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Retailers warn Reeves is creating a ‘jobless generation’ as hiring costs spiral
Business

Retailers warn Reeves is creating a ‘jobless generation’ as hiring costs spiral

by May 7, 2026

Britain’s high street is sounding the alarm. The country, retailers warn, is drifting towards a generation locked out of work, with the Chancellor’s tax and wage decisions accused of choking off the very entry-level jobs that young people rely on to begin their careers.

In a sharply worded intervention, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) has urged Rachel Reeves to halt what it describes as a relentless climb in the cost of employing people. The trade body estimates that the combined effect of higher employer National Insurance contributions and a steeper minimum wage added roughly £6.5bn to retailers’ wage bills in the last financial year alone, a sum that, on the BRC’s reading, is now translating directly into hiring freezes, reduced rotas and shrinking opportunities at the bottom of the ladder.

Helen Dickinson, the BRC’s chief executive, did not mince her words, accusing ministers of allowing an upward spiral in employment costs and red tape that is pushing young workers out of the labour market. Opportunities, she said, are vanishing in real time as businesses absorb a level of cost inflation many smaller operators simply cannot pass on to shoppers.

The political backdrop is unforgiving. Polling for the BRC by Opinium suggests that 49 per cent of the public believes Labour must do more to help unemployed young people, a finding that lands awkwardly for a government already battling questions over its handling of the wider economy. In March, ministers extended a scheme offering taxpayer-funded subsidies to firms hiring under-25s who have been claiming benefits for more than six months. Retailers, however, regard the measure as well-intentioned but undersized given the scale of the problem now bearing down on the sector.

The numbers tell their own story. Office for National Statistics data shows that more than nine million people aged 16 to 64 were economically inactive between December and February, neither in work nor looking for it, an inactivity rate of 21 per cent. Vacancies have fallen by 18 per cent since Labour took office in July 2024, the equivalent of around 156,000 jobs disappearing from the economy. The pain has been concentrated in precisely those industries, retail, hospitality and leisure, that have traditionally given school leavers and students their first taste of the world of work.

For Britain’s under-25s, the squeeze is acute. The unemployment rate for 16 to 24-year-olds reached 15.8 per cent in the three months to February, more than three times the overall jobless rate of 4.9 per cent. Behind that figure sits a generation of would-be Saturday-job applicants, gap-year workers and graduate hopefuls finding doors quietly closed before they have had a chance to knock.

Adding to the anxiety is the rapid arrival of artificial intelligence on the office floor. A survey by the Institute for Student Employers found that nearly nine in ten employers expect AI to reshape entry-level hiring, with almost a third anticipating significant changes to the way they recruit junior staff. Tourism and the legal profession are among the sectors expected to feel the impact first, raising the prospect of a double squeeze: rising employment costs at one end, technology displacing graduate roles at the other.

The Government has pushed back. Peter Kyle, the Business Secretary, argues that the Budget steadied the economy and pointed to 332,000 more people in work than a year ago. Ministers maintain that lifting the minimum wage was the right call for households still wrestling with the cost of living. For SME owners watching their wage bills climb and their till receipts soften, it is a defence that increasingly fails to land.

The deeper risk, as Dickinson’s warning makes clear, is structural. Once a cohort of young people misses that critical first rung, the part-time shop floor shift, the warehouse weekend, the graduate scheme, the economic and social cost of bringing them back can stretch over decades. For Britain’s SMEs, the question now is not whether the Chancellor will hear the message, but whether she will act before the damage hardens into something much harder to undo.

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Retailers warn Reeves is creating a ‘jobless generation’ as hiring costs spiral

May 7, 2026
Fertiliser shortages set to send global food prices soaring, warns Grosvenor chief
Business

Fertiliser shortages set to send global food prices soaring, warns Grosvenor chief

by May 7, 2026

British farmers are already nursing input cost rises of up to 70 per cent, and the worst of the squeeze on the world’s food bill is still to come.

That is the blunt assessment from the boss of the Grosvenor Group, the 349-year-old property and farming empire controlled by the Duke of Westminster, who has warned that fertiliser shortages caused by the war in Iran will have a “dramatic” effect on global food prices next year.

Mark Preston, executive trustee of Grosvenor, told Business Matters that fertiliser prices were “already quite expensive” before the conflict, but had since climbed by between 50 and 70 per cent since hostilities began in late February. The trigger, he said, was the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow shipping artery through which a substantial share of the world’s fertiliser and the liquefied natural gas needed to make it must pass. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps indicated on Wednesday that the strait could shortly reopen, but with roughly 1,600 vessels still stranded, the damage to supply chains is already done.

For UK arable farmers, the immediate growing season has largely been insulated. Most fertiliser earmarked for this year’s crops was bought and applied before prices ran away. The problem, Preston explained, is the planting cycle that follows. “Farmers are not buying that fertiliser, they’re sitting on their hands and hoping things will improve, which they probably won’t,” he said. The likely response, he added, will be a swing from winter cropping towards spring cropping, giving growers a little more breathing room, but at the cost of yield, planning certainty and, ultimately, the price on the supermarket shelf.

Grosvenor itself is unusually well placed to weather the storm. The group’s flagship Eaton estate in Cheshire, the Duke’s traditional family seat since the 1400s, runs a large dairy and arable operation that supplies millions of litres of milk to customers including Tesco and Müller, and leans heavily on cow dung rather than bagged nitrogen. Its other rural holdings span Lancashire and Scotland, complementing the Mayfair and Belgravia estates that anchor the group’s central London portfolio.

The wider picture is considerably more alarming. “It’s going to be a very, very dramatic problem for the world, not just the UK in terms of food, just because so much fertiliser comes through those straits,” Preston said. He argued the food security risk now eclipses the energy story that has dominated headlines: “The concern is at least as much, if not more, around food and fertiliser than it is around oil, because there are alternative sources of oil. There aren’t very many alternative sources of nitrogen, for the production of fertiliser.”

His warning echoes that of Yara International, the world’s largest fertiliser producer, whose chief executive cautioned last week that the conflict could push some of Africa’s poorest communities into outright food shortages. Domestic sentiment is already turning: research by Opinium this week found that 80 per cent of Britons are anxious about grocery prices, with retailers continuing to pass cost rises through to the till.

