
Janice Tai
New poll highlights concern over gig workers' prospects
Food delivery riders and ride-hailing drivers in Singapore tend to be young and low-income, a survey found.
Millennials find their calling in unheard-of jobs
Jobs that previously sounded obscure and niche are becoming less unusual today, said Ms Feon Ang, vice-president at LinkedIn Talent and Learning Solutions for Asia-Pacific.
New agri-tech facility opens at National Junior College as it marks its golden jubilee
SINGAPORE - The Republic's oldest junior college marked its golden jubilee on Saturday (May 4) by being the first school to link up with a start-up to establish an agriculture-technology facility...
NKF rolls out new smart card system for dialysis care
In a move to improve patient care, Singapore's largest dialysis provider is introducing a $3 million smart card system that records clinical data automatically.
Youth co-working space opens at *Scape in Orchard
SINGAPORE: A 4,000 sq ft youth co-working space was launched at *Scape in Orchard on Saturday morning (June 23).
Smaller grocery chains find ways to stay in the game
A small supermarket chain saw the potential of catering to residents in their neighbourhoods and rode the heartland wave to expand to eight outlets in the 2000s.
4 in 5 young adults in Singapore experience quarter-life crisis: study
Singapore ranked fourth out of 16 territories in terms of the prevalence of experiences of quarter-life crisis in the study by professional social network LinkedIn.
Cleaning companies bring in workers from more countries
Cleaning companies have started hiring foreign workers from countries such as Myanmar and Thailand to meet the rising demand for part-time cleaning services.
Charities take a leaf from companies' books in reaching out to public
Like companies, charities are conducting market research, opening pop-up and online stores, doing tie-ups and even giving out "performance bonuses" to staff.
Dyslexic but they thrived in business
His boss once accused him of falsifying the accounts, in front of his colleagues. This was because Mr Gary Seow, now 57, could not key in sales figures and targets correctly.