Archive for the ‘Spend Page’ Category

The Wall Street Journal Finds A Subscription In Your Pocket

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Now that everyone’s addicted to their CrackBerry, it’s time to pay the suppliers.

  • Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and CEO of NewsCorp., announced on Tuesday that the company would start charging a fee for users of its Wall Street Journal mobile application.
  • The move was in response to a continued industry-wide struggle to raise money by selling advertising and subscriptions to the newspaper’s website.
  • The new weekly access fees will affect most users of the mobile application, which is available for BlackBerry, iPhone, and iPod Touch.

Facts & Figures

  • Mobile application access will be free for users who subscribe to both print and web editions of the Journal; non-subscribers will pay $2/week for access; print-only subscribers will pay $1/week.
  • In a similar move, The New York Times recently asked its subscribers if they would pay a $2.50 monthly fee for Web access.
  • In terms of circulation, USA Today is the largest newspaper with 2.11 million subscribers; The Wall Street Journal is second with 2.08 million subscribers; the New York Times is third largest with 1.04 million.

Hidden taxes?

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

You wouldn’t think you could pay taxes without knowing it, but it actually happens all the time. So-called hidden taxes are taxes on goods and services that you, the consumer, end up paying for. They’re taxes that are charged before the product or service can be purchased, and the seller just adjusts for the tax by hiking up his or her prices. So the government gets the tax money, the seller fixes things so he or she can turn the same profit, and the consumer faces a bigger price tag in the end.

You aren’t aware of hidden taxes because they’re indirect – they can take the form of import or export taxes, sales tax, excise duties, value added tax, and more. What’s more, indirect taxes can be a sneaky way for government officials to raise revenue: if they raise, say, income taxes, everyone notices and complains, but if they raise indirect taxes, people still end up paying more, but it tends to slip under their radar.

However, some people don’t like this practice because they argue indirect taxes aren’t progressive – that is, they don’t take ability-to-pay into account the way income taxes do. If prices for consumer goods go up, that price hike is usually small change for the very rich, but for less wealthy individuals, a price increase on goods they need can make a sizable dent in their budget. For example, an added standard import tax on coffee impacts everyone who drinks coffee, rich or poor. So even though indirect taxes aren’t illegal or even truly hidden (the sellers who have to pay them can certainly see them), some people still consider them a way to increase their tax burden behind their backs.

Why can’t you buy Cuban cigars in the States?

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Currently in the U.S., it is illegal to buy, import, or sell cigars from Cuba. But, while cigars may be the most famous banned item, this law actually applies to any product from Cuba. The reason stems from a 1960 decision to impose a trade embargo on Cuba under President John F. Kennedy. The idea was to punish Cuba for hostile actions during the Cold War by denying it access to the enormous U.S. economy.

The embargo has been revised several times since its inception, but it hasn’t yet been lifted despite repeated calls for a free trade agreement from the business community. This embargo only applies to imports to the U.S., so American travelers will sometimes purchase Cuban cigars and other products in foreign countries and bring them back to America (although this is technically illegal).

A Seller’s Market is…

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

A seller’s market is a situation in which demand for a good or service is greater than the available supply, so the seller has more power to dictate the terms of sale, including price. Let’s say everyone in New York City wants to buy an orange (gotta get that Vitamin C), but only a few stores actually sell oranges. Those stores that do sell oranges are able to hike up the sale price because people who want to buy oranges have nowhere else to go to get their fix. This is a seller’s market because the stores can sell the oranges for whatever price they want, and people will still buy them.

The Black Market is…

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

The black market is the “marketplace” for anything that is illegal to buy or sell within a country. If you are buying something in a dimly-lit back alley, you are probably buying on the black market.

A Cartel is…

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

A cartel is a group of people or organizations in the same industry that work together to keep prices high so they can make more money. OPEC, for example, is an oil cartel. If any one of the member countries dropped their prices, people would flock to buy from that country, and the others would have to lower prices to compete. By all agreeing to keep their prices equally high, consumers don’t have a choice and all the members of the cartel make more profit.

An Import is…

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

An import is something that is brought into a country from another country. For example, true Champagne is only produced in the Champagne region of France, so if you want it and you live outside of France, you have to import it.

Lerival’s James & Dominique Discuss Furniture By Architects

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Lerival.com co-founders, James Coombes (27) and Dominique Gonfard (28) are two people from very different backgrounds: finance and architecture. Their shared passion for contemporary architecture led them to imagine a company that would expose today’s leading architectural talent to a wider audience. Their philosophy: If you can’t live IN a great piece of architecture, you should live WITH a great piece of architecture.

>>TILE brings you exclusive interviews from people doing great things in SPEND, GROW, and GIVE. To view more, click on TILEcasts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or someone you’d like to see interviewed? Let us know – just Ask TILE!

Exploring Fashion Trends with Randy Federgreen

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

randy-federgreen.png Randy Federgreen is a business advisor at Neiman Marcus and President at Bamford. He took some time (out of the middle of Fashion Week) to answer a few of our burning questions about luxury goods and the latest trends.