Grosvenor’s wider results illustrate just how mixed the trading climate has become for diversified British groups. Underlying profits fell 18 per cent to £70.5m last year, dragged down by its North American operations, although the UK property arm proved a notable bright spot, running at 97 per cent occupancy. The group’s largest scheme to date, the redevelopment of South Molton Street near Oxford Street — taking in offices, shops, a hotel and 33 homes, is on course for completion next year. In the North West, work has begun on the first phase of an ambition to deliver 700 social homes; 69 have been built near Chester and Ellesmere Port, with a further 120 due this year.

Hugh Grosvenor, the 35-year-old duke and one of Britain’s wealthiest individuals with an estimated fortune of £9.56bn, received dividends paid to family trusts that crept up from £52.4m in 2024 to £53.7m. The group’s total tax bill more than doubled to £248m, of which £200m was paid in the UK, reflecting buoyant property disposals that lifted personal taxes on income and gains by £61m and corporate income tax by £71.9m.

The company has also been doubling down on flexible workspace, a segment it believes is becoming structurally embedded rather than a post-pandemic fad. James Raynor, chief executive of Grosvenor’s property arm, said roughly 23 per cent of the group’s London offices were now flex space, with occupancy “well over 90 per cent”. Last week, the company broke ground on its first directly managed flexible workspace outside the capital, in Manchester’s Northern Quarter, a vote of confidence in the regional office market and in the appetite of SMEs for short-form, fully serviced space.

For owners of small and medium-sized businesses, particularly those in food manufacturing, hospitality and agriculture, Preston’s warning lands as a clear signal to lock in supplier contracts, hedge where possible and review pricing strategy ahead of what looks set to be a difficult 2027.

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Fertiliser shortages set to send global food prices soaring, warns Grosvenor chief

May 7, 2026
TGJones owner Modella Capital to shut up to 150 former WHSmith high street shops
Business

TGJones owner Modella Capital to shut up to 150 former WHSmith high street shops

by May 7, 2026

Modella Capital, the private equity owner of the rebranded WHSmith high street chain TGJones, is to shutter up to 150 of its 480 shops in a sweeping restructuring exercise that places hundreds of retail jobs in jeopardy.

The closures, confirmed to the BBC, mark the latest blow to a high street already battered by stubbornly weak footfall, mounting cost pressures and a string of high-profile collapses. They come barely a year after Modella swept up WHSmith’s loss-making bricks-and-mortar arm in a £40m deal struck in March 2025, with the WHSmith name itself excluded from the transaction and retained by the listed group, which has pivoted to its more lucrative travel concessions in airports and railway stations.

A Modella spokesperson said the decision had “not been taken lightly”, citing what it described as exceptionally tough trading. “While we continue to believe in the strength of the core business, TGJones has experienced highly challenging trading conditions over the past year, along with many other brick-and-mortar retailers,” they said.

The firm laid the blame squarely at the door of three culprits: the “forced” rebrand from the trusted, 233-year-old WHSmith fascia, which it said had dented brand recognition almost overnight; rising operating costs “as a direct result of government policy”, a thinly veiled reference to the increase in employer National Insurance contributions and the higher national living wage that have hammered labour-intensive retailers; and unspecified “geopolitical events”.

The restructuring plan, the spokesperson added, is “designed to protect the substantial core of the store estate and create a stronger, more sustainable business that can continue to serve customers for years to come”.

Modella has not yet specified how the cuts will be apportioned across its workforce, but conceded the plan “may result in the closure of some stores and the loss of some roles”. The owner said it would attempt to preserve “as many jobs as possible” and acknowledged the toll on staff, adding: “We recognise the impact this uncertainty will have on colleagues, their families and the communities we serve.”

The TGJones retrenchment lands less than a month after Modella’s stewardship of another high street stalwart ended in collapse. Claire’s, the teenage jewellery and accessories chain, ceased trading in the UK and Ireland in April, closing all 154 standalone stores and making 1,300 staff redundant. Modella had bought the British arm of the chain out of administration only last September, before placing it back into insolvency proceedings after what it called an “alarmingly” weak Christmas. The firm also owns Hobbycraft, the arts-and-crafts retailer, raising fresh questions in the City over the durability of its high street portfolio.

For the SME owners and independent traders that share Britain’s high streets with TGJones, the planned closures are a sobering reminder that scale offers no immunity. The combination of post-Budget cost increases, persistent shifts to online spending and the loss of anchor retailers continues to thin out town centres at pace, with knock-on consequences for footfall and the smaller businesses that depend on it.

Whether Modella’s pared-back TGJones estate can find a sustainable footing without the WHSmith name above the door, and without the cross-subsidy once provided by stationery, books and Post Office concessions, will be the defining test of its turnaround thesis.

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TGJones owner Modella Capital to shut up to 150 former WHSmith high street shops

May 7, 2026
The retired executives swapping the golf course for the boardroom – and charging next to nothing
Business

The retired executives swapping the golf course for the boardroom – and charging next to nothing

by May 7, 2026

Retirement is meant to be the reward for a lifetime of corporate slog: long lunches, a forgiving handicap and the freedom to ignore a Monday morning inbox. For a small but growing band of senior British executives, however, the gilded sunset has proved rather less golden than the brochure suggested.

Bored, restless and quietly itching for a problem to solve, they have done what their younger colleagues might find unthinkable. They have gone back to work, and, more often than not, they are doing it for free.

The Sapient Foundation, set up last year, is the brainchild of Brendan Logan, a 72-year-old serial entrepreneur with three decades in telecommunications and four start-ups to his name. The trigger was a conversation with his old friend Larry Quinn, 69, who had reluctantly agreed to advise a local golf club on its governance, despite, as Logan tells it, having no interest whatsoever in the game. The reason? He had, in his own words, “nothing else to do”.

Quinn, who has co-founded and exited eight businesses, was clearly wasted on bunker disputes. Logan rounded up two more retirees of equal vintage: Eden Phillips, 61, formerly a software engineering manager at BT, and Mary Whatman, 62, a transformation specialist whose CV includes Bell Canada and Nortel. The Sapient Foundation was born.

In the year since, the quartet has worked with just over a dozen companies stretched across the UK and beyond. The model is unusual. Sapient looks at a client’s balance sheet, decides what the business can realistically afford, and charges accordingly. In several cases there is no upfront fee at all; instead, founders are asked to make a donation to one of the charities Sapient supports, but only once their company is generating revenue.

