Commentary

Letters to the Editor

Letters to the Editor

CHALLENGING ARCHITECTUREi love john levesques column Boomtown Update in the December issue of Seattle magazine [published simultaneously as his Final Analysis column in Seattle Business]. Its a great article and I love the descriptions. We already were referring to the [apartment building] boxes in Ballard as architecturally challenged, but his addition of Bow-Wow-Haus is brilliant….

Commentary: Global Health

Commentary: Global Health

Will your business be the next one to join the regions fastest-growing sector? Coffee, airplanes, apples and software may dominate the economy in Washington state, but we are witnessing the astonishingly rapid formation of a large and growing new sector focused on global health. In this space, two seemingly different companies are finding distinct and…

CEO Adviser: Are You Protected?

CEO Adviser: Are You Protected?

Nearly two of three Seattle area companies with online services that received venture capital funding in the past year have a big kick me sign on their backs when it comes to class-action risks. Only one in nine have written clauses in their terms of service to protect against these risks in a form with…

Virgin on Business: Dealing with Canal Zones

Virgin on Business: Dealing with Canal Zones

By the time people got around to building a serious industrial transportation system in the Pacific Northwest, canal building had largely dried up in the rest of the country. Railroads were faster and better equipped to handle rugged topography, so thats the way everyone went. The one notable exception was the canal dug to create…

Commentary: Taking Care of Business

Commentary: Taking Care of Business

You might not think the business experiences of two Microsoft executives could help alleviate illiteracy in the developing world or devise a better strategy for attacking hydrocephalus, a potentially devastating health condition. After all, what does business have to do with literacy and disease? As it turns out, a lot. David Risher, who had worked…

Virgin on Business: The Future Is Not Now

Virgin on Business: The Future Is Not Now

Among the many broken promises the future made to the present was the end of the commute. No longer would the working masses pack themselves into wheeled metal boxes twice a day, burning hours and fossil fuel to reach their places of employment in a centralized location. Instead, they could work from home, at whatever…

Final Analysis: Leading Questions...

Final Analysis: Leading Questions…

Some years ago in this space, I wondered what it would be like if CEOs ran their companies according to Jesuit principles of leadership. The Jesuits call them Ignatian principles, after Ignatius Loyola, the soldier-turned-priest who founded the religious order 475 years ago. Jesuits operate a lot of universities, including several in Europe, and they…

Letters to the Editor

Letters to the Editor

The Minimum WageJohn Levesques final analysis column on the $15 minimum wage in the September issue was a nice article, but I think it would be more powerful if he gave more space to the effects on our economy of lower-middle-class and poor workers having more money in their pockets versus having that same money…

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