Online Community Development
fromEntrepreneur
1 day agoHow We Sold Out Our Live Event in Just 60 Days
The future of entrepreneurship lies in creating meaningful in-person experiences rather than relying solely on virtual events.
Eight of the ten clubs in the top half of the Premier League table are owned by Americans. In the Championship, four of the eight clubs battling for promotion are U.S.-owned, including the Ryan Reynolds-Rob McElhenney Wrexham project.
The Council, chaired by Wade, aims to provide young players with financial advice to help them navigate their short careers. The initiative stems from the unpredictable nature of a professional sports career, with the majority of professional athletes announcing their retirement before they turn 35 and less than 2% of NCAA athletes turning professional.
This year, conference-goers traded pictures and videos of the US men's hockey party at the local club E11even on Monday night. The team flew in from the host country of the Winter Olympics, Italy, and left the next morning, providing a clean metaphor for the entire week: Miami is a getaway, not a home.
Turning skills into a fulfilling and profitable venture is a natural next step for active seniors. The transition offers a way to monetize years of dedication and hard work. Creating a business plan for a hobby allows for a low-stress entry into the market. You already understand the product or service better than most competitors.
The corner of Sunset Blvd. and Alpine Drive became a traffic nightmare. Tour buses made it a stop. Tourists and locals alike milled about, gawked and took pictures. The neighbors were incensed. The "renovation" performed by Sheik Mohammed al Fassi, then 28, and his wife made them the talk of the town.
Jeffrey Epstein used high-end real estate as a tool for social leverage, transforming luxury properties into "social currency" to embed himself within elite global networks. Rather than treating real estate as a traditional investment, he used it to manufacture status and provide a venue for the cultivation of powerful relationships. Mechanisms of Social Leverage Property as Stature: Epstein's acquisition of high-profile properties, such as the Manhattan townhouse at 9 East 71st Street, served as a physical symbol of his wealth and "growing stature".
According to Thomas C. Corley's research, 76% of millionaires exercised for at least 30 minutes a day, four days a week. Yeah, exercise. Not exactly the secret formula you were expecting, right? Why movement matters more than you think I used to think successful people were too busy for the gym. Turns out, I had it backwards. They're successful partly because they make time for it.
Around the turn of the 21st century, the U.K. witnessed a dramatic surge in housing prices: the costs rose from four times peoples' annual earnings in 1995, to eight times by 2010. Homeowners subsequently enjoyed a wealth windfall, and it resulted in their kids receiving more housing wealth and higher-paying jobs, according to recent research from the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Lower-income renters, on the other hand, were faced with new affordability challenges.
Growing up outside Manchester, I thought everyone kept their tea bags to use twice. It wasn't until I was at university, sitting in a friend's kitchen in London, that I realized this wasn't normal. My friend watched in horror as I carefully squeezed out my used tea bag and placed it on a saucer for later. "What are you doing?" he asked, genuinely confused.
These brands specialize in just that: pieces created by hand to your exacting designs and specifications, and never to be replicated. Maybe you're looking for top-of-the-range headphones to match your jet. Or could it be a suit for a pirate-esque get together? Or even an engraved signet ring, depicting a favored holiday destination in full color? For all of the above and more, here's who Elite Traveler recommends.
According to an annual report from Oxfam, the world now has 3,000 billionaires. The figure is also soaring, the report shows: "In 2025, billionaire wealth increased three times faster than the average annual rate over the previous five years." To put the growth in perspective, the wealthiest individuals could have given $250 to every person in the world and still been $550 billion richer, based on the increase in their wealth from 2024 to 2025.
Like snow falling quietly overnight, wealth has a way of sneaking up: steadily increasing salaries, 401(k) contributions, stock options, rising home equity, inheritances. It accumulates while you're busy living. If your financial identity hasn't kept pace-understandably shaped more these days by inflating prices, competing tugs on your discretionary dollars, and that familiar feeling of " I'd be comfortable if I made more"-you're not alone.
On Monday, Coach launched a collection within The Sims 4, marking the first time a fashion brand has partnered with the video game in five years. All players will be able to access the new collection, which is free and features customizable items from Coach's ready-to-wear line, including its Tabby and Brooklyn bags, as well as decorative objects that can be used to craft Coach-inspired interiors through the game's build mode.
The street's ultra-luxury towers - from the first generation of supertalls west of Sixth Avenue that shaped the skyline, to mixed-use developments eastward 'driving the next phase of growth' - offer a dense concentration of cultural and lifestyle capital, paired with direct access to Central Park.
The difference between staying wealthy and losing it all isn't about making brilliant investment moves or having insider knowledge. After interviewing over 200 people for my articles, including everyone from startup founders to researchers studying wealth preservation, I've noticed something fascinating: Wealthy people who maintain their wealth make profoundly boring choices that most of us overlook. These aren't the sexy decisions that make headlines. They're the mundane, almost tedious habits that create an unshakeable foundation.
Ever notice how the people with the flashiest lifestyles often have the emptiest bank accounts? It's a strange paradox: those who look the wealthiest are sometimes the ones struggling most to make rent. I learned this lesson the hard way after being laid off during media industry cuts. Those four months of freelancing taught me something crucial about money that I wish I'd understood earlier.