That arrangement suited DocComs, a London-based start-up developing an encrypted messaging platform for doctors. Co-founder Roseanna Jaggard, who runs the business with her husband Matt, had considered the various free online services on offer to founders, but found them generic. Sapient, by contrast, has been working with the team on an investment strategy tailored to the company’s clinical niche.

In its inaugural year, the foundation donated a four-figure sum to the Solidarity Teacher Training College, part of the Solidarity with South Sudan charity. Logan says other educational causes will follow.

The retirees are unapologetically picky about whom they help. Projects must genuinely interest them, and venture capital firms hoping to use the foundation as a back door to discounted consulting have been politely shown the door. Logan says one or two have “tried to pull a fast one”.

The recurring themes among Sapient’s clients are the trio that haunt almost every British SME: funding, technology and governance. Logan and his colleagues have used their address books to introduce founders to investors and capital sources they would never otherwise have reached.

One beneficiary is Oraczen, an agentic artificial intelligence company with offices in London and Texas. Co-founder Raghu Prasad credits Sapient with steering the business away from chasing broad AI opportunities and towards a more practical commercial wedge in contracts, procurement, supplier management and spend leakage. The intervention, Prasad says, helped the team “sharpen our focus very quickly” as they plan an expansion across the UK and Europe.

“In a traditional setting, advice of this depth and quality from senior telecom and enterprise experts would likely have cost us ten to twenty times more,” Prasad adds. “As an early-stage AI company building for enterprises across Europe and the UK, that level of access and strategic guidance would have been difficult to justify financially.”

The foundation operates under what Logan calls the “no heavy lifting” rule. Phillips, who spends a few hours a day on Sapient projects, still has time to tend his allotment, take guitar lessons and volunteer for Citizens Advice. The point, Logan insists, is that the work must remain enjoyable, the charities well funded and the queue of grateful founders steadily growing.

Britain’s SMEs have long complained about the cost and accessibility of senior strategic advice. It turns out the answer may have been sitting on the patio all along, quietly bored and reaching for the secateurs.

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The retired executives swapping the golf course for the boardroom – and charging next to nothing

May 7, 2026
Amazon’s drones touch down in Darlington in UK delivery first
Business

Amazon’s drones touch down in Darlington in UK delivery first

by May 7, 2026

Amazon has quietly opened a new front in the battle for ultra-fast delivery, becoming the first retailer in Britain to drop parcels by drone after a limited launch in Darlington, County Durham.

The service, operated under the company’s long-gestating Prime Air programme, will see packages weighing less than 5lb (2.2kg) flown out from an Amazon fulfilment centre to homes within a 7.5-mile (12km) radius. Initial payloads are unglamorous but practical: beauty products, batteries, charging cables and the kind of small household items shoppers tend to discover they need only when it is already too late to drive to the shops.

For Amazon, which first promised drone deliveries more than a decade ago and has since watched the technology stutter through regulatory and engineering setbacks, the Darlington launch is both a proof point and a test bed. For Britain’s retail sector, including the small and medium-sized businesses that increasingly rely on Amazon’s logistics network, it is a sharper reminder still that the goalposts on customer expectation are moving once again.

The trial’s earliest beneficiary was Rob Shield, a Darlington farmer who let Amazon use an Airbnb on his land for its first test runs. The novelty, he admits, soon took over.

“Initially it was a novelty, so we were ordering everything under the sun,” he says. “Pens, paper, chocolates, anything to make it keep coming.”

Parcels arrive in shoebox-sized packages, released from a height of around 12ft onto the front garden. The spectacle, Mr Shield concedes, drew its own audience: “We’d have people come just to see it.”

What began as a curiosity has become, in his telling, a quiet utility. “You start realising, ‘I actually need something today’, like tape measures and stuff you’re always losing. We just order it and it comes.”

In the UK, Amazon’s drones currently promise delivery within two hours. The American benchmark is rather more pointed: David Carbon, vice president of Amazon Prime Air, says the average delivery time in the US is now 36 minutes.

“The certainty is people have never told us they want their stuff slower,” he says. “If you’ve got kids and you want fever medication, you want it. You don’t want to drive to the store.”

Amazon will cap operations at ten flights an hour and up to one hundred deliveries a day on weekdays, a deliberately modest cadence designed to satisfy regulators rather than sceptical shareholders.

The aircraft in question is the MK30, Amazon’s latest model, fitted with sensors intended to avoid trampolines, washing lines, pedestrians and other aircraft. GPS guides the drone to each drop-off, where it releases its load. “This is effectively an autonomous drone that can do what a pilot does in a flight deck. It can do what ground crews do, and it can deliver a package,” Mr Carbon says.

That autonomy is not absolute. The Darlington flights are conducted “beyond visual line of sight”, BVLOS in industry parlance, but every aircraft is monitored remotely by an operator who liaises with air traffic control at nearby Teesside Airport when required.

The choice of Darlington is, on closer inspection, a piece of careful corporate scouting rather than an accident of geography. The town offers a useful mix of residential streets, major roads and an airport in close proximity, allowing Amazon to stress-test its kit across multiple environments without travelling far. Crucially, it sits beside an Amazon hub with the deep stock needed to support the service.

It is also the only location outside the United States where the company is operating drone deliveries.

The Civil Aviation Authority has granted approval for a trial running to the end of the year, with temporary protected airspace, a regulatory prerequisite for autonomous flight under current rules, secured until mid-June and expected to be extended. Darlington Borough Council, which approved temporary planning permission for what it described as the “unprecedented nature of the scheme”, said it was “great to see Darlington at the forefront of such a pioneering scheme which highlights our borough as an area of innovation, development and investment”.

The limits of flying logistics

For all the choreography, the technology has obvious constraints. Eligible customers will need a garden or yard. Flats and terraces without outside space are excluded.

Dr Anna Jackman, an associate professor of geography at the University of Reading, says the Darlington trial illustrates both the promise and the limitations of the technology. “A lot of our demand for delivery services is in urban centres. They are very densely populated, very congested. And the reality is [drone deliveries] don’t work well in high-rise buildings.”

Rooftop drop-offs and centrally located drone hubs are being explored, she adds, “but right now we’re not there yet”.

