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Your EBITDA Isn’t What You Think It Is

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Men in the UK are nearly one-and-a-half times more likely to receive a bonus than women, and when they do, their payouts are significantly higher, according to new research from HR data specialists Brightmine.

And Sophisticated Buyers Already Know It Before You Sit Down

There is a conversation that happens thousands of times a year across Canada. It unfolds over golf rounds, dinner tables, and quiet advisory meetings between business owners and the people they trust most. It sounds something like this: “We’re doing about three million in EBITDA.” The number lands with authority. It carries the weight of years of work, sacrifice, and compounding effort. It feels like truth.

But somewhere beneath the confidence, a quieter voice exists. One that remembers the personal vehicle expenses run through the company. The above-market management fee paid to a holding entity. The one-time equipment write-off that, if you are being precise, was not exactly one-time. The family member on payroll whose role would not be backfilled by an arm’s-length hire at the same cost.

That quieter voice does not speak at dinner. But in a formal sale process, it eventually must.

The gap between the EBITDA a founder believes in and the EBITDA a buyer will actually underwrite is not simply a financial discrepancy. It is a credibility problem, a trust problem, and ultimately a multiple problem. Understanding how that gap forms, why it quietly widens over years of owner-operator decisions, and how to close it before a deal process begins is one of the most strategically valuable things a business owner can do in the years preceding an exit.

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The Number That Feels Real But Cannot Survive Diligence

Most private business owners arrive at their EBITDA figure through a combination of internal management accounts, year-end tax filings, and a set of verbal adjustments they carry in their heads like trusted companions. The legal dispute from three years ago. The daughter who was on salary during university and has since moved on. The company-paid memberships that are genuinely optional and personal in nature.

Each of these adjustments may be entirely legitimate in isolation. Normalized or adjusted EBITDA is an accepted and expected starting point in mid-market mergers and acquisitions. Buyers understand that owner-operated businesses run with a degree of personal overlap. The issue is not the existence of addbacks. The issue is how those addbacks are presented, supported, and stress-tested when a sophisticated buyer deploys a quality of earnings team against your financials.

A quality of earnings analysis, which has become near-universal in transactions above two million dollars in enterprise value, does not accept your verbal summary. It reconstructs earnings from source documents. It traces cash flows. It interrogates year-over-year patterns for inconsistencies. It distinguishes between genuinely non-recurring items and expenses that have been classified as one-time repeatedly across multiple years.

When addbacks are undocumented, inconsistently applied, or narratively weak, they begin to erode. Sometimes gradually. Sometimes in a single diligence meeting that reshapes the entire deal structure.

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Why Owners Overestimate Their Own Numbers

This is not a character failing. It is a natural consequence of how owner-operators experience their own businesses over time.

When you run a company for fifteen years, certain financial decisions become invisible to you. The SUV that is 80 percent personal becomes “the company truck.” The annual retreat to a resort that blends strategy with leisure becomes “an offsite.” The consulting fee paid to a spouse who contributes meaningfully but whose market-rate compensation would be a fraction of what is being paid becomes a normal line item in the overhead.

None of these decisions are inherently problematic. Many are prudent tax management strategies entirely appropriate in an owner-operated context. The problem surfaces when those same decisions are presented to a buyer without translation. Without the narrative infrastructure to explain them, contextualize them, and demonstrate that they will not recur under new ownership, they become liabilities rather than addbacks.

The psychological phenomenon at play here is what behavioral economists call the endowment effect. We assign higher value to things we own and have built than an objective outside observer would assign to them. This applies to businesses as directly as it applies to real estate or collectibles. A founder who has poured identity into a company will, almost always, unconsciously calibrate its value upward. The buyers across the table do not share that emotional history. They are underwriting future cash flows, not rewarding past effort.

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The Diligence Room and the Anatomy of a Collapsed Deal

Picture a deal that looked clean on paper. A manufacturing company generating what the owner reported as $2.8 million in normalized EBITDA. The initial letter of intent was signed at a seven-times multiple. Enterprise value of $19.6 million. Life-changing money.

