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  • House votes to delay overtime pay rule

    The House of Representatives has passed a bill that would delay by six months the effective start date of the Department of Labor's (DOL's) new overtime regulations.   The new rule will require employers to pay overtime to salaried workers earning less than $47,500 a year, double the current threshold of $23,660.      Five House Democrats joined 241 Republicans to support moving the rule's effective date from Dec. 1 to June 1.   
  • Target hopes to boost innovation through start-up pitches

    Creating an innovative customer experience is top of mind for Target. Now it needs the right solutions.   As a result, Target launched a new website that invites start-up companies to pitch ideas for new technology platforms that will help the big-box retailer enhance the customer experience in its stores and through its digital channels, according to an article in the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
  • Hiring for the Holidays: What Retailers Need to Succeed

    With the holidays right around the corner, retailers are already setting up for the biggest shopping season of the year. This year, retail revenue for the holidays is expected to surpass $1 trillion, compared to last year’s total of $626.1 billion.   One of the many holiday preparations brands are making to deal with this influx is bulking up in-store resources. At least 700,000 short-term retail jobs are assumed to be added across the U.S. this holiday season, helping brands fill gaps in-stores and on the back-end.  
  • Home improvement giant honored by EPA

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recognized The Home Depot for its eco-friendly freight transportation efforts.    The chain received a 2016 SmartWay Excellence Award for the fourth consecutive year for its contributions to cleaner, healthier air and reducing carbon emissions by hauling all freight with environmentally and energy efficient carriers.    
  • Costco Q4 profit tops Street

    Costco Wholesale Corp. reported a higher-than-expected profit for the fourth quarter.     In related news, shoppers opened 730,000 new credit card accounts since the Visa cards went live in June, Costco executives said on a conference call with analysts. (In June, Costco ended its longstanding relationship with American Express and switched to Visa.)    Net income rose to $779 million, or $1.77 per share, in the fourth quarter ended Aug. 28, from $767 million, or $1.73 per share, a year earlier.
  • Tech Bytes: Three steps to creating a ‘mobile’ pop-up

    The signs of fall are definitely upon us. The weather is finally dropping into the 70s on the east coast. Summer’s green leaves are slowly transitioning to rich autumn hues. You can’t escape “Pumpkin Spice.” And of course, the biggest sign of fall: Halloween pop-up stores.  
  • Trademark plans 82-acre mixed-use center in West Houston

    What Trademark did north of Houston with Market Street Woodlands (above) it intends to do in West Houston with an 82-acre mixed-use town center at the junction of I-10 and Mason Road.   “We believe this site is the next great opportunity in the country to develop a premier regional, mixed-use town center,” said Terry Montesi, CEO, Trademark Property Co. “There is a tremendous retail void in West Houston.”  
  • Global grocery e-commerce hits $48 billion

    E-commerce is on the rise in the grocery segement.    Online grocery sales are gaining momentum, reaching $48 billion in 12 months as of June 2016, according the “Future of E-commerce,” a report from Kantar Worldpanel. While the overall consumer packaged goods market remained flat, increasing just 1.6% over the 12-month period, online grocery sales are outpacing the market.  
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