There is also the question of safety, where Amazon’s record is not unblemished. In February, an MK30 drone clipped the gutter of an apartment building in a Dallas suburb after losing GPS signal, falling to the ground and breaking apart. No one was hurt, and Amazon has since suspended deliveries to similar buildings. Mr Carbon describes it as one of the “things we learn as we go along”, noting that 170,000 drone flights have been completed safely.

Drones are not entirely new to British skies. The NHS is trialling them to ferry blood supplies across London, and Royal Mail is using them to reach remote communities in Orkney. Amazon’s intervention is different in character: this is a commercial play by the country’s largest online retailer, and the read-across for smaller businesses is significant.

Independent retailers and the SMEs that use Amazon’s marketplace will, sooner or later, face customers who have come to view sub-two-hour delivery as the baseline. The pressure to match, or at least mitigate, that experience will fall hardest on those without the logistics muscle of a global platform. At the same time, the gradual normalisation of BVLOS flight could open new commercial doors for British drone operators, software firms and aerospace suppliers servicing the sector.

For now, the residents of Darlington are the test market, and reaction has been mixed. The launch itself ran years behind Amazon’s original 2023 pledge to begin in 2024, a reminder that aviation regulation does not bend easily to Silicon Valley timelines.

Mr Carbon is unrepentant. “We wouldn’t be doing it if it wasn’t commercially viable,” he says. “It’s a business, right? Absolutely, it can be commercially viable, and that’s the goal that we’re going after.”

Whether it ends up reshaping British retail logistics or remaining an expensively engineered curiosity will depend on what happens next: the regulator’s willingness to widen the airspace, Amazon’s appetite to keep spending, and customers’ willingness to look up.

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Amazon’s drones touch down in Darlington in UK delivery first

May 7, 2026
Why Nano Banana Is Becoming the Core Engine Behind Visual AI Workflows
Business

Why Nano Banana Is Becoming the Core Engine Behind Visual AI Workflows

by May 7, 2026

The creative technology sector is currently witnessing a massive paradigm shift, moving away from fragmented, heavy-duty processing models toward more agile and intelligent systems.

As digital marketing demands higher volumes of personalized content, the need for a reliable, centralized infrastructure has never been more urgent. Enter the nano banana, a versatile and high-performance framework that has rapidly ascended to become the heartbeat of professional visual automation. This transition isn’t merely a trend; it represents a fundamental change in how visual assets are ideated, rendered, and deployed across the digital landscape.

In this new era, the strategic Engine positioning of creative tools determines which brands lead and which follow. By prioritizing speed without sacrificing the logical integrity of the image, the nano banana has secured its place as the go-to solution for agencies that require industrial-scale output. Unlike the general-purpose generators of the past, a nano banana workflow is built with the commercial creator in mind, ensuring that every pixel serves a specific marketing objective. It is the silent workhorse that allows a single designer to perform with the capacity of an entire production house.

Platforms like Higgsfield have recognized the immense potential of this architecture, integrating it to streamline the most complex parts of the creative pipeline. By leveraging the foundational strengths of Nano Banana 2 and the surgical precision of Nano Banana Pro, the ecosystem provides a scalable ladder for growth. Whether you are a small startup looking for your first viral hook or a global enterprise managing a thousand ad variations, the nano banana provides the consistency and power required to thrive in a visual-first economy.

The Convergence of Speed and Precision in Visual Workflows

The primary challenge in visual AI has always been the trade-off between how fast a model can work and how accurate the result remains. For years, “fast” meant “blurry,” while “precise” meant “expensive and slow.” The nano banana architecture has successfully deconstructed this barrier. By utilizing a highly optimized latent space, nano banana produces high-fidelity results at speeds that keep pace with the fastest creative brainstorms. This allows for a real-time iterative process where the technology actually encourages exploration rather than acting as a bottleneck.

This convergence is particularly vital for performance marketers who need to react to trends as they happen. When you use a nano banana system, you are tapping into a model that understands the physics of lighting and the nuances of human expression natively. This means less time spent on “cherry-picking” the best results and more time spent on strategy. While Nano Banana 2 provides the initial spark for these projects, the move toward final production is fueled by the core nano banana engine’s ability to handle complex semantic instructions with total reliability.

Furthermore, the nano banana is designed to be hardware-efficient. It doesn’t require a massive server farm to generate professional results, making it accessible for agile teams who need to work on the go. This accessibility is a cornerstone of the modern creator economy, where the ability to generate a high-quality nano banana asset on a laptop can be the difference between hitting a deadline and missing a market window. It is this combination of high-end output and low-friction operation that makes it the core engine of choice today.

Optimized Diffusion Cycles: nano banana achieves professional resolution in fewer steps than competing models.
Semantic Accuracy: The engine understands the relationship between objects, ensuring realistic compositions every time.
Scalable Frameworks: Easily move from low-res drafts to high-res final renders within the same nano banana interface.

Seamless Integration into Commercial Advertising Pipelines

Visual AI is only as good as its ability to fit into existing commercial workflows. The nano banana was built from the ground up to be a team player. It features an open architecture that allows it to interface with professional editing suites and marketing automation tools. When a creative lead initiates a nano banana session, they aren’t just making an image; they are creating a dynamic asset that can be resized, restyled, and repurposed across social, web, and print platforms without losing its core identity.

Higgsfield has mastered this integration by providing a hub where nano banana assets are managed with professional oversight. This is crucial for maintaining a strong brand identity, as it ensures that the “visual DNA” remains consistent across a thousand different generations. By using Nano Banana Pro for the final, mission-critical renders, brands can be certain that their high-volume output doesn’t dilute their market presence. The nano banana acts as the glue that holds these disparate creative efforts together.

Asset Uniformity: Maintain a consistent look and feel across every nano banana generation.
Metadata Integration: Automatically tag and categorize assets generated by the nano banana for easier retrieval.
Workflow Automation: Use the nano banana to handle the repetitive tasks of resizing and re-lighting, freeing up human designers for high-level tasks.

Democratizing High-End Creative Directing

Perhaps the most impactful role of the nano banana is its ability to turn anyone with a vision into a creative director. In the past, the gap between a “great idea” and a “professional image” was filled with years of technical training in complex software. The nano banana acts as a cognitive translator, taking simple descriptive intent and turning it into a visual reality. This shift allows marketing managers and entrepreneurs to take a more hands-on role in their visual storytelling, using the nano banana to prototype and finalize concepts in minutes.

