful eco-friendly celebrations and gift giving.

The holidays can elicit all kinds of emotions. It can be exciting to think about all the fun celebrations and gifts that will be arriving this month. It can also be a daunting and fraught time trying to make this season meaningful and less consumerist. However, I can attest that it is possible to make this a season of personal fulfillment and spreading joy while also thinking practically about gift giving and being eco-conscious. Below are a few ways I have figured out how to make this holiday time more meaningful and the kind of celebration I want my family to partake in.

Gum Ball Garland Mak

1. Focus on the Season

Regardless of what holiday you celebrate in winter, there are occurrences happening in nature this time of year that are worth taking time to appreciate. A magical way to take in the changing of the season as we head into winter is going on a full moon walk. Oxley Nature Center has a Full Moon Walk available for all ages. Check the Oxley Website for the date set for the “Cold” Moon walk this December and how to register. While there, consider giving the gift of membership to Oxley Nature Center and help them spread the message of nature connection and awareness in our city.

2. The Gift of Giving

Some of the most meaningful holiday gifts received make a difference in our community. Consider giving a donation to a local non-profit you want to support or a larger organization doing good in the world. One of my favorite organizations to support is Heifer International. I love their mission of providing animals to families and people in need around the world. Children love knowing they can make a difference, and it’s also fun to receive a card showing the gift of a pig, cow, bees, ducks etc.

3. Use Earth Friendly Materials

In pandemic times, celebrations will likely look different than in past years. In order to make things special, you need not look any further then your own backyard or nearby green space. I regularly search outside for inspiration in my holiday decorating. Pine cones and a little festive ribbon displayed on a plate look just as festive as anything store-bought. Grab a can of golden spray paint, some twine or pretty yarn, and those “Gum balls” or acorn caps your local trees drop, and make a simple, festive garland. Here’s an article on how to make these beautiful garlands.

Another way to think eco for celebrations is using compostable plates and flatware that can be purchased at Sprouts Grocery. Or why not use all that festive fine china that we only get out for special occasions. That way you get to admire the beauty of an antiqued past and simply wash up after the celebration.

4. Gift Giving in an Eco Way

I love to give gifts that I know will encourage the kind of behaviors I want to see in my children. When I give them things that encourage being active, going outside and using nature knowledge, I know I have given them a good gift. I also use the adage of Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle when purchasing gifts. Buying something used rather than new is a better option when taking an earth friendly approach. I find Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist to be a great place to look first when purchasing toys for my children. Often the toys I have found have been in good condition and serve just as much function as a new toy would.

If you want to give something useful, there are many functional gifts to give children that can provide outdoors skills and teach them to be more eco conscious. Below I have compiled a list of some of my favorite functional gifts to give. Click the links to find ways to purchase them.

Beeswax Candles Mak

A. Nature Journals

make simple and beautiful gifts for your explorers to use every time you go outside. They are great for younger and older children alike. Gift yourself one, too, and you can journal together as you discover the nature in your local park or on a hike. You can purchase a lovely pre-made journal with the link above, or make your own following this template and tips for how to get started from the Sierra Club.

B. Forager Pockets

Forager Pockets from Chaos Creations are a lovely way for children to gather and collect nature objects when they are on hikes. They also make perfect storage for snack wrappers and other lightweight supplies so that your children can easily carry whatever they need while out on an adventure.

C. Mushroom Growing Kit

It is a very satisfying for children and adults to grow their own food and watch the process. When I bought this kit my daughters loved checking the mushrooms each day and watching them through the stages from tiny baby to full grown mushroom. The best part, they loved cutting off the mushrooms, sautéing them in butter and herbs and eating them. Up until we grew our own, my children were not interested in eating mushrooms. It was a win, win for parenting.

D. National Parks Pass

A wonderful way to encourage your family to get outside and explore, is visiting a National Park. You can make these trips a family priority with a National Parks Pass. This is a wonderful gift of experience everyone can enjoy.

E. Candle Making

Candle making kits are a lovely gift to give, spreading warmth and light in the coldest season. My family and I use melted beeswax and ball jars to make sweet/affordable handmade gifts for relatives and friends. Check out this article for how to make your own candles.

F. Butterfly Hatching Kit

Another way to inspire awe this holiday season is to give the experience gift of hatching your own butterflies. This fun activity is easy to do and inspiring to watch the many stages of the butterfly. Remember to wait till there are some flowers blooming to hatch and release your butterflies.

G. Outdoor Explorer Kit

This kit includes a compass, binoculars, flashlight and safety whistle, all the gear needed to dive deep into a hike or take camping on all your nature adventures.

H. Wildcraft the Game

This board game, from the Learning Herbs Company, is one of our family favorites. It teaches children and adults all about the power of plants as medicine and basic wilderness survival skills. The company also has other fun products for you and your family to learn about herbal medicine.

Wildcraft Mak

5. Eco-wrapping.

After getting your children and loved ones one of these lovely gifts, it’s also fun to think of eco ways to wrap them up. Every year when we take down our holiday decorating supplies, we also pull out a box full of bows, gift bags and ribbon from the previous year. This box has had years of use. We love seeing our gifts displayed in the same bags and ribbons they were in years passed. It creates less waste to re-use the bags and can elicit the same reaction of holiday cheer.

Another way to be more eco in holiday wrapping is to use scraps of cloth to wrap your gifts. The look of a cloth-wrapped candle made with love from your family is a wonderful way to bring out the deeper meaning of celebrating the winter holidays.

6. Shopping Local

It is so easy to click the links to companies all over the country or big box stores selling all your holiday desires at a discount. Taking the time to buy local requires a little more legwork but ultimately brings the gift of helping to create a diverse community full of rich culture.

Some of my favorite places to shop local are Fulton Street Books, Magic City Books, The STEMcell Science Shop, Lavender Blue’s Literacy Market and Kiddlestix Toys. There are so many more great shops to choose from, and I encourage you to support these businesses, as they are the most affected by the pandemic. Check out this short video to learn more about independent Tulsa business to support.

7. The Gift of Service

One of our most unforgettable holiday traditions is to do acts of service in our community. My family likes to choose an activity that brings beauty and health to our society. For that reason, we pick up trash. In many of the wild places we go for hikes we often find trash. Litter is a constant problem in our cities’ waterways and green spaces. Taking the time to bring a bag and pick up the trash we find teaches my children to be better stewards to our land and makes our hikes even more important and enjoyable.

