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Why You Must Vote Tomorrow

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Why You Must Vote Tomorrow

I am not, in the ordinary run of things, a man given to civic exhortation. Lecture another adult on what to do with their Thursday and you tend to end up wearing their coffee, quite rightly.

But indulge me, just this once, because tomorrow is local election day across great swathes of England, and somebody has to say something about the great British shrug that has come to define our relationship with the ballot box at the parish-and-pothole level.

In the last round of council elections, turnout in some wards crept south of thirty per cent. Thirty per cent. Sit with that for a moment. Seven in ten adults, in possession of a franchise their grandparents fought a war to defend, opted instead to put the kettle on, watch a man on YouTube fitting a gearbox, or sit there in a state of low-grade irritation about Westminster as though the council had nothing whatever to do with their lives.

As though the council did not run their bins, set their parking charges, decide whether the vape shop next door could open at seven in the morning, and quietly determine, through the dark art of the local plan, whether a four-storey block of flats will rise next year on the patch of brownfield where their children currently kick a football.

I run businesses for a living, and I can tell you, as readers of this magazine will already know in their bones, that the people who shape your operating costs are not, in the main, the slick young SpAds and ambitious junior ministers preening on the Today programme.

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They are councillors. People with names like Peter, Paul and Jane, even I used to be one for over a decade. People with dreadful lanyards and, mostly, excellent intentions. They set business rates relief schemes. They grant, or refuse, your A-board, your awning, your application for a pavement licence so the punters can drink rosé in the rain.

They decide whether your high street will boast a half-decent bus service or a bewildered taxi rank flanked by three Costas and a Greggs. They sign off road closures that can cost a small retailer a fortnight’s takings in a single botched resurfacing job. They run procurement budgets through which billions are quietly dispensed every year, and from which, incidentally, your own firm could perfectly well be eating, were you ever to bother with the tendering portal.

In short, if you run a business, the council is your landlord, your regulator, your customer and your traffic warden, all rolled into one slightly damp Edwardian building with a malfunctioning lift. Ignore it at your peril.

Now. I am not going to tell you who to vote for. I have my views, strong ones, in fact, ones I will not bore you with here because, frankly, they are not the point, and you have yours. That is the splendid, frustrating, occasionally infuriating glory of the thing. You may be a lifelong Conservative who has finally had enough. You may be Labour through and through, a Lib Dem with a clipboard, a Green who cycles, a Reform man who shouts, or one of those magnificent independents who slipped in last time on a single-issue ticket about the duck pond.

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I do not care. I genuinely, profoundly, do not care. What I care about is that you put on a coat tomorrow, walk to the church hall, the primary school or the slightly dispiriting community centre, take the stubby pencil they have thoughtfully provided, and put a cross in a box.

Because here is the awkward truth: democracy is a muscle. Use it badly, use it crossly, use it with a heavy sigh and a glass of red waiting at home, but use it. Leave it in the drawer for too long and it withers, and once it has withered the people who do turn up, and they always turn up, get to decide everything for the rest of us. That is not a left-wing observation or a right-wing one. It is simply how arithmetic works in a polling station.

I am told there is a fashionable line these days, much retweeted by sixth-formers and weary executives alike, that “voting changes nothing”. To which the only sensible reply is: marvellous, then you will not object to my vote counting double. Of course it changes things. Ask any small business owner who has watched a sympathetic council slash parking charges, or an unsympathetic one slap on a workplace levy. Ask the publican facing a three a.m. licence refusal. Ask the parent whose new primary school exists because three hundred neighbours bothered to turn out one wet Thursday in May.

So. Tomorrow. Coat on, pencil up, cross in. I am not telling you who to vote for. I am telling you to vote. There is, I promise, a meaningful difference.

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Richard Alvin

Richard Alvin

Richard Alvin is a serial entrepreneur, a former advisor to the UK Government about small business and an Honorary Teaching Fellow on Business at Lancaster University.