The collaborative potential of the nano banana is immense. Teams can share nano banana “seeds” or style guides to ensure that everyone is working from the same visual playbook. This eliminates the “creative drift” that often happens when multiple people are involved in a project. While Nano Banana 2 is the perfect tool for the early “sandbox” phase of a project, the core nano banana provides the rigorous structure needed to turn those wild ideas into polished, brand-safe marketing materials that are ready for public consumption.

This democratization also means that high-quality visual content is no longer the exclusive domain of companies with massive budgets. With the nano banana, a small local business can produce social media ads that look just as professional as those of a Fortune 500 company. It levels the playing field, making the quality of the “idea” the most important variable in the equation, rather than the size of the production budget. The nano banana is truly the engine of a more equitable creative future.

Technical Reliability: The Anatomy of the Engine

To understand why the nano banana is winning the AI arms race, one must look at its technical “anatomy.” It uses a sophisticated feedback loop that critiques its own output during the generation process. This internal quality control mechanism is what makes the nano banana so reliable. It doesn’t just guess where a shadow should go; it calculates the light path. It doesn’t just draw a hand; it understands the skeletal structure beneath it. This level of technical reasoning is what prevents the “hallucinations” that often plague other generative systems.

By using Nano Banana Pro for the most demanding tasks, creators can unlock even deeper levels of this technical mastery. However, the core nano banana remains the everyday workhorse because of its incredible “hit rate.” You don’t have to generate a hundred versions to find one that works. The nano banana is built to get it right the first time, or at least very close to it. This efficiency is a massive competitive advantage in a world where attention spans are short and content needs to be refreshed daily.

Logical Latent Mapping: nano banana connects text to imagery with a 98% semantic success rate.
Noise-Reduction Algorithms: Every nano banana generation is cleaner and sharper than previous iterations.
Cross-Platform Compatibility: Run the nano banana engine on a variety of operating systems without performance loss.

The Role of Nano Banana in Global Content Strategy

For a global brand, “content” isn’t a single event; it’s a constant stream. Managing this stream across different cultures, languages, and time zones is a monumental task. The nano banana simplifies this by acting as a universal creative translator. You can use a single nano banana prompt and, with minor adjustments, localize the entire visual context for a dozen different markets. It understands that a “modern kitchen” looks different in Paris than it does in Tokyo, and it adjusts the nano banana output accordingly.

Higgsfield’s global infrastructure leverages this capability to allow brands to “centralize creativity while localizing execution.” By using the nano banana to handle the variations, a central marketing team can ensure that the core brand message remains unchanged while the visual delivery is optimized for local audiences. This is the ultimate expression of automating creative workflows with AI, where the machine handles the cultural nuances that would otherwise take months of manual research and production.

Cultural Intelligence: The nano banana recognizes regional aesthetics and applies them accurately.
Instant Localization: Swap out background elements or character features in the nano banana to suit different demographics.
Unified Governance: Ensure that your global teams are all using the same nano banana standards for quality and brand safety.

Ethical Design and the Future of Visual AI

As we integrate the nano banana deeper into our professional lives, the conversation naturally turns toward the future of ethical design. A model as powerful as the nano banana carries a responsibility to be transparent and fair. This is why the latest iterations of the nano banana include metadata watermarking and origin tracing. It’s not just about making a pretty picture; it’s about ensuring that the nano banana is used as a tool for positive human expression and economic growth.

The future of the nano banana will likely see it becoming even more intuitive, perhaps even anticipating a creator’s needs based on their past project history. We are moving toward a world of “proactive” AI, where the nano banana suggests visual improvements and variations before the user even asks for them. As we continue to build on the successes of Nano Banana 2 and Nano Banana Pro, the core nano banana engine will remain the anchor that keeps these innovations grounded in commercial reality and creative excellence.

Conclusion: Anchoring Your Creative Future with Nano Banana

The evidence is clear: the nano banana is no longer just a “tool” it is the foundational engine that makes modern visual AI workflows possible. Its unique ability to combine raw processing speed with deep, logical reasoning has made it an indispensable asset for creators of all sizes. By removing the friction from the production process, the nano banana has unlocked a new era of human creativity where the only limit is the speed of our own imagination.

Whether you are just beginning to explore the world of AI with Nano Banana 2 or you are a seasoned pro using Nano Banana Pro for high-stakes commercial campaigns, the core nano banana engine is there to ensure your vision is realized with uncompromising quality. It is time to stop thinking about visual content as a series of slow, manual tasks and start thinking about it as a dynamic, scalable stream powered by the nano banana. The future of visual AI is here, and it is powered by an engine that never stops innovating. Embrace the nano banana and transform your creative workflow forever.

 

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Why Nano Banana Is Becoming the Core Engine Behind Visual AI Workflows

May 7, 2026
Best Occupational Health Screening Service in 2026: Providers Advancing Modern Workforce Readiness
Business

Best Occupational Health Screening Service in 2026: Providers Advancing Modern Workforce Readiness

by May 7, 2026

Occupational health screening is no longer a simple pre-hire checkbox. In 2026, employers are navigating tighter compliance expectations, higher safety standards, and stronger internal pressure to support employee wellbeing.

As a result, organisations are looking for screening partners that can deliver clinically sound assessments while keeping hiring and deployment timelines on track.

This guide compares leading occupational health screening service providers based on medical exam coverage, coordination and logistics, compliance support, and overall ability to keep workforces job-ready in a fast-changing environment.

1. ScoutLogic

Best For: Employers that want reliable, compliance-forward screening coordination with attentive support and consistent oversight.

ScoutLogic has broadened its workforce screening capabilities as more employers seek a single partner that can manage both administrative screening and health-related requirements with tight process control. While widely recognised for background screening, ScoutLogic’s occupational health coordination approach stands out for organisations that need predictable turnaround times and strong documentation practices.

Rather than relying solely on self-serve workflows, ScoutLogic uses a service-led model where dedicated specialists track each case, coordinate with clinics, follow up on outstanding medical records, and help keep programmes aligned with employer and regulatory requirements. This can be especially useful in industries where delays impact start dates, shift coverage, or compliance posture.