Another way we like to help is to deliver food and gifts to those in need. Bringing some of our holiday traditions to folks that would normally not be able to have elaborate celebrations feels good and helps my children see that we can actively make a difference in the health and wellbeing of our community.

Butterfly Hatching Mak

I hope you get to enjoy this holiday season as much as we do. Please share the ways you like to make your celebrations eco-conscious and full of meaning. Happy holidays!

About Margaritte Arthrell-Knezek

Margaritte Arthrell-Knezek is a naturalist, writer and community educator committed to teaching the skills of sustainability and instructing children and adults on how to connect with the natural world that surrounds them daily. Arthrell-Knezek hails from New Haven, Connecticut where she began her work in the arts and environmental activism in 1997.

She graduated from The Evergreen State College In Olympia WA, 2010, with a bachelor’s degree in multi-media art and sustainability studies. She has traveled the world and landed in Tulsa, OK, where she is the Executive Director and Lead Educator of Under The Canopy LLC. Margaritte is a parent to two awesome children and wife to Mykey Arthrell-Knezek.

You can learn more about the programs she teaches at www.underthecanopy.org She is a regular contributor to TulsaKids.com and also keeps a personal blog about parenting in all its real and messy forms called Tap the Root. She was also published in Hilary Frank’s 2019 book, “Weird Parenting Wins.”


Green Giving Pin

The Link Lonk


December 01, 2020 at 03:44AM
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Green Holiday Giving - tulsakids.com

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Holiday

Jolly Creek Holiday Festival Offers Outdoor Holiday Fun - News 13 Orlando

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KISSIMMEE, Fla. — The holiday season is in full swing and there's a new outdoor event in Kissimmee that offers safe, family friendly fun.


What You Need To Know

  • Jolly Creek Holiday Festival runs select nights through Jan. 2

  • Outdoor event features lights, decorations, Santa meet-and-greet, and more

  • Jolly Creek Orchestra performs holiday favorites throughout the evening

  • Portion of the proceeds go to Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida

Jolly Creek Holiday Festival & Marketplace has been set up at Boggy Creek Airboat Adventures.

The event features Christmas decorations and lights, live entertainment, photo ops, a Santa meet-and-greet, and more.

Visitors who want to meet Santa can find him sitting in an airboat in a designated area. From a distance visitors can interact with Santa and even get their picture taken with him.

At times, visitors might even spot a light up Christmas tree that roams around during the event.

For those who want to get creative, there's a craft area where families can make their own holiday souvenirs. The crafting kits are an additional cost.

The event also offers festival food and beverage items that can be purchased. And local vendors also have tables set up with various items for sale.

Jolly Creek is also providing work for performers who were impacted by coronavirus layoffs.

One of the groups performing at the event is the Jolly Creek Society Orchestra, which is comprised of former members of the Grand Floridian Society Orchestra. The band performs multiple times each evening, playing a variety of holiday favorites.

Also taking the stage on select nights are The Misletones, an acapella group, and the Vocalitas.

The event also helps a good cause, with a portion of the proceeds going to Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida.

The organizers of Jolly Creek have made sure to put safety measures in place. Visitors are required to wear face masks. There are also social distancing markers and reminders placed in various locations, including the seating area.

Jolly Creek Holiday Festival & Marketplace takes place on select nights through January 2.

For more information and to purchase tickets, visit jolly-creek.com.

The Link Lonk


November 30, 2020 at 10:00PM
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Jolly Creek Holiday Festival Offers Outdoor Holiday Fun - News 13 Orlando

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Holiday

Support local artisans and shop small at holiday markets - WECT

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If character, charm and history define your style, the Holiday Gift Market at Legacy Architectural Salvage is a unique event designed to help customers find inspiration in beautiful gifts from local makers and artisans. Vendors will be offering jewelry, vintage clothing, woodworking, plants, signs and a variety of art forms. Located at 1831 Dawson Street behind Stevens Ace Hardware, this market is held Saturday, December 5 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The Link Lonk


December 01, 2020 at 06:23AM
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Support local artisans and shop small at holiday markets - WECT

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Holiday

This holiday season, everyone is shopping from home - Finance and Commerce

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NEW YORK — The viral pandemic is accelerating a transformation of America’s holiday shopping season.

Few people showed up at the mall this weekend, with millions of pandemic-wary shoppers staying home to shop online.

The result? Overall holiday sales are projected to rise a slight 0.9% in November and December — and even that modest gain will be due to an explosion in online shopping, according to the research firm eMarketer. It expects online sales to jump nearly 36%, while sales at physical stores fall 4.7%.

The online rush was on fully display Monday, known as Cyber Monday, a day of sales promoted by retailers back in 2005. Once the final numbers are tallied up, this year’s Cyber Monday is projected to become the biggest online shopping day in American history.

Here’s how this holiday shopping season is shaping up:

“Bleak Friday”

Black Friday, typically the frenzied kick-off of the holiday shopping season, was eerily quiet this year. Health officials had warned shoppers to stay home, and stores followed suit by putting their best deals online to discourage crowds.

Half as many people shopped inside stores this Black Friday than last year, according to retail data company Sensormatic Solutions.

“Black Friday was really Bleak Friday,” says David Bassuk, a member of the retail practice at the consulting firm AlixPartners.

Online was a decidedly different story. Sales hit a record $9 billion on Black Friday — up a sharp 22% from last year, according to Adobe Analytics, which tracks online shopping.

Cyber Monday still on top

Even though shoppers had access to weeks of online deals, many held out for bargains that they could get only on Cyber Monday, the Monday after Thanksgiving.

Amazon offered 30% off on board games and discounts on many of its gadgets. Target had 40% off Legos and robot vacuums for $75 off.

Cyber Monday is expected to generate as much as $12.7 billion in sales — a 35% jump from a year ago, according to Adobe Analytics.

Shipping slowdown

A big unknown hanging over the shopping season is this: Will retailers and shippers be able to deliver all those online orders in time for Christmas? Retailers have been warning shoppers to buy early this year, because with far more people shopping online during the pandemic, shippers may become overwhelmed with packages to deliver.

Prolonged delays could send people back to physical stores closer to Christmas, if many people eventually decide that old-fashioned stores are a more reliable way to obtain their gifts on time, said Charlie O’Shea, a retail analyst at Moody’s.