Six weeks into diligence, the buyer’s quality of earnings team begins circling three categories of addbacks totaling $620,000. A related-party lease paid at a rate 40 percent above market comparables. A “one-time” consulting engagement that appeared in each of the prior four years under slightly different descriptions. And an owner salary addback that assumed a replacement CEO could be hired for $180,000 annually, when the actual market rate for the operational role being performed was closer to $280,000.

None of these were fabrications. They were real items, poorly documented, inconsistently framed, and not pre-emptively addressed before the buyer’s team arrived with questions. The adjusted EBITDA settled at $2.18 million after negotiation. At the same multiple, the enterprise value dropped to $15.3 million. Four million dollars in value, dissolved not because the business was worth less, but because the financial presentation could not defend what it was claiming.

This is the scenario that keeps owners awake. Not the negotiation itself. The feeling of having the numbers taken apart in a room where you cannot control the narrative.

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Inconsistent Reporting and What It Signals to a Buyer

Beyond specific addback disputes, there is a broader credibility signal that buyers read before a single addback is ever discussed. It is the internal consistency of your financials over time.

When revenue recognition policies shift between years without explanation, when gross margin percentages fluctuate in ways that do not align with cost input changes, when owner compensation appears in three different line items across three different years of financials, a pattern emerges. And that pattern communicates something specific to an experienced acquirer.

It communicates that the business has been managed for tax efficiency rather than for clarity. That the financials have been optimized for minimizing reportable income rather than for demonstrating value. This is an entirely rational strategy for an ongoing business owner with no near-term plans to sell. It becomes a significant obstacle when the goal changes.

The institutional buyers, private equity groups, and strategic acquirers who operate at this level of the market have developed finely tuned instincts for what they call “hair on the deal.” Inconsistent reporting, even when individually explainable, creates a cumulative impression of opacity. And opacity is expensive. It either reduces the price or adds conditions and escrow structures that erode net proceeds.

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The Addback Problem Is Not Financial, It Is Narrative

Here is a reframe that most business owners find genuinely clarifying: the addback problem is not primarily an accounting problem. It is a storytelling problem.

A well-presented addback schedule does not simply list expenses and declare them non-recurring. It builds a case. Each item is supported by documentation. Each item is explained in plain language that a non-specialist buyer can follow. Each item is anticipated before the buyer asks about it, which shifts the dynamic from reactive defense to proactive transparency.

Consider two ways of presenting the same addback. Version one appears as a line in a spreadsheet: “Owner personal expenses, $147,000.” Version two appears as a documented schedule with a brief explanatory note: “Owner-related expenses totaling $147,000, comprising $82,000 in vehicle costs related to two personal vehicles maintained on the company fleet, $41,000 in club memberships and personal travel, and $24,000 in discretionary charitable donations made in the owner’s name. These costs are fully discretionary and will not be replicated under new ownership. Supporting documentation available.”

Both versions are presenting the same financial reality. But only one of them invites trust. Only one of them signals to a buyer that the management team understands what they are looking at and has done the work of presenting it honestly.

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This is the essence of buyer-grade financial preparation. It is not about inflating numbers. It is about presenting accurate numbers in a way that earns credibility rather than erodes it.

What “Buyer-Grade” Actually Means in Practice

The phrase gets used frequently in deal preparation conversations, but its practical components are worth unpacking directly.

Buyer-grade financial presentation typically encompasses several interconnected elements. First, a normalized income statement that clearly separates reported financials from adjusted figures, with each adjustment individually identified and cross-referenced to supporting documentation. Second, a consistent three-to-five year historical view that allows a buyer to observe trends, identify any anomalies, and understand the trajectory of the business without needing to request additional data. Third, a working capital analysis that defines what a normalized level of working capital looks like for the business and defends that figure against buyer attempts to renegotiate the peg at closing. Fourth, a capital expenditure schedule that distinguishes between maintenance capex required to sustain current operations and growth capex that is discretionary.

Each of these components, when prepared in advance and organized into a cohesive information package, does something important. It shifts the center of gravity in a diligence process. Instead of the buyer’s team setting the agenda and the seller’s team responding reactively, the seller has framed the conversation. The buyer is working within a narrative structure that the seller has already established.