Features:

Full-cycle coordination for occupational health screening programmes
Fitness-for-duty evaluations, drug testing, and compliance-oriented workflows
Dedicated support for appointment tracking and medical record collection
Built to handle multi-site and high-volume hiring needs
Integrations to connect with HR, ATS, and compliance tooling

Pros:

Responsive support with careful attention to detail
Strong emphasis on documentation and compliance consistency
Capable across complex, multi-location screening rollouts
Reliable scheduling coordination and record follow-up

Cons:

Primarily designed around North American employer requirements
High-touch support may be more than needed for occasional or low-volume users

2. WorkSTEPS

Best For: Employers prioritising injury prevention through job-specific functional testing.

WorkSTEPS is best known for functional capacity and post-offer physical ability testing designed to align an individual’s capabilities with job demands. For employers in physically demanding environments, its structured approach can support safer placements and help reduce musculoskeletal injury risk.

Features:

Functional capacity and post-offer physical ability evaluations
Return-to-work and fit-for-work assessments
Job demand validation and evidence-based testing protocols
Tools to support injury risk reduction initiatives

Pros:

Well-regarded methodologies for physical capacity measurement
Strong fit for warehousing, manufacturing, construction, and logistics
Useful for reducing strain-related incidents and claims

Cons:

More focused on physical ability testing than broad medical screening
Less relevant for primarily desk-based roles

3. Mobile Health

Best For: Employers that value rapid turnaround and the option for on-site screening.

Mobile Health combines clinic-based services with mobile capabilities, giving employers flexibility in where screenings take place. This model can be useful for large onboarding classes, distributed worksites, or time-sensitive projects where sending employees off-site adds friction.

Features:

On-site occupational health screening options
Clinic services for TB testing, vaccinations, drug tests, and physicals
Scheduling and records management supported by technology
Scaling options for seasonal hiring and project-driven staffing

Pros:

Convenient on-site delivery for high-throughput screening days
Fast completion for many standard occupational health services
Helpful for geographically dispersed operations

Cons:

On-site programmes can increase overall cost
Service density and coverage can differ by region

4. NMS Health

Best For: Employers seeking broad clinic access with straightforward scheduling and reporting.

NMS Health provides access to a nationwide network of occupational health locations, supporting common pre-employment exams and compliance testing. Its processes tend to suit employers that want standardised workflows and visibility into appointment progress.

Features:

National clinic and testing access
Pre-employment physicals and regulated testing services
Dashboards to manage scheduling and reporting
Support for compliance-heavy industry needs

Pros:

Wide clinic footprint for multi-state hiring
Practical workflows for steady, repeatable screening volumes
Clear scheduling pathways for common exam types

Cons:

Clinic availability can vary by market
Less hands-on case oversight than service-led coordination models

5. OHS Health & Safety Services, Inc.

Best For: Employers that need strong alignment to safety programmes and regulatory screening requirements.

OHS Health & Safety Services focuses on occupational health needs that intersect closely with safety compliance, including screening and documentation that supports OSHA and DOT-related programmes. Its offering often appeals to employers that must demonstrate audit readiness and structured programme governance.

Features:

Screening support aligned with OSHA and DOT expectations
Respirator clearance, hearing conservation, and occupational evaluations
Compliance-first documentation and reporting
Programme design tailored to safety-intensive operations

Pros:

Strong compliance orientation and audit-friendly reporting
Useful for employers with rigorous safety management systems
Solid fit for regulated or higher-risk environments

Cons:

May be more robust than necessary for low-risk workplaces
Timeframes can vary for specialised or higher-complexity evaluations

Choosing the Best Occupational Health Screening Service

The right occupational health screening partner should balance medical accuracy, operational reliability, and compliance discipline. The strongest providers typically demonstrate:

Operational Reliability: When start dates and coverage depend on timely screening, active coordination helps reduce missed appointments, incomplete files, and delayed results.

Range of Assessments: Employers may need drug testing, physicals, vaccinations, respirator clearance, hearing testing, or functional capacity evaluations. Broader coverage helps when requirements change.

Compliance Strength: DOT, OSHA, and state rules can require strict documentation and consistent workflows. Strong compliance support reduces audit and liability exposure.

Ability to Scale: Multi-site employers and those with seasonal peaks need dependable networks, scheduling capacity, and reporting that can withstand volume spikes.

Across these considerations, ScoutLogic often appeals to employers that want a coordinated, closely managed experience, especially where turnaround time and documentation quality are critical.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does an occupational health screening service typically include?

Most services include pre-employment physicals, drug and alcohol testing, respirator evaluations, vaccinations, functional testing, and medical exams tied to regulatory requirements. Offerings vary by provider and industry.

How do employers choose the best occupational health screening provider?

Common decision factors include clinical quality, turnaround time, reporting consistency, regulatory knowledge, clinic availability, and the provider’s ability to support multi-location hiring. Communication and scheduling tools also matter for day-to-day execution.

Why is occupational health screening important?

Screening helps confirm fitness for duty, supports safer job placement, reduces injury risk, and strengthens compliance. It is especially important in safety-sensitive and physically demanding roles.

Summary: Occupational Health Screening Partners Shaping Safer, Job-Ready Workforces

Employer expectations around workplace health and compliance continue to rise. The providers above bring different strengths, from functional testing and mobile delivery to compliance-focused programme support. In 2026, organisations benefit most from partners that combine clinical capability with dependable execution, and ScoutLogic stands out for employers that prioritise structured coordination and consistent oversight.

Read more:
Best Occupational Health Screening Service in 2026: Providers Advancing Modern Workforce Readiness

May 7, 2026
Abraham Pinchuck Built Success by Changing How Sales Works
Business

Abraham Pinchuck Built Success by Changing How Sales Works

by May 6, 2026

Why Rethinking Sales Helped Shape His Career

Most sales advice focuses on what to say. Abraham Pinchuck built his career by focusing on what not to say.

Instead of pushing products, he built a system around listening. Over time, that idea became the foundation of his work across multiple industries.

“Selling is a recipe for failure in sales,” he says. “If you focus on yourself, you lose. If you focus on the person in front of you, everything changes.”

From Brooklyn Beginnings to Business Foundations

Abraham Pinchuck grew up in Brooklyn, New York. His early years were shaped by sports, especially basketball. That competitive environment taught him discipline and consistency.

He later attended Bernard Baruch College, earning a degree in marketing and sales in 1991. Like many graduates, he entered the workforce with a traditional understanding of how sales worked.