More curbside pickup

Curbside pickup, in which people order online and pick up at a store’s parking lot, is becoming a popular option for those who want their gifts right away or who fear that they won’t be shipped on time.

Some stores, like Macy’s, are offering curbside pickup for the first time this holiday. Others are making more space in their parking lots for people to park and pick up orders.

In the weekend after Thanksgiving, curbside pickup rose 67% from a year ago, according to Adobe Analytics.

Online small businesses gain, too

While retail giants Amazon and Walmart are likely to be the biggest winners this holiday season, smaller businesses that have an online presence are racking up sales, too.

Adobe Analytics says online sales at smaller retailers were up 349% on Thanksgiving and Black Friday. And at the more than 1 million businesses that use Shopify to build their websites, sales rose 75% from a year ago to $2.4 billion on Black Friday, according to Shopify.

Some shoppers are purposefully skipping big stores for smaller ones.

Bernadette Vielhaber, a technical writer in Avon, Ohio, says she bought books, T-shirts and other gifts from small businesses online, instead of giving her money to large companies that she feels don’t need it, like Amazon.

“I’m trying to be more supportive of people who are struggling to keep their businesses open,” she says.

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The Link Lonk


December 01, 2020 at 05:52AM
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This holiday season, everyone is shopping from home - Finance and Commerce

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Holiday

An Oregon nurse bragged on TikTok about not wearing a mask outside of work. She’s now on administrative leave. - The Washington Post

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“When my co-workers find out I still travel, don’t wear a mask when I’m out and let my kids have play dates,” the nurse wrote in a caption accompanying the video, which has since been deleted.

Following swift online backlash from critics, her employer, Salem Health, announced Saturday that the nurse had been placed on administrative leave. In a statement, the hospital said the nurse, who has not been publicly identified by her employer, “displayed cavalier disregard for the seriousness of this pandemic and her indifference towards physical distancing and masking out of work.”

“We also want to assure you that this one careless statement does not reflect the position of Salem Health or the hardworking and dedicated caregivers who work here,” said the hospital, adding that an investigation is underway.

Salem Health did not respond to The Washington Post’s request for comment as of early Monday.

The nurse’s video offers a startling and rare glimpse of a front-line health-care worker blatantly playing down a virus that has killed at least 266,000 Americans. It also has been seen in some coronavirus patients, some on their deathbeds, who still refuse to believe the pandemic is real.

The incident comes at a time when Oregon has continued to see a spike in new coronavirus cases and virus-related hospitalizations. Just last week, the state’s daily reported deaths and hospitalizations rose by 33.3 and 24.2 percent respectively, according to The Post’s coronavirus tracker. At least 74,120 Oregonians have been infected with the virus since late February; 905 of them have died.

The clip posted to TikTok on Friday shows the nurse mocking the health guidelines while using audio from a scene in which the Grinch reveals his true identity to Cindy Lou Who.

Although the original video was removed, TikTok users have shared a “duet” video posted by another user critical of the nurse, which had more than 274,000 reactions as of early Monday.

Soon after she posted the clip, hundreds took to social media and the hospital’s Facebook page to report the nurse’s video and demand an official response from her employer. Some requested that the nurse be removed from her position and that her license be revoked.

Hospital officials told the Salem Statesman Journal that the investigation is aiming to figure out which other staff members and patients have come in contact with the nurse, who works in the oncology department.

But for some, the hospital’s apologies and actions were not enough.

“The video supplied should be evidence enough," one Facebook user commented. "She needs to be FIRED. Not on PAID leave. As someone fighting cancer, I can only imagine how her patients feel after seeing this news.”

The hospital thanked those who alerted them of the incident, emphasizing that its staff, patients and visitors must adhere to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines.

“These policies are strictly enforced among staff from the moment they leave their cars at work to the moment they start driving home,” hospital officials told the Statesman Journal.

The Link Lonk


November 30, 2020 at 07:44PM
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An Oregon nurse bragged on TikTok about not wearing a mask outside of work. She’s now on administrative leave. - The Washington Post

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Work

Diving into the work of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency - Federal News Network

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Best listening experience is on Chrome, Firefox or Safari. Subscribe to Federal Drive’s daily audio interviews on Apple Podcasts or PodcastOne.

A lesser known function of the Defense Department provides advisors or coaches to friendly foreign militaries. The Ministry of Defense Advisors Program goes back a few years to the surge in Afghanistan. Now it has advisors embedded around the globe. With more on the program, the chief of the institutional capacity building division of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, Laura Alami, joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin.

Tom Temin: Ms. Alami, good to have you on.

Laura Alami: Great to be here. Thank you.

Tom Temin: So give us a brief rundown on the background of this program, it goes back to 2009.

Laura Alami: It does. In 2009, the program was created to address operational requirements, focusing on civilian lead defense institutions for Afghanistan and Iraq.

Tom Temin: And this program, the advisors that are sent out around the world then come from the civilian ranks of DoD, career people, not the uniform ranks.

Laura Alami: Correct. In 2009, the department started looking at focusing on defense DoD civilians in order to leverage their expertise to work with their partners and counterparts in the ministry of defense of our partners.

Tom Temin: And where are people now besides Afghanistan? Are they all over the world at this point?

Laura Alami: Correct. In 2012, Congress gave us the authorization to go global and our requirements are aligned to national defense strategy and objectives. So we do have people across the world in different countries to address those objectives.

Tom Temin: And who do they tend to work with? What are some other countries besides Afghanistan for example?

Laura Alami: Currently, we have positions open up in Colombia, we have Fiji, Indonesia, Ukraine, again, obviously Iraq, all across the world.

Tom Temin: And do they deal with other civilians in the ministries or do they deal with both them and uniformed personnel?

Laura Alami: Anyone. So who’s ever in those positions and offices within their ministries of defense.

Tom Temin: So it sounds like they might be advising in areas other than direct warfighting questions that surround militaries. You tell me — procurement, for example, planning and that kind of thing?

Laura Alami: Correct. We work to support any capability gaps a partner may have in their institution, it could range from intelligence, human resources, strategy, and policy, cyber, etc. So across the whole board, we can work with partners.