TILE: Where do trends start – on the street or the runway?
Randy:
It’s kind of a circle. The trends start on the street and on the runway. The street inspires the designers because the design teams are out on the streets of the major capitols – the shops and the boutiques of Paris, London, Milan, New York, and Tokyo. It comes from the street but then runways inspire the street as well. Really, the colors and the textures and the fabrications start even earlier because the mills spin and color the yarn and make the fabrics show at the yarn, fabric, and leather fairs. The design associates go to these fairs, and bring them back to the designers. Right now, they say it’s all about red but the reason is that 10 months ago the fairs may have been showing red so that all these design assistants who pulled the fabric to show the designers all pulled things being driven by the mills. That’s why there’s so much consistency in the market.

TILE: So, it’s really a chicken and egg scenario?
Randy:
It’s circular because the street inspires the designers and designers inspire the street. And then you have the mills and producers of the yarn that are really dictating colors, textures and patterns that you start seeing everywhere.

And if there’s something really hot, let’s say there’s a mill making a tweed that has a silver yarn running through it and several designers get inspired by it. Let’s say Armani picks it up, Prada picks it up, and Ralph Lauren picks it up, they all interpret it in their own different ways. Ralph might make a riding skirt, Armani might make a gown, and Prada might make a jacket and boots in it. Each designer puts their own handprints on it, but it’s the fabrics and yarns that run through all these different collections.

TILE: How is fashion dictated by the economy? Can fashion trends reflect the markets?
Randy: Yes, they say the length of a skirt tends to go down when business is bad. Today, watch sizes are getting smaller on men and women maybe to say enough with the excess, enough with the flash. The watch faces are getting smaller because people are getting more conservative and more tasteful. Watches were getting larger and larger for years (in the boom) and now we’re seeing a shift. This current fall season, we are seeing more conservative clothing for both women and men, it just feels right. You will see all shades of greys, dark purples, reds and of course, a lot of black. Going into spring, I expect you will see more feminine and soft fashions for her. You will see luxury brands lowering their prices and I expect that will get her out to shop.

TILE: How about purchasing behavior? Are people buying different items?
Randy: One of the trends is that a woman will spend more money for a few key piece in her wardrobe, like a Chanel jacket and wear it with a Theory trousers or a simple skirt. A new pair of Louboutins will certainly spice up a simple black suit or dress from last year. And she may wear a beautiful scarf from Hermes and throw it over a sweater from J. Crew. She’s certainly not buying the skirt, the jacket, and blouse from one designer anymore. She’s buying a few pieces. And I think that is a trend to stay because I think the head-to-toe dressing in one designer has become excessive. We won’t see those days again for a long time.

TILE: How does fashion inspire the way you live in your life?
Randy:
I think something new or something exciting added to someone’s wardrobe or home gives them a little boost, makes them feel happy, energized. Rarely do people go out and buy something new and think “God I look horrible in this.” Especially now, people get inspired by beautiful things because they’re really looking at them. That whole consumerism thing that was going on for so long where women would pick up a new pair of Manolo’s once a week – those weeks are gone. And that’s kind of been crippling to the industry but the reality is that it never should have been like that. Everyone is thinking through their purchases; whether you’re Amy Butte (CEO of TILE) or someone with a $40k a year assistant’s salary. You’re looking at every purchase you make whether you are shopping at Anthropologie buying a $180 dress or shopping at Chanel. Purchases are made out of emotion and necessity and you think about them before you buy.


TILE: How has the recession changed the modus operandi of stores?
Randy: Now, the biggest challenge and opportunity in the fashion business is to inspire men and women to come in and see something new. Designers have done a lot to realign their prices and to come up with new and exciting things. It’s now up to the stores to get the customers back. But stores have cut their budgets for things like marketing and advertising so far down that they really don’t have the luxury to do that kind of outreach anymore.


There is also far less inventory in the stores. A few years ago, if you wanted an Armani jacket and shirt there would be 2 on the floor and a dozen more in the back stockroom. Today there are 2-4 pieces on the floor in that jacket and that’s all. So, if a customer is holding off on a purchase and hoping – like before – that it will go on sale… well, there is not going to be that much to go on sale. It’s going to be like buying Christmas ornaments the day before Christmas and having the store be completely out of ornaments or going to buy a Halloween outfit on Halloween, and there is nothing left but candy corn, Dracula capes, bunny ears and a nurse uniform. I like the saying, “you snooze, you lose.”


TILE: What is the best piece of advice you’ve received in the fashion industry?
Randy:
Know who you are. You can’t be everything to everybody.

TILE: How about the best compliment?
Randy:
The best compliment I ever received was when Ralph Lauren told me I inspired him. I worked at Ralph for 22 years. That was one of the most memorable moments, which I will never forget.

>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. To read more, click on Ask the Experts in the TILE Library.

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Casualty Loss is…

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Casualty loss is the loss of property or money through damage, destruction, theft, or some other unforeseen calamity.