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Firms that work with business owners preparing to sell my business, particularly those with revenues between five and one hundred million dollars, frequently cite proactive financial preparation as the single most impactful thing a seller can do to protect their multiple in a competitive process. Not the quality of their legal counsel. Not the breadth of the buyer pool. The quality of the financial story they arrive with.

The Multiple Is Not Fixed, It Floats on Confidence

One of the most consequential misunderstandings in private business transactions is the belief that the purchase multiple is determined by the market and applied mechanically to a normalized EBITDA figure. In reality, the multiple is a negotiated outcome that floats on a combination of factors, and one of the most underestimated is the buyer’s confidence in the numbers themselves.

A buyer looking at two companies with identical normalized EBITDA figures will offer a meaningfully different multiple to the company whose financials they find credible versus the one whose financials require extensive interpretation. This is not arbitrary. It is a rational response to risk. When a buyer cannot fully trust the earnings figure, they protect themselves with a lower entry price, a more aggressive working capital peg, a longer escrow period, or an earn-out structure that defers a portion of the proceeds contingent on future performance.

Each of these mechanisms transfers risk from the buyer back to the seller. They are not punishments. They are rational structures in the presence of uncertainty. The most effective way to reduce their prevalence in a deal is to reduce the uncertainty that triggers them.

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The Pre-Sale Window That Most Owners Miss

The ideal window for beginning financial preparation in anticipation of a sale is two to three years before the intended exit date. This is not an arbitrary buffer. It reflects the practical reality that a buyer will request three to five years of historical financials, and the quality of those years is largely fixed by the time a deal process begins.

If a business owner begins cleaning up their financial presentation eighteen months before going to market, they can influence the most recent one or two years in the historical record. If they begin three years out, they can shape the majority of the period a buyer will scrutinize. If they wait until they are actively in a process, they are defending history rather than engineering credibility.

The preparation process itself involves several stages. An honest internal audit of current financial practices, identifying where owner-related expenses have been commingled with business operations. A reclassification of recurring expenses into the appropriate reporting categories. The establishment of consistent accounting policies that will hold across multiple reporting periods. The documentation of all anticipated addback items with supporting evidence organized and retrievable. And the development of a coherent management narrative that explains the business, its performance drivers, and the sustainability of its earnings in language a sophisticated buyer can evaluate.

Working with experienced business brokers in Canada who have a track record in mid-market sell-side preparation can accelerate this process significantly, particularly for business owners who have not been through a formal transaction before. The institutional knowledge of what buyers in specific industries and size ranges actually scrutinize is not something that can easily be replicated through general research.

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The Credibility Multiple and Why Buyers Pay It

There is an informal concept in M&A advisory circles sometimes referred to as the credibility premium. It describes the additional multiple that a well-prepared, financially transparent business tends to command in a competitive process compared to a comparable business with messier presentation.

The mechanics of this premium are intuitive when examined through the buyer’s psychology. A buyer who sits down with a business’s financial package and finds it organized, consistent, well-documented, and proactively explanatory experiences something important: reduced anxiety. Acquisitions are high-stakes decisions. The individuals and investment committees making them are acutely aware of downside risk. When a seller’s presentation reduces perceived risk, the buyer’s required return adjusts accordingly, which manifests as a willingness to pay a higher price.

Robbinex, a business brokerage firm serving Canadian mid-market business owners, has built a portion of its advisory process around exactly this dynamic, working with sellers to prepare financials that not only survive diligence but actively build buyer confidence throughout the process.

The inverse is equally true. When a buyer encounters financial statements that require interpretation, when addbacks feel more like guesses than documented facts, when the numbers tell a slightly different story each time they are approached from a different angle, anxiety rises. And anxious buyers do not pay premiums. They build in discounts, conditions, and protective mechanisms that erode the seller’s net outcome.

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What the Owner With $3M EBITDA Actually Needs to Hear

Return to the owner at the beginning of this piece. The one who tells friends his company does three million in EBITDA. He is not wrong, exactly. The business probably does generate something close to that figure in economic benefit to him as the owner. The problem is that three million in economic benefit to a current owner and three million in transferable, defensible, buyer-grade normalized EBITDA are meaningfully different concepts.

The transferable version asks a harder question: how much of this cash generation will survive the departure of the current owner, under new management, with no personal expenses, no related-party arrangements, and no discretionary owner decisions embedded in the cost structure?