Tom Temin: So it’s really tailored to that particular ministry in terms of one’s needs. And do other countries tend to have what you might call the fourth estate or the ministerial part or the Pentagon part equivalent, in addition to their armed services as kind of separate operating units.

Laura Alami: They do, but it’s different for a country. And again, we’ll work with whatever they need to help into support their capability gaps.

Tom Temin: And they have people probably that travel back and forth between those two areas as much as we do.

Laura Alami: Yeah, again, different for country.

Tom Temin: You get the Pentagon duty, and then you’re back to your ship, or back to your squadron or back to your platoon, whatever the case might be. And how long do these assignments last generally?

Laura Alami: Most of our positions are detailees from the DoD. So we are looking usually at one to two years where they’re away from their host organization in DoD and working with the partner.

Tom Temin: And they spend the whole time there, they move in there for that duration?

Laura Alami: Absolutely. They’re embedded with the ministry, and they’re sitting next to their counterparts advising them on how to, again, build a capability.

Tom Temin: In some ways it’s an ambassadorial type of function. And does the State Department provide support in any way? Do they operate out of embassies and that kind of thing? How does it all work?

Laura Alami: Most of the time, they actually work out under chief of mission at an embassy. They’re their mentors and their advisors, but they’re also first line relationship builders, which is one of our goals of security cooperation at large. And they’re able to work directly with the partner on the ground day to day.

Tom Temin: And what do you look for in people that say want to do this type of work?

Laura Alami: We’re looking for permanent GS 13, 14, 15 employees who have about 10 plus years of experience with the government.

Tom Temin: And besides that, what kinds of qualities, they must be able to be teachers as well as just functionaries in some sense?

Laura Alami: Well, we actually have an intense advisor trainings for those people who are the subject matter experts who may not have the advising expertise. So they come to DSCU. And it’s sponsored by our defense security cooperation university for seven weeks, and have to be certified through that program, where they learn advising skills, personal security skills, as well as stuff about the host country — cultures, language, etc.

Tom Temin: Do they need to speak the language of the host country or are there translators available? Or do the host countries tend to speak English?

Laura Alami: On the whole, they don’t need to learn a language, but sometimes that is a requirement. But there’s also the ability to have translators, it really is country to country.

Tom Temin: And is there a particular area of topics or one topic that seems to be the most in demand by the host country?

Laura Alami: It really depends on what the US National Defense objectives are and priorities and the mutual interest with the partner — and that drives us and tells us what we need to help them with. So no, it again different for country, different for what we’re trying to partner to, again to help the partner achieve and what mutual challenges we’re trying to address.

Tom Temin: Because I mentioned procurement and acquisition. And a lot of countries have different approaches, you might say to put it euphemistically than the United States with respect to vendor relations and the ethics and the laws surrounding that. But what are some of the other topics that tend to be in demand?

Laura Alami: So again, like right now we have an intelligence position we have open in Colombia, we have maritime domain awareness, which tends to be popular, and that’s in Fiji and Indonesia. Human resources management is always a big issue. And again, strategy and policies is always important. So again, it depends on the partner and what role we’re trying to address.

Tom Temin: At the moment, you have openings, how does the whole process work?

Laura Alami: We have relationships across the department, to help us recruit and to get the word out to announce positions, to make sure that we have the senior subject matter experts that we need in order to advise our partners. So once we will put out announcements in different ways, you can find out current positions at DSCA’s Institute for Security Governances websites where it says work with us, and you will see the different positions open. And then that individual gets vetted across all the stakeholders. So you’re talking about DSCA, the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Policy, the Geographic Combatant Command and the US Embassy, and sometimes the host nation themselves. And if vetted and selected, then they go to the training, and that is their certification is the final step in becoming a MoDA advisor.

Tom Temin: Got it. And when they are in a location, is it generally the case that the US military also has some contingents of uniform people nearby or in that country?

Laura Alami: Again, different for country.

Tom Temin: Sure. And do they check in with some of the military people from time to time when over there just to make sure everybody’s on the same page?

Laura Alami: Yeah, again, it’s a holistic program. The individual works very closely with the security cooperation office at the embassy, which is the one who’s going to be the one to integrate all the different pieces that DoD is doing on the ground. So yes, there’s integration to make sure it’s a holistic approach.

Tom Temin: And one point I wanted to come back to, you mentioned that part of the seven week training involves personal security. That tends to be an issue, I guess, in a lot of places nowadays.

Laura Alami: It does for some. Again, a big contingent of our program does go to Afghanistan, and that is something that is required. But for others, it really depends on where they’re going and the requirements of the country and the embassy.

Tom Temin: And what are the housing situation and all that? Do families go with the people when they’re away for a year? And tell us about the human aspect of it?

Laura Alami: Right. Absolutely. Again, it depends on the location. And it depends on, again, the embassies requirements. So some, if families allowed, they go — and we just follow those rules, the general foreign affairs rules that go with the embassy because they fall under them and their responsibility while they’re over there.

Tom Temin: Got it. Sounds like pretty exciting proposition for someone.

Laura Alami: It’s an exciting program. Yeah, we feel it is one of those. It is a key program in our security cooperation, institutional capacity building toolkits. It addresses our national security and national defense strategies, as well as the guidance for the development of alliances and partnerships, the new DoD guidance that’s intended to inform both near term security cooperation, and longer term strategic and force planning with allies and partners. And we just think it’s a great experience all around, it’s mutual beneficial for us as well as for the partner and for the personal, it pays professional and personal dividends.

Tom Temin: But in general, you find there is demand from the country — they say, we would love to have one of your experts on X-Y-Z topic join us for a year.

Laura Alami: Absolutely. And MoDA is one of a hook more of a holistic approach that we do with our partners for strengthening partner defense institution. The US supplies them with the most advanced defense equipment in the world and services associated with them. And then on top of that, we provide education, training, advice and expertise from the most advanced military in the world. So this integrated approach allows them to absorb, maintain and sustain their defense and security capabilities. They’re right down range with our partners, and they facilitate the development of the long term relationships between us and our partner, which is extremely a mutual benefit between us that allows us to address our shared challenges together.

Tom Temin: So they really are ambassadors, and in that sense, maybe not officially, but in reality.

Laura Alami: Yeah. They’re working day to day directly with the partner and representing the United States with that partner.

Tom Temin: Laura Alami is chief of the Institutional Capacity Building division of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency. Thanks so much for joining me.

