While everyone's crying at wall street silicon valley is going to take over. Companies like Google (now Alphabet Ltd) are now branching into the things that wall street investment banks do. They will take over wall street
But of course companies like Google and Apple have "modern" faces and redditors and other faggots won't protest them.
Im an undergrad accounting student, GPA 2.7 3rd yeat So a couple of weeks ago, I won a case competition at a Big4 in Cyber Risk and they want me to apply for a job in their cyber risk division. apart from winning the case comp, I dont know jack shit about cyber risk. should I ask them to refer me to a internship/job in accounting? Should I take a internship/job as a cyber risk analyst or smt insread?
Ok Biz I have a few degree questions and I realized that you guys give honest, straightforward advice. What degree is more practical and offers more security, an accounting degree from a mid tier Uni, or a finance degree from a mid tier Uni? Also, what are the job prospects like for both majors when you consider they both were granted from a mid tier university? Thanks in advance!
I live in a small rural town, we have 4 fast food burger places, 1 franchise fried chicken place, 2 hole in the wall greasy spoon carry out places serving frozen stuff, 1 greasy spoon type eat in place, 2 pizza joints, 1 Chinese, 2 Mexican restaurants, 1 bbq shack that is open 3 days a week im guessing the population is around 15,000... I have had a ideal for sometime now to open a small deli style shop with maybe a couple tables inside but aimed mostly at take away customers, I would like to offer smoked beef, pork, chicken or turkey, as my base meats, and then offer your choice of meat on a nice quality bun, or in a gyro, and have a selection of maybe 5 or 6 deli style sides for example potato salad, cole slaw, macaroni salad, cauliflower salad, broccoli casserole, and maybe pie by the slice, and also a small selection of cold cuts My question for /biz/ especially for restaurant owners or workers what do yo think if would ruffly cost to produce a serving of this im guessing about 4oz of meat per sandwich, and what could I realistically expect people to pay for it... these are cost I have been able to come up with help me wit ones I've left out >food >disposable containers/ utensils/bags >utilities >labor (1) person
I should preface this by saying that I'm all in favor of a boost to minimum wage. In my state alone, $7.25/hr certainly isn't enough to live on and I wouldn't mind seeing a change. But why not to something more reasonable, like $9-10/hr? Going from $7 to $15 overnight seems like a huge jump. I'm no economist, so I acknowledge everything I'm about to say is probably going to sound incredibly stupid, but I guess that's why I'm posting here.
The way I see it:
John and his co-workers at the same fast food restaurant are paid $7.25 an hour and can barely afford to pay the rent on their apartments, feed their families, keep the lights and water turned on, etc. A federally-mandated raise suddenly means their paychecks double each month, but wouldn't that mean that eventually, rent, food, and utilities would too? After all, "the top" who not only pays the salary of "the bottom" must provide those utilities and goods as well, and the difference has to be made up somewhere.
Additionally, how does this effect Jacob, who pre-wage increase, was ALREADY earning $15/hr at his office job? Will he get a pay raise? Will his rent go up? Will he eventually struggle just as John did? Would it be appropriate for him to ask for a raise, as he now finds himself technically earning minimum wage for a job he's been doing for 5 years?
Should I sell textbooks from my high school on ebay if they're stamped with the name of the high school? Can I get charged for this. I graduated last year and never handed my books back.