When that question is answered rigorously and honestly, the number sometimes holds. The business genuinely generates three million in transferable value and the addbacks are clean and defensible. But more often, the rigorous answer produces a lower number, typically somewhere between fifteen and thirty percent lower than the informal version, and sometimes more.

The earlier that gap is identified, the more time exists to close it. Not through manipulation of the numbers, but through deliberate operational decisions, financial hygiene improvements, and documentation practices that make the true value of the business visible and legible to the people who will eventually be asked to pay for it.

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A business that generates two million in rigorously defensible EBITDA with clean books, documented addbacks, consistent reporting, and a coherent earnings narrative will often command a higher absolute purchase price than a business claiming three million in EBITDA that collapses under scrutiny. The multiple applied to a credible number, by a buyer who trusts what they are seeing, frequently exceeds the multiple applied to an inflated number that generates anxiety and adversarial negotiation.

The owners who understand this earliest are the ones who arrive at closing with the outcome they expected. The ones who discover it in the diligence room are the ones who spend the flight home recalculating what the deal actually delivered.

For anyone considering a transition in the next several years, the work of preparing financials to withstand scrutiny is not a transaction cost. It is a value creation strategy. One that pays its highest returns not when the documents are assembled, but when a buyer looks across the table, absorbs what they are seeing, and decides that this is a business worth paying a premium to own.

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Wall Street Traders Are Pouncing on the Tariff Refund Chaos

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Wall Street Traders Are Pouncing on the Tariff Refund Chaos

Wall Street smells an opportunity in the chaos over President Trump’s tariffs.

The Supreme Court’s tossing of Trump’s sweeping tariffs last week

kicked off a scramble among business leaders to sort out what might come next—including how they might claw back the levies they have been paying to import goods from around the world.

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

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How to Keep Your Email Marketing Up to Date in 2026

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How to Keep Your Email Marketing Up to Date in 2026

Digital marketing has changed a lot over the years. The days of non-targeted ads, desktop-first web design and mass communication blasts are all but behind us. With that in mind, many wonder whether it’s worth doing email marketing at all in 2026. While digital marketing and email techniques have evolved, there’s no need to think of emails as obsolete in this age’s cyber landscape. 

Modern emails need to be AI-optimised, personalised and technically sound, among other things. This article will offer guidance on proper digital agency techniques to benefit your email marketing metrics, keeping the marketing channel alive well into the back half of the 2020s. 

Personalisation is everything in email marketing

For those wondering how to create an effective email marketing campaign, personalisation is king. Personalisation has become more important in every facet of marketing and promotion. It’s no longer enough to use someone’s first name as a way of showing you “care”. Batch-and-blast email marketing will easily get you blacklisted as spam. 

  • Real-time behavioural actions should trigger flows and campaigns, rather than you simply sending out as many generalised newsletters as possible. Say a customer repeatedly views a page about a specific product. That should trigger an email with information about the product.
  • Software like HubSpot can swap out email sections based on past behaviours and purchases, ensuring people aren’t greeted by irrelevant listings. 

Generalisation kills engagement. Use data to drive your email offerings. 

Optimise your emails for AI 

People with email marketing jobs have already embraced generative AI in terms of creating outlines or even building emails from scratch. However, these days, much like your average Google search, many email providers will create AI summaries, meaning people might not even read the whole thing. 

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  • Provide a proper value proposition in plain HTML text, not in a graphic.
  • Use H1 and H2 tags to display a clear hierarchy throughout the content of the email.
  • Place the most important information in the first 50 words for the AI to understand.

Artificial intelligence is here to stay, so you need to know how to work with it, rather than trying to bypass it in email marketing. 

Make data collection more consensual

Privacy laws are tighter than ever, and for good reason. However, this does mean traditional data tracking can be a little more complicated, which is why you need to make the collection of the data more of a cooperative thing. 

  • Allow subscribers the chance to set their preferences during sign-up, ensuring you never overload them with quantity or unwanted information. 
  • Use interactive polls and questionnaires inside your emails to capture data willingly, which is also likely to increase the details offered.

This is a more compliant and effective way to collect data than ever before, which will allow for personalisation to be even more optimised. 