Laura Alami: My pleasure.

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December 01, 2020 at 01:26AM
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Diving into the work of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency - Federal News Network

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Art world star gives back by buying work of the undiscovered - WTOP

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NEW YORK (AP) — Painter Guy Stanley Philoche, a star in the New York art world, had wanted to treat himself to a fancy watch after a hugely successful gallery show. Then the pandemic hit, and he feared for all the struggling artists who haven’t been so lucky.

So he gave up his $15,000 Rolex dreams and went on a different kind of buying spree, putting out a call on Instagram in late March to any artist anywhere who had creations to sell. The submissions rolled in, hundreds at a time.

He’s spent about $60,000 so far with plans to continue as long as he can, and Philoche’s own patrons have taken notice and asked him to make purchases on their behalf as well.

“It’s about artists helping artists,” said the 43-year-old Philoche, who came to America from Haiti with his family at age 3, nearly nothing to their names.

“I’m not a rich man,” he said, “but I owe a big debt to the art world. Art saved my life, and I made a promise to myself that once I made it, to always buy from artists who hadn’t gotten their big break.”

Philoche has a budget, seeking out works in the $300 to $500 range. He buys only what he loves, from as far away as London and as close as the studio next to his in East Harlem. An abstract mixed-media piece by Michael Shannon, his studio neighbor, was his first purchase, leading Philoche to include him and others he’s discovered in an upcoming group gallery show.

About half the artists Philoche has chosen are people he knows, many in New York. The others sent him direct messages on Instagram with sample work in hopes of being picked.

Philoche, who went to art school in Connecticut where his family settled, has lined the walls of his tiny apartment with his Philoche Collection During Covid, ranging from graffiti-inspired work and portraiture to pop art and a huge pistol done in bright yellow, red and blue paint.

Philoche’s own work goes for up to $125,000 a piece. During a recent interview at his studio, he slid out from storage large canvases from his breakthrough, Mark Rothko-esque abstract Untitled Series and a collection of female nudes with duct tape over their mouths. Often whimsical, he has also produced paintings inspired by Monopoly and other board games, as well as comics such as Charlie Brown.

Among his clients: Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch and Barclay Investments Inc., along with Uma Thurman, George Clooney and fellow artist Julian Schnabel.

Giving back isn’t something the affable Philoche just recently decided to do. Over his 20-plus year career, he has tried to stick to a simple rule to support other artists: Sell a painting, buy a painting. But it was a chance meeting with a friend and fellow artist who was anxious about the pandemic with a baby on the way that set him on his pandemic buying spree.

“I’m not on the first line, but my community was impacted as well,” he said. “It was just the right thing to do. I love waking up in my apartment every morning seeing the walls. There’s paintings on the floor, all over. Some of these people have never sold a painting in their life.”

His feisty French bulldog Picasso at his side, Philoche recalled his own meager start in New York after he put himself through art school while working full-time as a bartender.

“People didn’t open the doors for me. I had to get into the room through the back door, or through the window,” he said with a laugh. “But now that I’m in the room, with a seat at the table, I have to open doors for these artists.”

Copyright © 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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November 30, 2020 at 10:15PM
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The Pandemic Effect on Holiday Shopping in 2020 - Investopedia

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The holiday shopping season is normally a busy one for retailers, restaurants, and other merchants. For 2020 the average shopper plans to spend $998 on holiday purchases, according to the National Retail Federation (NRF). However, this year’s holiday shopping season probably won’t look like those of the past. The coronavirus pandemic is reshaping the way people shop and spend for the holiday season in more ways than one.

Key Takeaways

  • The average American plans to spend just under $1,000 on the holidays this year. 
  • Online shopping is set to take precedence over in-store shopping as consumers observe social distancing measures. 
  • Black Friday continues to be the most popular day for holiday shopping, followed by Amazon Prime Day and Cyber Monday. 
  • Small Business Saturday may be a highlight of this year’s holiday shopping season, as consumers seek to help small businesses affected by COVID-19. 

How Holiday Spending Adds Up

Consumers still plan to spend money over the holidays this year, despite financial setbacks related to the COVID-19 pandemic. A PwC survey found that nearly 40% of consumers expect to spend the same amount as they did last year, while 11% actually plan to spend more. Of the nearly $1,000 on average they plan to spend, according to the NRF, the majority of that is budgeted toward buying gifts.

Gift card purchases are also expected to get a boost this year. According to the NRF, consumers are expected to spend $27.5 billion on buying gift cards, either for themselves or to give to others over the holidays.

Travel spending, on the other hand, may see a slowdown over the holiday season as government and health agencies caution people to avoid gatherings. One in five holiday shoppers who typically travel through November and December said they plan to stay home this year. And more than half of them, 53%, said they’re more likely to use the money they would have spent on travel to pay for gifts, decorations, and other holiday purchases.

If you’re booking holiday travel, check your airline’s and hotel’s cancellation policies in case your plans are derailed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Online Shopping Expected to Increase

In terms of the biggest trends for holiday shopping this year, the focus is less on buying “hot” items and more on maintaining health and safety while shopping.

In a DealAid.org survey, 90% of consumers said they’ve spent more time shopping online since the COVID-19 pandemic first began. While 87% of consumers shopped in a store for the holidays last year, just 60% of consumers say they plan to do so this year.

That’s a decline of 27%, but DealAid.org also found that when asked directly 31% of those surveyed said they expected to avoid in-store shopping in 2020 as compared with 2019. On average, consumers plan to spend nearly $100 more shopping online in 2020. Overall, 97% of consumers surveyed by DealAid.org said they’d do at least some of their holiday shopping online.

Retail Dive reported that, according to Adobe Analytics, online sales reached $9 billion on Black Friday 2020, 21.6% ahead of 2019. Salesforce tracked them at 12.8 billion and 23% growth.

Curbside pickup and order online with in-store pickup are also things holiday shoppers are interested in this year. In the PwC survey, 55% of millennials said they’d use curbside pickup for their holiday purchases, while 52% said they plan to order items online and pick them up at the store. Not surprisingly, curbside pickup rose 52% over last year, Adobe Analytics reported, with retailers providing it harvesting a 31% rate of traffic conversions to their online sites. The salesforce conversion number reported was 19%. 

If you’re shopping online for the holidays, mark Dec. 14 on your calendar. It’s national Free Shipping Day at participating retailers. 