That understanding would evolve quickly.

Real Estate: Early Lessons in Human Behavior

His first major step was in real estate. He worked on renovating properties and reselling them.

This wasn’t just about improving buildings. It was about understanding buyers.

What made someone choose one property over another? What details mattered most?

These questions helped him realize that decisions are driven more by personal priorities than by logic alone.

Manufacturing Experience and a Broader View of Business

Abraham later moved into food manufacturing. This chapter of his career lasted for many years and expanded his view of how businesses operate.

He learned how systems, processes, and efficiency impact results. Over time, he transitioned into consulting, helping manufacturers improve performance.

In that role, he saw a pattern.

Many businesses struggled not because they lacked effort, but because they focused on the wrong things.

A Shift Toward Coaching and Sales Development

Eventually, Abraham moved into the insurance space, where he now works as a self-employed consultant. He trains agents in Medicare Advantage (MAPD) and life insurance.

These are demanding fields. High rejection rates and complex products make success difficult.

But Abraham doesn’t teach traditional selling techniques.

“Learning to listen to people, ask good questions, and identify what is important to them—that’s what actually works,” he says.

His approach focuses on understanding before offering solutions.

The Mindset Change That Made the Difference

One of the most important lessons in Abraham’s career came from his own mistakes.

“Biggest obstacle was not realizing that in order to be successful I needed to focus on the people I’m helping, not me,” he says.

That realization changed how he approached every conversation.

Instead of thinking about outcomes, he focused on the process. Instead of trying to convince, he worked to understand.

This shift made his results more consistent over time.

How He Applies This Approach Today

Abraham’s work today centers on helping others adopt the same mindset.

He trains agents to slow down conversations, ask better questions, and pay attention to what clients actually care about.

“Being a great listener and having a genuine desire to help people,” he says, “that’s the difference.”

He also emphasizes long-term thinking. His personal benchmark is steady improvement, with a goal of increasing results by 20% each year.

This kind of growth, he believes, comes from habits—not shortcuts.

What Drives Results in a Competitive Industry

In a field where many rely on scripts and pressure tactics, Abraham focuses on relationships.

One of his main growth strategies is simple.

“Referrals,” he says.

When clients feel understood, they are more likely to trust—and more likely to recommend.

This creates a more stable and sustainable path for growth, especially in industries like insurance.

Influence, Learning, and Staying Grounded

Abraham credits part of his approach to the influence of Dale Carnegie, known for his work on communication and human connection.

But he also relies on his own experience.

“Look at my past success,” he says. “That helps me stay grounded.”

Reading is another key part of his routine. It helps him continue learning and refining his approach.

Life Outside of Work

Outside of business, Abraham focuses on staying active and balanced.

He enjoys hiking, bodybuilding, pickleball, and traveling. These activities support both physical and mental discipline.

They also reflect the same consistency he applies in his work.

A Practical Idea That Scales Across Industries

Abraham Pinchuck’s career has taken him through real estate, manufacturing, and insurance. Each industry is different, but one idea has remained constant.

Understand people first.

“Have a genuine desire to help people,” he says. “That’s what works.”

It’s a simple concept. But applied consistently, it has shaped his career—and the way he helps others build theirs.

Read more:
Abraham Pinchuck Built Success by Changing How Sales Works

May 6, 2026
Lessons from High-Performing Campaigns You Need to Know
Business

Lessons from High-Performing Campaigns You Need to Know

by May 6, 2026

High-performing campaigns today aren’t just about visibility; they’re about measurable impact, relevance, and adaptability. With global digital ad spend surpassing $700 billion and dominating over 65% of total advertising, competition is intense, and only the smartest strategies cut through.

What separates top-performing brands is how they blend data, creativity, and customer understanding into cohesive campaigns.

Here are the key lessons modern brands are applying to stay ahead.

They Prioritise ROI Over Vanity Metrics

Modern campaigns are built around outcomes, not impressions. While likes and clicks still matter, brands now focus on conversion rates, revenue, and customer lifetime value. In fact, 83% of marketing leaders say demonstrating ROI is their top priority.

High-performing brands track performance across the full funnel, ensuring every campaign contributes to measurable growth rather than surface-level engagement.

They Combine Brand and Performance Marketing

The most effective campaigns no longer treat brand awareness and performance as separate efforts. Instead, they integrate both.

Recent data shows companies are rebalancing investments, with many increasing spend on brand building after over-focusing on short-term performance tactics.

The lesson is clear: campaigns that build recognition while driving conversions outperform those that chase quick wins alone.

They Invest Heavily in Content That Delivers Value

Content remains at the core of high-performing campaigns. Around 84% of organisations now have a content marketing strategy, and it continues to be a major driver of engagement and traffic.

What’s different today is the emphasis on quality and relevance. Successful brands are producing content that educates, entertains, or solves real problems, not just promotes products.

They Embrace AI to Scale Smarter

AI is no longer experimental; it’s foundational. Around 67% of marketers now use AI in content or SEO strategies, with 68% reporting improved ROI as a result.

High-performing campaigns use AI for:

Audience targeting and segmentation
Content ideation and optimisation
Real-time performance adjustments

This allows brands to scale campaigns faster without sacrificing precision.

They Build Campaigns Around Personalisation

Generic messaging no longer works. Today’s audiences expect relevance at every touchpoint.

Leading brands use data to tailor messaging based on behaviour, preferences, and intent. This shift toward personalisation is a major driver of performance, especially in channels like email, where ROI can reach $36 for every $1 spent.

The takeaway is simple: the more tailored the experience, the stronger the results.

They Leverage Multiple Channels, Not Just One

High-performing campaigns don’t rely on a single platform. They operate across a mix of channels, including search, social, email, and video.

Organic search alone drives over 50% of website traffic, while social media and other channels play supporting roles in discovery and engagement.

Modern brands understand that success comes from channel synergy, not isolated tactics.

They Focus on Authenticity and Community

Audiences are becoming more sceptical of traditional advertising. Campaigns that feel overly polished or sales-driven often underperform.

Instead, brands are shifting toward authenticity, user-generated content, and community engagement. Many successful campaigns now rely on real voices and relatable storytelling to build trust and drive conversations.

They Use Video and Interactive Formats to Capture Attention

Attention is harder to earn than ever. That’s why 86% of businesses now use video as a key marketing tool, with most marketers considering it essential to their strategy.