Technical must-haves for a good email marketing career in 2026

Starting with a weak technical foundation is cancerous to your email marketing campaigns. You won’t even reach the Promotions tab, being destined to exist solely in the realm of spam communications. 

  • DMARC, SPF and DKIM are all essential authentication steps to eliminate the possibility that you’re a ‘spoofer’.
  • Accessible layouts, colour schemes, easy-use buttons and Alt-Texts are all essential for maximising user friendliness.
  • Optimising your imagery and text for ‘Dark Mode’, which is very popular. 

A solid technical base is key for the rest of your efforts to be effective.

These guidelines aren’t just pieces of advice for your campaigns; they’re absolute essentials for anyone trying to capture the success of a dedicated email marketing agency. Email marketing can very easily become outdated without the right approach, but when you put modern techniques first, it can remain a valuable part of any 2026 plan,

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Crypto Fund Trader Review: Is It the Most Transparent Prop Firm in 2026?

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Crypto Fund Trader Review: Is It the Most Transparent Prop Firm in 2026?

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Greener Routes, Smarter Logistics: The Evolution of Sustainable Last Mile Delivery

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Greener Routes, Smarter Logistics: The Evolution of Sustainable Last Mile Delivery

Sustainability is no longer a side initiative in logistics. It is a defining factor in how companies design, manage, and optimize their last-mile delivery operations. As e-commerce continues to expand, the final leg of the delivery journey has become both the most visible and the most environmentally impactful stage of the supply chain.

For multifamily properties, student housing communities, and corporate campuses, this shift has created a new operational reality. Digital tools such as automated mailroom software are now central to supporting sustainable last-mile delivery strategies while maintaining efficiency and service standards.

Why the Last Mile Matters Most

The last mile is often the shortest segment of the delivery journey, but it accounts for a disproportionate share of emissions and costs. Multiple delivery attempts, inefficient routing, traffic congestion, and fragmented drop-off points increase fuel consumption and carbon output.

At the property level, unmanaged parcel flows add to the problem. Delivery drivers may spend excessive time locating package rooms, waiting for access, or making repeat visits when residents are unavailable.

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“Sustainability in last-mile logistics begins where the truck stops.”

Improving this final handoff point is one of the most practical ways to reduce environmental impact without compromising convenience.

The Rise of Centralized Parcel Management

As delivery volumes surge, properties are moving away from informal package handling processes. Instead, they are adopting structured parcel management systems that consolidate deliveries and reduce friction.

By leveraging centralized parcel management software platforms designed for high-volume environments, properties can support more efficient parcel management workflows while minimizing unnecessary driver dwell time.

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When delivery personnel can complete drop-offs quickly and accurately, routes become more efficient. Fewer delays at each stop translate into lower fuel consumption across entire delivery networks.

A comparison of traditional and sustainable approaches illustrates the shift.

Operational Element Traditional Last Mile Model Sustainable Optimized Model
Delivery Attempts Multiple attempts per package Consolidated, first-time acceptance
Package Intake Manual and time-consuming Barcode scanned and logged instantly
Driver Wait Time Extended due to access issues Streamlined access and drop-off process
Resident Notification Delayed or manual Automated real-time alerts
Environmental Impact Higher emissions per stop Reduced idle time and route inefficiencies

The difference lies not only in vehicles or fuel types, but also in operational coordination at the delivery destination.

Digital Mailrooms as Sustainability Enablers

Modern properties are increasingly implementing intelligent mailroom systems to manage growing parcel volumes. Through automated logging, resident notifications, and secure tracking, these systems eliminate many inefficiencies that historically plagued last-mile delivery.

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Communities adopting integrated mailroom software solutions for sustainable mailroom management are finding that digital infrastructure directly contributes to environmental goals.

Here is how:

  • Reduced repeat delivery attempts through secure package acceptance
  • Faster drop-offs that lower vehicle idle time
  • Organized storage that prevents lost or misplaced parcels
  • Data insights that support better staffing and scheduling

When drivers can complete deliveries in minutes rather than navigate confusion, emissions decline incrementally across thousands of stops.

“Sustainability is built on small operational improvements repeated at scale.”