Small Business Saturday Could Be a Boon for Local Businesses

The most popular day to shop, according to a McKinsey & Company survey, is Black Friday, with Amazon Prime Day coming in a close second. Cyber Monday takes the third-place spot for the most popular holiday shopping day. However, there’s another annual holiday shopping event that could be particularly important this year. It’s called Small Business Saturday, and it occurs every year on the Saturday between Black Friday and Cyber Monday. American Express created Small Business Saturday in 2010 to cast a spotlight on small, locally owned businesses. This year it is scheduled for Nov. 28.

To date consumers have spent more than $120 billion on Small Business Saturday, with nearly $20 billion of that spent in 2019 alone.  Small Business Saturday takes on new importance for 2020 as many small business owners struggle with the economic impacts of COVID-19.

According to American Express, 62% of small businesses reported a need to see consumer spending return to pre–COVID-19 levels by the end of 2020 in order for them to be able to remain in business. According to the Associated Press, a survey conducted by Amex found that 88% of consumers say they’re committed to spending at small businesses this year to offset some of the financial effects of the pandemic.

Use the Shop Small map located on the American Express website to find small businesses that you can support on Small Business Saturday and all year long.

How to Prepare for This Year’s Holiday Shopping Season

If you plan to spend over the holidays, it’s important to consider how the COVID-19 pandemic might affect your shopping plans. First, check your budget to see how much money you can commit to holiday spending this year and how much you spent last year. If your income has been affected by the pandemic, you may not be able to spend as much as you did in previous years. Having in mind a firm number you can afford to spend can help you avoid accumulating debt to pay for the holidays. 

Next, consider your preferred method for shopping. With social distancing guidelines in place, it may be more practical to stick with online shopping for most or all of your holiday needs. If you’re shopping online, keep these tips in mind:

  • Compare prices at different websites before making a purchase
  • Look for free shipping promotions to save money
  • Check online deal sites for promo codes or discounts you could apply to purchases
  • Check the retailer’s return policy in case you need to send something back

If the item you want to purchase doesn’t offer free shipping, opt for curbside or in-store pickup if that's available. That can save you money on shipping fees and keep the amount of time you need to spend in stores over the holidays to a minimum. 

Also, consider the timing if you’re making holiday purchases online. Standard shipping times could be delayed due to the pandemic, so you may need to give yourself a longer window for ordering and receiving items. Alternately, you may need to leave extra room in your holiday budget to pay for rush shipping fees if necessary, so an item can be delivered on time. 

Be prepared for some items to be out of stock or unavailable altogether, as supply chain logistics issues could cause shortages. 

Finally, consider how you plan to make holiday purchases, especially if you’re shopping online. Paying with a credit card can offer more fraud protection if your card details are stolen by holiday scammers. Nevertheless, be sure that you have a plan for paying off your credit cards after the holidays to avoid getting stuck with high-interest debt. 

The Link Lonk


November 30, 2020 at 11:50PM
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2020 holiday shipping deadlines: USPS encourages customers to send cards, gifts early - WKYC.com

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USPS said its 644,000 employees are ready to handle significant volume increases this December.

DENVER — The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is encouraging customers to send their holiday gifts and cards early due to expected significant increases in volume.

USPS said more holiday gifts and greeting cards will be sent through the mail this year, as families and friends will hold virtual celebrations instead of opening gifts in person.

USPS said it is committed to making sure gifts and cards are delivered on time to celebrate the holidays in this extraordinary year.

According to USPS, the busiest time of the season peaks two weeks before Christmas, when much of the last-minute shopping starts. Customer traffic is expected to increase beginning Monday, Dec. 7, with the week of Dec. 14-21 predicted to be the busiest mailing, shipping and delivery week.

To prepare for the holiday season, USPS said planning begins in January. The service has the ability to flex its network to meet the significant volume increases including making sure the right equipment is available to sort, process and deliver the expected mail and package volumes.

Seasonal workers have been hired when and where needed, and technology has been expanded to enhance package tracking throughout the processing and transportation networks, said USPS.

Sunday delivery was expanded beginning Sunday, Nov. 29 to locations with high package volumes.

USPS reminds customers that they don't need to leave their homes to ship their packages. Customers can use USPS.com or use Click-N-Ship for free Priority Mail boxes, printing shipping labels, purchasing postage and even requesting free next-day Package Pickup.

2020 Holiday Shipping Deadlines

The Postal Service recommends the following mailing and shipping deadlines for expected delivery by Dec. 25 to Air/Army Post Office/Fleet Post Office/Diplomatic Post Office and domestic addresses*:

  • Dec. 9   — APO/FPO/DPO (ZIP Code 093 only) Priority Mail and First-Class Mail
  • Dec. 11 — APO/FPO/DPO (all other ZIP Codes) Priority Mail and First-Class Mail services
  • Dec. 15 — USPS Retail Ground service
  • Dec. 18 — APO/FPO/DPO (except ZIP Code 093) USPS Priority Mail Express service
  • Dec. 18 — First-Class Mail service (including greeting cards)
  • Dec. 18 — First-class packages (up to 15.99 ounces)
  • Dec. 19 — Priority Mail service
  • Dec. 23 — Priority Mail Express* service
  • Dec. 18 — Alaska to/from Continental U.S. First-Class Mail
  • Dec. 19 — Alaska to/from Continental U.S. Priority Mail
  • Dec. 21 — Alaska to/from Continental U.S. Priority Mail Express
  • Dec. 15 — Hawaii to/from mainland Priority Mail and First-Class Mail
  • Dec. 21 — Hawaii to/from mainland Priority Mail Express

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November 30, 2020 at 08:33PM
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Socially distanced holiday light shows come to Orange, Sullivan counties - Times Herald-Record

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Rachel Ettlinger   | Times Herald-Record

Santa landing on the race track. "Groovy" 1969 Woodstock-themed light displays. 

Holiday lights are aglow in Orange and Sullivan entertainment facilities as locals get into the spirit of the season amid a second wave of COVID-19. 

Bethel Woods Center for the Arts and the Orange County Fair Speedway have developed plans for their own socially distant, lit-up fun with each of their unique drive-through, festive light shows. Bethel Woods' "Peace, Love and Lights" in Sullivan County and OCFS's "Holiday Light Spectacular" will run through Jan. 3, 2021. 