A winner of the London Chamber of Commerce Business Person of the year and Freeman of the City of London for his services to business and charity. Richard is also Group MD of Capital Business Media and SME business research company Trends Research, regarded as one of the UK’s leading experts in the SME sector and an active angel investor and advisor to new start companies.

Richard is also the host of Save Our Business the U.S. based business advice television show.

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U.S. Economy: The Housing Market Worsens

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U.S. Economy: The Housing Market Worsens

This article was written by

Bret Jensen has over 13 years as a market analyst, helping investors find big winners in the biotech sector. Bret specializes in high beta sectors with potentially large investor returns.Bret leads the investing group The Biotech Forum, in which he and his team offer a model portfolio with their favorite 12-20 high upside biotech stocks, live chat to discuss trade ideas, and weekly research and option trades. The group also provides market commentary and a portfolio update every weekend. Learn More.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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On May Day, founders are workers too

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On May Day, founders are workers too

Tomorrow is May Day, and somewhere in the middle of the country, a married couple in their early forties is opening up a small bakery for the third Friday in succession on which they have not, between them, drawn a salary.

They started the business in 2022. They re-mortgaged the house. They missed two of their daughter’s school plays last term, including the one where she had a line. They have not, for nineteen months, taken a day off. They are, on the official ONS labour-market classification, “self-employed”, which is to say they are not, technically, considered workers at all.

I would like, on this particular May Day, to suggest that they are.

There is a particular sleight-of-hand in British political language that has, over the last fifty years or so, produced an increasingly narrow definition of the word “worker”. A worker, in current usage, is someone who is paid by an employer in return for doing a job, ideally with a contract, a payslip, and a pension contribution. The “workers’ movement”, in modern parlance, is the political and industrial movement representing exactly that figure. Anyone outside the definition is, by implication, something else, an entrepreneur, an investor, a self-employed person, a small-business owner, a family-firm founder. They get other ministries, other sympathies, other adjectives. They do not, on the whole, get celebrated on May Day.

This is, frankly, ridiculous. The bakery couple work, on the broad numbers, more hours than any of their employees. They take home, on average, less per hour than their employees. They have less holiday, less protection, less pension, less sick pay, less of everything. Their economic risk is total. Their political clout is somewhere between negligible and non-existent. Their public image, in much of British political discourse, is closer to that of the tax-avoiding non-dom than that of the sympathetic NHS porter, which is, when you actually meet either, a perfect inversion of reality.

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There are, by the latest ONS estimate, just over 4.3 million self-employed workers in the UK. Of those, around 600,000 run businesses with employees of their own. They collectively contribute approximately £303 billion to UK GDP, which is more than the entire UK financial-services sector. They pay corporation tax, dividend tax, capital gains tax, employer NICs, business rates, VAT, and insurance premium tax. They keep more than three million Britons in PAYE jobs. They are, in any meaningful definition, the productive backbone of the country.

And, for at least the last decade, they have been treated by every successive UK administration with a mixture of mild benign neglect and occasional, almost incidental, cruelty. IR35 was a cruelty. Making Tax Digital is a cruelty. The narrowing of business property relief on inheritance tax has been a cruelty. The withdrawal of various small expenses and reliefs has been a cruelty. None of these things has been done because anyone in Whitehall actively dislikes the small-business owner; it is rather that, in the present political configuration, the small-business owner is too small to matter, too dispersed to organise, and too busy to march. The civil servants drafting the SI get the headline figures right, and the headline figures, individually, are small.

May Day, in its original conception, was a workers’ holiday, but, as anyone with any knowledge of the period will tell you, the “workers” it commemorated were not, exclusively, the wage-labour pay-packet figure of present-day usage. They were the broader productive class: artisans, shopkeepers, mechanics, makers, the journeymen in the literal sense who worked with their own tools to produce something useful. A baker in Walsall, in 2026, getting up at 4am to mix the dough, fits that older definition perfectly. The fact that she has, technically, incorporated herself as a private limited company should not, surely, exclude her from the holiday.