Consolidation and Smart Locker Integration

Another key development in sustainable last-mile delivery is consolidation. Instead of individual doorstep drop-offs, many properties are encouraging centralized package rooms or locker systems.

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Consolidated delivery points create measurable environmental advantages:

  • Fewer stops within a property
  • Reduced internal vehicle circulation
  • Improved route density
  • Lower overall fuel consumption

Digital parcel management platforms help coordinate these consolidated deliveries by ensuring every item is logged, tracked, and communicated to residents without delay.

In student housing and multifamily communities, this approach also enhances security and resident satisfaction while aligning with broader sustainability initiatives.

Data Driven Environmental Accountability

Sustainable last-mile strategies increasingly rely on measurable performance indicators. Property managers and logistics partners alike are turning to analytics to assess environmental impact.

Mailroom management systems provide valuable operational data, including:

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  • Volume trends by day and season
  • Average pickup turnaround time
  • Peak delivery windows
  • Carrier performance metrics

When this data is shared with logistics providers, both parties can refine delivery schedules and reduce congestion during high-volume periods.

For example, staggering carrier arrival times or allocating dedicated delivery windows can reduce vehicle clustering and minimize idling-related emissions.

Data also supports corporate sustainability reporting. As organizations track Scope 3 supply chain emissions, efficient parcel intake processes contribute to measurable improvements.

Supporting Alternative Delivery Models

Sustainability in the last mile is not limited to electric vehicles or bike couriers. It also involves operational readiness to support evolving delivery models such as micro fulfillment centers, consolidated carrier partnerships, and scheduled bulk drop offs.

Properties equipped with scalable parcel management infrastructure are better positioned to adapt to these models. Without structured systems in place, carrier-level innovation can be undermined by inefficiencies at the destination.

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By integrating mailroom management software into broader property operations, managers create a stable foundation for greener logistics partnerships.

The Human Factor in Sustainable Logistics

Technology alone does not guarantee sustainability. Staff training, process consistency, and resident education all play important roles.

Clear pickup policies, timely notifications, and accessible package rooms reduce dwell time and unnecessary storage. Encouraging residents to retrieve packages promptly also improves turnover and storage efficiency.

When operational discipline aligns with digital tools, sustainability outcomes improve significantly.

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“Environmental progress in logistics is achieved through coordination, not complexity.”

Looking Ahead

As urban density increases and e-commerce continues its upward trajectory, sustainable last-mile delivery will remain a strategic priority. Carriers are investing in cleaner fleets and smarter routing algorithms, but meaningful progress also depends on the infrastructure at delivery endpoints.

Multifamily communities, student housing providers, and commercial properties play a critical role in this ecosystem. By modernizing parcel intake processes and adopting digital mailroom systems, they actively contribute to reduced emissions and more efficient delivery networks.

The evolution of sustainable last-mile delivery is not defined by a single breakthrough. It is shaped by coordinated improvements across vehicles, routes, and property operations.

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In this new landscape, the mailroom is no longer a passive recipient of packages. It is an active participant in building a more efficient and environmentally responsible logistics future.

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Why you should consider fixing your energy tariff now

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Why you should consider fixing your energy tariff now

Martin Lewis explains what the upcoming change to the energy price cap means for your bills.

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The Math Behind Trump’s Eye-Catching Economic Ideas

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The Math Behind Trump’s Eye-Catching Economic Ideas

In a record-length State of the Union address, President Trump threw out a string of eye-catching economic ideas. Among them: new retirement accounts for Americans without access to 401(k)s; replacing income taxes with tariff revenue; balancing the federal budget by eliminating fraud; and lowering the cost of housing for buyers while preserving high home values for happy homeowners.

His proposals and promises come as American voters are increasingly frustrated with the economy. About 56% of Americans disapprove of his handling of it, compared with about 40% who approve, according to an average of polls collected by the nonpartisan Cook Political Report.