"When you're in the show, you're there with other cars. Everyone's in their own car, but everyone's experiencing the same thing," said Ron Weber, who has helped set up OCFS's Holiday Light Spectacular. "It's kind of like you're together, even though you're apart."

Like in the fall when OCFS hosted its drive-through fair food festival, its winter wonderland festivities will start with food vendors, where people can pick up some empanadas, zeppoles, Mexican hot chocolate, cupcakes, or other treats to enjoy during the light show, Weber said.

This is the first time OCFS is offering an event like this, he added. Those that stop by can wind through the fair grounds, picking up some of their favorite treats to have during a 15-minute, 30-foot by 60-foot projection show in the arena.

BAR CLOSES: Maskless gathering at Sullivan bar produces 6 positive cases

HOLIDAYS: What to see, do, buy

BLACK FRIDAY: Fewer shoppers likely, 'stores lucky to have a Gray Friday,'

Bethel Woods with Pamal Broadcasting will have more than a mile of illuminated light displays, including a 120-foot “Twinkle Tunnel,” and themed areas like the “Enchanting Forest” that highlights the Catskill Mountains or a set-up of Santa’s Workshop.

There are optional additional weekly and daily events, like dinner with Santa, or weekly features like Walkthrough Wednesdays - where guests can donate a toy to the Sullivan County Federation for the Homeless or pay $5 admission to walk around the displays - or Family Fridays where there are additional activities at the "Holiday Hub." Bethel Woods will also offer discounted museum admission starting at 3 p.m. before the shows begin after dark.

Bethel Woods will have their holiday experience open daily through Jan. 3, 2021, from 5 to 10 p.m. Tickets starting at $20 can be purchased in advance, and more information on specific events and promotions for certain days can be found on their website

The OCFS display is open Thursday through Sunday each week from 5 to 10 p.m. through Dec. 13. Starting Dec. 17, the fair's light show and grounds will be open daily for the same five hours through the first Sunday of the new year. Tickets start at $25 online and go up to $30 at the gate. 

rettlinger@th-record.com

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December 01, 2020 at 12:13AM
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Socially distanced holiday light shows come to Orange, Sullivan counties - Times Herald-Record

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Melania Trump's White House holiday decor spotlights essential workers - CNN

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November 30, 2020 at 10:13PM
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Melania Trump's White House holiday decor spotlights essential workers - CNN

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'Hurricane Season for Mental Health'—Lawyers With Holiday Stress, Put These Coping Mechanisms in Your Arsenal Now | Texas Lawyer - Law.com

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The Practical Benefits of Resolving Coverage Disputes through Mediation

Sponsored By : NAM |

Webcast Date : Thursday, December 10, 2020 | “A coverage dispute” is a wide net that broadly captures an array of issues encountered in the context of first-party claims, third-party claims and inter-insurer disputes – each of which, in turn, has various subsets, depending on the parties, policies, facts and damages in question.

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Salesforce's Talks to Buy Slack May Herald More Work-From-Home Deals - The New York Times

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Credit...Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Salesforce has approached Slack about a deal, DealBook hears, confirming a report in The Wall Street Journal. A takeover could be announced as soon as this week. The potential deal is a bet on remote working, an area that bankers tell us will be a hot spot for consolidation in the months ahead, as highly valued software companies look to roll up the fragmented market for collaboration tools.

Work practices may never return to pre-pandemic norms. Or at least that’s the premise behind moves like the one Salesforce is making, with companies hoping to cash in on the shift by assembling a suite of services to make remote working easier. Slack had a market capitalization of about $17 billion before news of the potential deal broke, and it’s now worth around $23 billion. Until the recent pop, it had recorded relatively muted growth in its share price, perhaps because its videoconferencing tools have lagged rivals like Zoom and Microsoft.

Who’s next? Many software companies are riding high with surging stock prices, sitting on large cash piles and able to tap more capital easily if they need to. In addition to Salesforce, bankers say potential buyers include Adobe (which bought Workfront earlier this month), Twilio (purchaser of Segment and Sendgrid) and ServiceNow. Potential targets include Airtable, Asana, Box, DocuSign, Dropbox and Smartsheet. These deals won’t be cheap, but as the shares of buyers rise in tandem with targets, that may simply mean more stock-for-stock deals.

Microsoft is the elephant in the (virtual) room. The computing giant’s Office software is already installed on most workplace computers, which makes it easy to integrate its Slack-like collaboration tool, Teams. (Slack contends in an antitrust suit against Microsoft in Europe that its bundling of Teams with Office is anticompetitive.) Microsoft has been acquisitive throughout the pandemic, trying to scoop up TikTok and announcing a deal to buy the gaming company Zenimax Media. It may face more regulatory scrutiny than rivals, but it can certainly afford plenty more purchases. It’s sitting on roughly $136 billion in cash and it is one of the few companies with a AAA credit rating.

S&P Global agrees to buy IHS Markit. The transaction, worth about $44 billion, will combine two of the world’s biggest financial data providers. It’s the latest move to capitalize on the value of data, following the London Stock Exchange’s $27 billion offer for the analytics firm Refinitiv, Intercontinental Exchange’s $11 billion purchase of Ellie Mae and others.

New York City will reopen public elementary schools. The abrupt reversal came after Mayor Bill de Blasio was criticized for shutting the nation’s biggest school system, while letting businesses like indoor restaurant dining stay open. Middle and high schools will remain shut.

The E.U. plans to ask the U.S. to form an alliance to stand up to China. The bloc will call on America to set aside differences on trade and global taxes to create a unified approach on regulations and overhauling the World Health Organization, The Financial Times reports.

Nike and Coke lobby against a bill that would ban imports from the Xianjiang region of China. They are among several big companies pushing to weaken the legislation, which would prohibit goods made with forced labor by persecuted Muslim minorities in the region. Opponents of the bill say they oppose human rights violations but also fear disrupted supply chains.

The longtime business partner of Robert Smith resigns. Brian Sheth, the president and co-founder of Vista Equity Partners, announced his departure on Thanksgiving, a month after Mr. Smith agreed to pay $140 million to settle a federal investigation into a scheme to evade taxes.

President-elect Joe Biden is set to name more of his economic team this week, and his likely choices imply the continuation of two themes: a focus on progressive labor economics, and picks that may upset the left wing of his party.