I do not, please understand, wish to undermine the more familiar version of May Day. The march, the bunting, the speeches, the flag, they are part of a recognisable British political tradition that I rather enjoy. I just would like, this year, to make a small modest plea for the inclusion in it of the people whose labour is no less skilled, no less hard-won, no less honest, and considerably less protected, than the labour the day was originally meant to celebrate.

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So if you are in the bakery this morning, or the small workshop, or the family-run pub, or the consultancy that lives at the kitchen table, or the farm that has been in your name for thirty years, happy May Day. The country is, despite the available evidence, better off because of you. Take five minutes off, if you can. Drink a coffee. Watch the bunting. And, before you go back to it, remember that whatever the textbook says, and whatever the marching song goes, the work you do is, exactly, work.


Richard Alvin

Richard Alvin

Richard Alvin is a serial entrepreneur, a former advisor to the UK Government about small business and an Honorary Teaching Fellow on Business at Lancaster University.

A winner of the London Chamber of Commerce Business Person of the year and Freeman of the City of London for his services to business and charity. Richard is also Group MD of Capital Business Media and SME business research company Trends Research, regarded as one of the UK’s leading experts in the SME sector and an active angel investor and advisor to new start companies.

Richard is also the host of Save Our Business the U.S. based business advice television show.

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Texas Pacific Land faces earnings test after shareholder shakeup

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Texas Pacific Land faces earnings test after shareholder shakeup

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Energy Collective Co Bridges the Gap Between People Insights and Business Outcomes

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Energy Collective Co

Energy Collective Co observes that businesses often recognise that people-related challenges can have significant implications for cost and performance, yet the route to resolving them is not always clearly defined. “We’ve seen organisations encounter HR solutions that appear broad in scope or disconnected from tangible outcomes,” says founder Jade Donegan. “This can create a gap between identifying an issue and implementing an effective response.” She established Energy Collective Co to help bridge this space, encouraging a closer examination of how performance is influenced across both people and systems.

The company focuses on helping improve workforce productivity by examining the psychosocial factors that influence how work is designed and experienced. Drawing on her background in culture and transformation, Jade positions the business alongside organisational decision-making, where people, systems and commercial priorities meet. “I work with leaders to understand what’s driving performance,” she explains. “I believe the path forward becomes clearer when you can distinguish between system factors and individual factors.” This viewpoint sets the foundation for how the organisation engages with its clients and informs the structure of its services.

Jade Donegan
Jade Donegan

This perspective, Jade notes, also connects to a common assumption within organisations: that increased HR investment will lead to improved outcomes. She says, “Additional spend can sometimes focus on visible symptoms instead of underlying causes, which can limit the overall impact.” Energy Collective Co introduces the idea that many organisational challenges are not immediately visible, even though their effects can be observed through productivity or engagement. By identifying and addressing one or two high-impact factors, organisations may begin to unlock meaningful improvements in performance.

Broader research provides useful context for this way of thinking. A report shows that 82% of organisations experience some level of misalignment between HR and overall business strategy, with only 18% reporting strong alignment across key areas such as strategy execution and leadership collaboration. “This indicates that even well-intentioned initiatives can fall short when they aren’t directly connected to commercial priorities,” Jade remarks. In this context, Energy Collective Co places emphasis on linking people-related insights to measurable business outcomes, helping ensure that interventions are informed by both organisational needs and strategic direction.

Jade shares an example that illustrates how this philosophy translates into action. “In one case, a company considered investing approximately $15,000 in personality profiling to improve collaboration within its procurement team,” she shares. “Through diagnostic analysis, I identified that the challenge was process inefficiency rather than interpersonal dynamics.” By refining the workflow instead of introducing a new tool, Jade notes that the organisation was able to address the issue more directly.