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

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Why I'm Still Bullish On Novo Nordisk Despite Recent Setbacks

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Why I'm Still Bullish On Novo Nordisk Despite Recent Setbacks

Why I'm Still Bullish On Novo Nordisk Despite Recent Setbacks

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Baron International Growth Fund Q4 2025: Contributors, Detractors, And Trades

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Baron International Growth Fund Q4 2025: Contributors, Detractors, And Trades

Baron is an asset management firm focused on delivering growth equity investment solutions. Founded in 1982, Baron has become known for its long-term, fundamental, active approach to growth investing. Baron was founded as an equity research firm, and research has remained at the core of its business. Note: This account is not managed or monitored by Baron Capital, and any messages sent via Seeking Alpha will not receive a response. For inquiries or communication, please use Baron Capital’s official channels.

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Girls’ Generation’s Tiffany Young, Byun Yo Han Are Now Married

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Tiffany Young and Byun Yo Han
Tiffany Young and Byun Yo Han
Tiffany Young / Instagram

K-Pop star and Girls’ Generation member Tiffany Young and actor Byun Yo Han are officially married.

The couple has registered their marriage, which means that they are legally considered married despite not holding any wedding ceremony.

Tiffany Young and Byun Yo Han Are Married

According to The Korea Times, Byun’s agency TEAMHOPE confirmed the marriage in a statement to the couple’s fans.

“Actors Tiffany Young and Byun Yo Han completed their marriage registration today, based on deep trust in and love for one another,” TEAMHOPE said in the statement.

“We also feel cautious and concerned that the continuing news might cause some fatigue,” the company continued. “However, the two actors told us they wanted to share the news first with their fans, who have always watched over them with great love, and we are informing you of this out of respect for their wishes.”

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The couple met when they co-starred in the Disney+ drama “Uncle Samsik.” They confirmed their relationship last December.

Will They Hold a Wedding Ceremony?

While no wedding ceremony has held upon the registration of their marriage, the couple is planning to hold a small ceremony, according to Korea JoongAng Daily.

This, again, was confirmed by TEAMHOPE.

“They are carefully considering holding a small wedding with family members in order to pay their gratitude, in the form of a [church] service,” the company said.

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UK car production falls 13.6% in January as exports weaken, SMMT reports

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Britain’s car manufacturing output has slumped to its lowest point in more than seven decades after a devastating cyber attack brought Jaguar Land Rover’s (JLR) assembly lines to a standstill for more than a month.

Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) has reported a sharp contraction in UK vehicle output at the start of the year, with total production down 13.6 per cent in January as weaker export demand weighed heavily on the sector.

A combined 67,415 vehicles left British factories during the month, comprising 65,249 cars and 2,166 commercial vehicles. Car production declined by 8.2 per cent compared with January 2025, while commercial vehicle output slumped by 68.6 per cent year on year.

The fall was primarily driven by reduced overseas demand. Although domestic appetite for UK-built cars remained broadly stable, export volumes softened, particularly in markets outside Europe. Exports typically account for the majority of British vehicle production, leaving manufacturers exposed to fluctuations in global demand and trade conditions.

The United States remained the second-largest destination for UK-built cars after the European Union, accounting for 14.1 per cent of exports. Japan followed with a 2.7 per cent share, while China and Turkey took 2.5 per cent and 2.4 per cent respectively.

Electrified vehicle output also declined. Production of battery electric vehicles (BEVs), plug-in hybrids and hybrid models fell by 10.6 per cent to 26,854 units, representing 41.2 per cent of total car output. Despite the drop, electrified vehicles continue to form a substantial share of UK production as manufacturers transition towards zero-emission platforms.

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The industry body said the weak start to the year reflected subdued global demand and underlined the importance of stable trade relationships. Protectionist measures and “made in Europe” proposals in some markets were cited as additional headwinds.

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the SMMT, described January’s figures as disappointing but pointed to expected recovery later in the year as new electric models enter production.

“Weak exports to markets beyond Europe amid soft demand delivered a disappointing start to the year for UK vehicle manufacturing,” he said. “It reinforces the need for a forward-looking trade agenda that secures existing preferential access and builds new ones with markets worldwide.”

The SMMT expects overall car production to increase by more than 10 per cent to around 790,000 units in 2026, with the potential to reach one million vehicles by 2027, provided new model launches proceed on schedule and investment conditions remain supportive.

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The outlook hinges on competitive energy costs, a strong domestic market and targeted supply chain support, the trade body said, as the sector continues its capital-intensive shift towards electrification.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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