Cecilia Rouse, the Princeton economist, is expected to run the Council of Economic Advisers, with Jared Bernstein and Heather Boushey also serving on the group. The labor-focused economists — along with Janet Yellen as Treasury secretary — suggest a “strong focus on worker empowerment as a tool for economic growth,” The Times’s Alan Rappeport writes.

Other picks may be more contentious. Mr. Biden has chosen Brian Deese, who helped lead the Obama administration’s auto bailout and advised on climate change, to lead the National Economic Council. He has also picked Adewale Adeyemo, who helped negotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership, as deputy Treasury secretary.

  • Both have spent time at the investment giant BlackRock, potentially making them problematic to progressives urging Mr. Biden to avoid picks from the corporate world. Such ties may make it “less likely that the federal government will rein in BlackRock as it should be,” Jeff Hauser of the Revolving Door Project told Politico.

And then there’s Neera Tanden. Ms. Tanden, the head of the Center for American Progress, the left-leaning think tank, is Mr. Biden’s pick to lead the White House Office of Management and Budget. Conservatives and progressives alike are wary of Ms. Tanden, who’s close to Hillary Clinton. A former aide to Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, suggested she may be a “sacrifice to the confirmation gods,” meaning she could be set up to take the heat while other nominees pass the Senate.


According to Adobe Analytics, American consumers spent $9 billion at online retailers on Friday. That was nearly 22 percent higher than Black Friday last year, boosted by shoppers staying away from malls and big-box stores for health reasons. Indeed, Facteus, a research firm that monitors card payments, recorded a huge gap between online and offline sales activity on Black Friday that was especially stark at department stores and electronics retailers. It’s no wonder that Amazon has been adding 1,400 new workers per day this year.


Today, the U.S. Supreme Court considers arguments on President Trump’s order to exclude undocumented immigrants from the census count used to allocate House seats. On Tuesday, the high court will hear a case in which former child slaves in Ivory Coast have sued Nestlé over alleged human rights violations at cocoa farms.

Fresh from their disagreement over the use of funds designated for pandemic stimulus programs, the Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, and the Fed chairman, Jay Powell, will testify before Congress about … pandemic stimulus programs. They appear in the Senate on Tuesday and the House on Wednesday.

Tech companies are on deck for earnings, with Zoom reporting today, Box and Salesforce on Tuesday, and Snowflake on Wednesday.

The U.S. employment report due Friday is expected to show that 500,000 jobs were added in November, less than the 638,000 gained in October, a potential sign that the resurgence in coronavirus cases is slowing the economic recovery.

Friday is also the latest deadline set by the U.S. government for TikTok to sell itself to Oracle and Walmart. The date has already been delayed twice.


Tony Hsieh, the 46-year-old entrepreneur and venture capitalist who turned the online shoe retailer Zappos into a billion-dollar business, died on Friday from injuries suffered in a house fire. He stepped down as chief executive of Zappos in August, after more than two decades leading the company with a mission to “create fun and a little weirdness.”

He was obsessed with company culture. Shortly after Amazon bought Zappos for $1.2 billion in 2009, Mr. Hsieh documented the challenges of the growing venture. He lamented that “at company happy hours, you don’t see as many employees from different departments hanging out with one another.” So Zappos began to track the “number and strength” of cross-departmental relationships, aiming to foster more friendships among co-workers. Attention to the little things that help relationships flourish was key to success in business, Mr. Hsieh believed.

He hoped to inspire a management revolution. In 2010, he wrote a best-selling book about the philosophy that drove Zappos, which he dubbed “Delivering Happiness.” He said that prioritizing employee and customer satisfaction was worth the cost. Later, Zappos adopted Holacracy, a radical approach to governance that abolished all titles and hierarchies, intended to free employees to improve processes and meet customers’ needs.

He bet on the physical world, too, trying to revitalize a dilapidated area of downtown Las Vegas. He hoped Zappos’ presence would transform the area and invested $350 million in local real estate and redevelopment. “A lot of companies talk about work-life balance,” he said. “We’re more about work-life integration.”

He realized that not everyone shared his intensity. Zappos became known for an intriguing deal for new hires: it offered some workers up to $1,000 if they wanted to leave. Mr. Hsieh figured that whoever took the offer wasn’t fully committed to the company mission.

His death is under investigation. Recordings of first responders in New London, Conn., where the blaze took place, referred to a man “trapped” or “barricaded” in a burning home, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Deals

  • Ant Group’s planned I.P.O., which was delayed by regulators, looks increasingly unlikely to be rescheduled for next year, according to Chinese officials. (Bloomberg)

  • Perella Weinberg Partners is near a deal to go public by merging with a blank-check company run by the banking entrepreneur Betsy Cohen. (FT)

  • Compass, the retail brokerage backed by SoftBank’s Vision Fund, has hired Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to advise on an I.P.O. that could take place next year. (Bloomberg)

Politics and policy

  • Staff members at the Environmental Protection Agency are rebelling against the Trump administration’s final deregulatory push. (NYT)

  • The White House reportedly plans to add the semiconductor maker SMIC and the oil and gas producer CNOOC to a blacklist of Chinese companies with alleged military ties. (Reuters)

  • A close look at Newsmax, the media outlet that pushes President Trump’s baseless claims of a stolen election — even though its founder doesn’t believe them. (NYT)

Tech

  • The price of Bitcoin slumped when the C.E.O. of Coinbase, Brian Armstrong, tweeted about rumors of rushed new regulations on cryptocurrencies. (CoinDesk)

  • Adding Tesla to the S&P 500 will be a major technical challenge. (WSJ)

  • The fight over luxury e-commerce is a familiar tale: Amazon versus everyone else. (NYT)

Best of the rest

  • What New York City restaurants really want for the holidays is … outdoor heaters. (NYT)

  • The N.F.L.’s travails show why pro sports needs bubbles to operate in a pandemic. (WaPo)

  • “The World’s Most Glamorous Quarantine Project” (NYT)

We’d like your feedback! Please email thoughts and suggestions to dealbook@nytimes.com.

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November 30, 2020 at 07:24PM
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Hybrid Work Is Here To Stay. Now What? - Harvard Business Review

dogol.indah.link CURT NICKISCH: Welcome to the HBR IdeaCast from Harvard Business Review. I’m Curt Nickisch. To say the last year has ch...

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