American fast-food chains have become an unlikely source of female employment and empowerment in India, a country where traditionally most women are kept from working outside the home.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Uber is making a big push in India, but finding drivers is a challenge in a country where knowing how to operate a car and a smartphone is a rare talent.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
The U.S. Navy said it once again will let enlisted sailors use traditional job rating titles, an about-face by top leaders who wanted to scrap a system as old as the Navy itself but who faced pushback from sailors world-wide.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Hospital patients treated by female physicians had a small survival edge over those with male doctors, a new study of more than 58,000 physicians found.
National soul-searching over officer shootings has obscured a routine reality for cops—the threat of violence is often just behind a door, and for some of them the trauma can leave lasting personal damage.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Kroger is offering early retirement to 2,000 corporate employees, in an effort to cut costs amid stiff competition from more stores and online merchants stocking food.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
A long trail of empirical evidence shows that increased productivity brought about by automation and invention leads to more wealth, cheaper goods and more jobs, writes Christopher Mims.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Founder Ren Zhengfei’s intense style looms large at world’s No. 3 smartphone maker, where employees are rewarded for things like forgoing vacations and overtime.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Pilots at Delta Air Lines ratified a new four-year labor contract that contains big raises and retains the aviators’ lucrative profit-sharing formula, reversing widespread rejection of an earlier proposed pact in 2015.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
The Remote Year program that plucks employees from their work environment and sends them on a round-the-world trip, as they work remotely for jobs based thousands of miles away.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Joshua Reeves, CEO of Gusto, has begun shadowing employees to learn nitty-gritty details of all the work that goes on at the company. He learns about the job, helps with some tasks, and brainstorms new approaches.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
The financial pros who specialize in assigning a valuation to intangible corporate assets, such as patents and trademarks, don’t have a credential that attests to their experience and training. That’s about to change.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
National accreditors are getting tough and telling law schools to better prepare students for legal practice or risk losing their accreditation.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Notre Dame heads the list, followed closely by Georgetown, of the top Catholic schools in the WSJ/THE College Rankings.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Ralph Lauren’s new CEO, formerly at Old Navy, hopes to revive the company by closing stores, trimming management and reducing discounts.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Former Marine Scotty Bob Morgan jumps off mountains and out of helicopters in experimental nylon suits that allow daredevils to maneuver in the air; ‘you don’t want to be the error.’
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Raj Nagra, international bartending competition judge and brand ambassador for Bombay Sapphire, never travels without a pepper grinder and an Hermès tie.
Ralph Gardner Jr. views (and covets) architecture critic Paul Goldberger’s impressive collection of souvenir building models.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Chef Michel Nischan is rarely far from his acoustic-electric guitar, even when at work.
Sin City visitors show increasing interest in shows before sunset, where the tickets are cheaper, everyone’s sober, and the jokes involve guinea pigs.
Content engaging our readers now, with additional prominence accorded if the story is rapidly gaining attention. Our WSJ algorithm comprises 30% page views, 20% Facebook, 20% Twitter, 20% email shares and 10% comments.
Want to be your own Boss?
Find opportunities in our business and franchise databases.
Hello
Your question to the Journal Community Your comments on articles will show your real name and not a username.Why?
Create a Journal Community profile to avoid this message in the future. (As a member you agree to use your real name when participating in the Journal Community)