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“It’s about asking whether we are solving the right problem,” she says. “Sometimes the answer sits in how the work is designed, not in who is doing it.” This example highlights the importance of examining assumptions before committing resources.

To support this level of insight, Energy Collective Co has developed a structured diagnostic process that moves beyond standard engagement surveys. The organisation uses a culture, performance and productivity survey with adaptive questioning, allowing responses to guide deeper exploration into specific areas.

This is complemented by a psychosocial diagnostic framework that examines several factors, including leadership capability, work design and organisational systems. Through this process, Jade notes that organisations may gain a clearer understanding of whether challenges originate from structural elements or individual behaviours, which in turn informs the next steps.

This distinction becomes increasingly relevant when considering wider workforce trends. Insights from an HR monitor survey indicate that 32% of employees do not yet have all the skills required for their current roles. “This tells us that performance challenges may relate to capability development, role design or system effectiveness, rather than individual effort alone,” Jade says. By incorporating these factors into its analysis, Energy Collective Co connects workforce capability with broader organisational performance, helping ensure that recommendations reflect both immediate and longer-term considerations.

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Once key drivers have been identified, the organisation focuses on delivering targeted and scalable solutions. These may include consulting engagements, tailored training programmes or self-service tools that enable leaders to address challenges directly within their teams. Ongoing pulse checks form part of this process, providing a way to monitor progress and maintain alignment over time. “Sustainable change happens when the business takes ownership of the solution,” Jade states. “Our role is to provide tools that make that possible.” This emphasis on ownership supports continuity beyond the initial intervention.

The delivery model is designed to remain accessible, with streamlined engagement processes and a focus on timely implementation. This can allow organisations to act on insights without unnecessary delay, supporting momentum as changes are introduced. At the same time, it can provide leaders with a structured way to consider the implications of inaction, including replacement costs, legal exposure and complexities linked to workforce management.

Alongside organisational systems, Energy Collective Co also considers individual energy as a contributing factor to performance. Its frameworks explore how mental, emotional and physical energy influence decision-making, collaboration and resilience. By connecting these elements with organisational dynamics, the model presents a more integrated understanding of how performance develops across different levels of the business.

Ultimately, as organisations continue to navigate evolving workforce expectations, Energy Collective Co encourages leaders to reflect on the nature of the challenges they encounter. Questions such as whether an issue stems from people or processes, and how that distinction can be identified, offer a starting point for more informed decision-making. Jade states, “Leaders need to ask more precise questions to create the conditions for more effective decisions.”

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Diageo springs a surprise, sales climb on Africa, Latin America

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Diageo springs a surprise, sales climb on Africa, Latin America
Diageo‘s sales unexpectedly rose in the latest quarter as growth in Africa and Latin America was enough to offset significant weakness in the US.

The maker of Johnnie Walker whisky and Guinness stout said Wednesday that organic net sales rose 0.3% in period, beating 2.3% slump expected by analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Diageo kept its guidance for this fiscal year unchanged, with organic net sales expected to decline between 2% and 3%.
Like rival drinks makers, Diageo is grappling with persistent weak demand for beer and spirits in critical markets, including the US. Consumers are moderating their alcohol intake to improve their health and in response to higher living costs from US President Donald Trump‘s trade tariffs and conflict in the Middle East.

The distiller is also trying to overcome self-inflicted errors such as poor service levels to some customers since Covid and an intense focus on premium drinks that has left the company underrepresented in growing parts of the market, like “ready-to-drink” canned cocktails.

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IonQ earnings on deck: Can contract wins fuel revenue growth?

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IonQ earnings on deck: Can contract wins fuel revenue growth?