High-performing campaigns go beyond static content by using:

Short-form video
Interactive experiences
Live or real-time content

These formats increase engagement and keep audiences invested.

They Continuously Optimise, Not Set and Forget

The best campaigns are never static. They evolve based on data, testing, and performance insights.

Modern brands run ongoing A/B tests, refine messaging, and adjust targeting in real time. This continuous optimisation ensures campaigns improve over time rather than plateau.

They Work with Specialists to Maximise Performance

Behind many high-performing campaigns is a structured, expert-led approach. Brands are increasingly partnering with agencies and specialists to execute complex strategies effectively.

Working with experienced teams, such as neramarketing.co.uk, allows businesses to combine creative thinking with data-driven execution, ensuring campaigns are both innovative and results-focused.

Wrapping Up

High-performing campaigns aren’t built on a single tactic. They succeed because they combine strategy, creativity, and data into a cohesive approach.

Brands that prioritise ROI, embrace personalisation, leverage multiple channels, and continuously optimise their efforts are the ones seeing consistent results.

The difference today isn’t just what brands are doing, it’s how intentionally and intelligently they’re doing it.

Read more:
Lessons from High-Performing Campaigns You Need to Know

May 6, 2026
Vickie DeHart: Building Clarity and Leadership in Construction
Business

Vickie DeHart: Building Clarity and Leadership in Construction

by May 6, 2026

Why Vickie DeHart’s Experience Matters in Cities Like London

London is a city constantly rebuilding itself. Old spaces become new housing. Retail districts evolve. Infrastructure expands. Behind every project is the same challenge: coordinating people, ideas, and execution under pressure.

That is why the career of Vickie DeHart, a construction and real estate leader based in Las Vegas, has lessons that resonate far beyond the United States. Cities like London rely on professionals who can move projects from concept to completion while managing complexity.

DeHart has spent decades doing exactly that. Her work has focused on aligning finance, planning, and on-site execution. Those are the same pressures developers and builders face in London today. “Big ideas only work if they’re grounded in execution,” she says. “You can have a great plan, but it only matters if it actually gets built.”

Her perspective is practical. Construction is not theoretical. It is about making decisions that affect people, timelines, and communities.

“There’s no hiding in construction,” DeHart explains. “Either it works or it doesn’t.”

Early Life and the Foundations of Responsibility

Vickie DeHart grew up in Jacksonville, Florida, alongside her two brothers. Her family environment was simple and disciplined. Responsibility was expected, not negotiated.

“If something needed to be done, you stepped in and did it,” she says.

That mindset carried into adulthood. After graduating from Western High School in Las Vegas in 1979, DeHart entered the workforce and gradually found herself drawn to construction and development.

What attracted her was the clarity of the industry. Progress is visible. Problems cannot be ignored.

“I liked that you could see the results of your work,” she explains. “A building either stands the way it should or it doesn’t.”

Becoming One of Nevada’s Early Female General Contractors

One of the defining chapters of DeHart’s career began at Powerhouse Construction, where she served as Principal and Vice President for five years.

The company specialised in framing apartments and condominiums, as well as renovations and tenant improvements for commercial retail spaces.

During this time, DeHart carried the company’s general contractor’s licence. That distinction made her one of the first women in Nevada to hold such responsibility.

She rarely presents this as a personal milestone.

“I didn’t think about being first,” she says. “I thought about the responsibility. When you carry the licence, the outcome sits with you.”

That mindset shaped her leadership approach. Accountability mattered more than recognition.

Lessons from the Job Site

Construction projects are rarely smooth. Delays, miscommunication, and shifting priorities are common.

One early Powerhouse project illustrated this clearly. A project began slipping behind schedule because suppliers and site teams were not aligned.

Instead of assigning blame, DeHart focused on the system.

“We added daily check-ins,” she recalls. “Even for smaller jobs. It was simple, but it fixed the communication gap.”

The experience reinforced a principle she still believes today.

“Most problems aren’t caused by lack of effort,” she says. “They come from unclear expectations.”

Building EHB: Integrating Planning and Execution

Later in her career, DeHart co-founded EHB alongside Yohan Lowie and her husband, Paul DeHart.

The idea behind the company was straightforward: reduce fragmentation in development projects.

Too often, planning, finance, and construction operate separately. EHB aimed to connect those functions more closely.

“At EHB we wanted fewer hand-offs,” she explains. “When everyone understands the same goal, projects move faster.”

Her role covers a wide range of responsibilities. She works closely with the CEO on strategy and operations. Her daily work includes financial oversight, insurance, escrow coordination, and collaboration with engineers, architects, and local building departments.

She also manages leasing and rental properties and works directly with clients during interior selections and home closings.

“One moment I’m reviewing financial details,” she says. “The next I’m walking through a property with a client. That balance keeps decisions realistic.”

Leadership Through Clarity and Presence

DeHart’s leadership style is calm and practical. She does not rely on pressure or hierarchy.

“I don’t believe in pressure-led leadership,” she says. “I believe in clarity.”

That philosophy influences how she works with teams. Rather than issuing constant instructions, she focuses on clear expectations and follow-through.

She also believes strongly in being physically present.

“You learn more by walking a site than reading ten reports,” she says. “Problems look different when you see them up close.”

In industries like construction, where decisions affect large budgets and tight schedules, that presence matters.

Wellness, Focus, and Long-Term Perspective

Outside work, DeHart prioritises wellness and time outdoors. Hiking and walking are regular parts of her routine.

The habit began as a personal choice but became an important leadership tool.

“When I step outside, my thinking becomes clearer,” she says. “Solutions often show up when you stop staring at the problem.”

Construction and development bring constant pressure. Physical activity helps her maintain perspective.

“If you don’t take care of your health,” she adds, “decision-making eventually suffers.”

A Career Built on Practical Ideas

Looking back, DeHart does not measure success through titles or recognition. Instead, she focuses on execution.

Projects delivered on time. Teams that communicate clearly. Processes that work better than before.

Her view of leadership remains simple.

“Buildings last,” she says. “But so do reputations.”

For cities like London — where development shapes neighbourhoods and communities — that principle carries weight. The best ideas are not the loudest ones.

They are the ones that get built.

Read more:
Vickie DeHart: Building Clarity and Leadership in Construction

May 6, 2026
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