As tech companies shed workers and service sectors struggle with wage pressures, everyday Angelenos face a tougher employment landscape than headlines suggest.
As commercial and residential investment surges across Los Angeles, understanding what drives capital flows offers crucial insight into where the economy is headed.
A surge of precision manufacturing startups across Downtown and Vernon is creating unexpected career pathways and forcing employers to compete fiercely for skilled workers.
Rising operational costs, international uncertainty, and changing travel patterns are squeezing Los Angeles's $28 billion hospitality sector as summer approaches.
As tensions flare across the Middle East and Africa, port operators and manufacturers in LA face supply chain disruptions that are already hitting bottom lines.
As venture capital floods the Arts District and Bunker Hill, established real estate firms and emerging software companies are positioning themselves to capture unprecedented growth in the city's innovation corridor.
As international visitor numbers stabilize, local operators face shifting demand patterns, tech-driven competition, and the challenge of recapturing pre-pandemic spending habits.
As tech layoffs slow and logistics demand surges, Los Angeles employers face a tightening labor market with wage pressures mounting across key sectors.
As geopolitical tensions ripple across the world, local entrepreneurs and corporations are scrambling to adapt supply chains, insurance costs, and operational strategies.
As consumer spending patterns evolve and labor costs climb, Los Angeles hospitality and food businesses face a critical reckoning—here's what the data reveals.
As commercial property values plummet across Central Business District and Downtown, companies are decentralizing to secondary markets, forcing a fundamental reimagining of LA's job geography and talent acquisition strategies.
From the farmers markets of Echo Park to the boutiques of Melrose Avenue, geopolitical tensions and tariff wars are reshaping what you pay for everyday goods.
As young entrepreneurs ditch traditional careers for content creation and digital ventures, Los Angeles employers are facing a historic shift in how they recruit and retain workers.
Mid-year employment data reveals shifting labor patterns across tech, hospitality, and manufacturing sectors—forcing employers to rethink hiring strategies.
As tourism and local spending surge post-pandemic, savvy restaurant and hotel owners are positioning themselves to capture unprecedented growth—and early movers are already seeing it in their bottom lines.
A slowdown in venture capital deployment across Silicon Beach masks a deeper shift toward profitable, sustainable ventures—and that's actually good news for Los Angeles.