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Western Asset GSM 7-Year Portfolios Q1 2026 Commentary

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U.S. Money Markets: Slow Calm To Steady State

Franklin Resources, Inc. [NYSE:BEN] is a global investment management organization with subsidiaries operating as Franklin Templeton and serving clients in over 150 countries. Franklin Templeton’s mission is to help clients achieve better outcomes through investment management expertise, wealth management and technology solutions. Through its specialist investment managers, the company offers specialization on a global scale, bringing extensive capabilities in fixed income, equity, alternatives and multi-asset solutions. With more than 1,300 investment professionals, and offices in major financial markets around the world, the California-based company has over 75 years of investment experience and over $1.4 trillion in assets under management as of June 30, 2023. For more information, please visit franklintempleton.com and follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook.

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Backblaze: AI Infrastructure Opportunity Is Becoming Clearer (Upgrade)

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Backblaze: AI Infrastructure Opportunity Is Becoming Clearer (Upgrade)

Backblaze: AI Infrastructure Opportunity Is Becoming Clearer (Upgrade)

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EQT Raises Takeover Bid For Intertek Again

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EQT Raises Takeover Bid For Intertek Again

Swedish buyout group EQT said Tuesday that it submitted an improved takeover proposal for Intertek, valuing the provider of testing, inspection and certification services at 8.93 billion pounds ($12.08 billion).

In the new offer, the private-equity company values Intertek at 58 pounds a share in cash, or a 54% premium to its closing price on April 9, the day before the initial proposal was submitted. The proposal values the company as a whole at 8.93 billion pounds, based on share-count data provided by LSEG.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Meesho Q4 Results: Co narrows loss by 88% YoY to Rs 166 crore, revenue jumps 47%

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Meesho Q4 Results: Co narrows loss by 88% YoY to Rs 166 crore, revenue jumps 47%
E-commerce company Meesho narrowed its consolidated losses to Rs 166 crore in the March-ended quarter versus Rs 1,391 crore in the year-ago period, implying an 88% drop. The loss is attributable to the owners of the parent.

The company’s revenue from operations, meanwhile, rose 47% to Rs 3,531 crore versus Rs 2,400 crore posted in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year.

The losses were lower on a sequential basis as well, falling from Rs 491 crore in Q3FY26, while the topline was flat quarter-on-quarter versus Rs 3,518 crore in the January-March quarter of FY26.

Meesho, which claims to be India’s largest e-commerce platform by Annual Transacting Users (ATUs) and orders placed, reported a net merchandise value (NMV) of Rs 11,371 crore in Q4FY26, up 43% YoY, with 717 million orders (+43% YoY), driven by continued new user onboarding and deeper engagement from existing cohorts.

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For the full year FY26, Meesho continued to expand India’s e-commerce market, emerging as the most downloaded shopping app in India and the largest platform by Annual Transacting Users (ATUs) and placing orders. Its ATUs grew 33% YoY to 264 million, while orders increased 45% YoY to 2.67 billion.


NMV for the year stood at Rs 41,560 crores, up 39% YoY, with frequency improving to 10.1 transactions per user annually.

Management commentary

Founder & CEO Vidit Aatrey said FY2026 deepened the company’s conviction that the Indian e-commerce market has far more depth than most people assume. “In emerging markets like China, Southeast Asia, and Latin America, more than 80% of smartphone users shop online. In India, that number is around 30%, not because Indians don’t want to shop online, but because nobody has built an e-commerce that actually works for them. Every time we removed one of those barriers, the market got larger. That pattern has held for a decade,” he said.Also read: KPIT Technologies Q4 Results: Cons profit falls 33% YoY to Rs 163 crore despite 12% revenue uptick

Underscoring the importance of AI, he highlighted that more than 75% of orders on Meesho come from personalised feeds that infer what a user is looking for before they even type a query. “Vaani, our voice shopping agent, lets a user describe what they want in their own language and complete a purchase through conversation. GeoIndia decodes the landmark-based, vernacular addresses that conventional systems cannot parse. The result is that first-time buyers who had never placed an order online are now completing purchases on Meesho,” Aatrey said.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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