Worklife Archives - NationNews https://nationnews.in/category/worklife/ Voice of The Nation Fri, 13 Dec 2024 09:45:13 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://nationnews.in/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/cropped-nationnews-signature-32x32.png Worklife Archives - NationNews https://nationnews.in/category/worklife/ 32 32 हैदराबाद के भगदड़ केस में अल्लू अर्जुन गिरफ्तार, पुष्पा 2 की स्क्रीनिंग के दौरान हुई थी घटना https://nationnews.in/%e0%a4%b9%e0%a5%88%e0%a4%a6%e0%a4%b0%e0%a4%be%e0%a4%ac%e0%a4%be%e0%a4%a6-%e0%a4%95%e0%a5%87-%e0%a4%ad%e0%a4%97%e0%a4%a6%e0%a4%a1%e0%a4%bc-%e0%a4%95%e0%a5%87%e0%a4%b8-%e0%a4%ae%e0%a5%87%e0%a4%82/ https://nationnews.in/%e0%a4%b9%e0%a5%88%e0%a4%a6%e0%a4%b0%e0%a4%be%e0%a4%ac%e0%a4%be%e0%a4%a6-%e0%a4%95%e0%a5%87-%e0%a4%ad%e0%a4%97%e0%a4%a6%e0%a4%a1%e0%a4%bc-%e0%a4%95%e0%a5%87%e0%a4%b8-%e0%a4%ae%e0%a5%87%e0%a4%82/#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2024 09:45:07 +0000 https://nationnews.in/?p=6924 हैदराबाद के भगदड़ केस में अल्लू अर्जुन गिरफ्तार, पुष्पा 2 की स्क्रीनिंग के दौरान हुई थी घटना पुष्पा 2 के एक्टर अल्लू अर्जुन को पुलिस स्टेशन ले गई। वहां पूछताछ के बाद गिरफ्तार ​कर लिया है। 4 दिसंबर को मूवी का प्रीमियर रखा गया था। इस दौरान भगदड़ में एक महिला की मौत हो गई थी। पुष्पा 2 एक्टर अल्लू अर्जुन को हैदराबाद पुलिस ने पूछताछ के बाद गिरफ्तार कर लिया है। थोड़ी देर पहले खबर आई थी कि पुलिस उनके घर पहुंची है और फिर एक्टर को गाड़ी में थाने ले जाते देखा गया। अब पुलिस ने खुद इस...

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हैदराबाद के भगदड़ केस में अल्लू अर्जुन गिरफ्तार, पुष्पा 2 की स्क्रीनिंग के दौरान हुई थी घटना

पुष्पा 2 के एक्टर अल्लू अर्जुन को पुलिस स्टेशन ले गई। वहां पूछताछ के बाद गिरफ्तार ​कर लिया है। 4 दिसंबर को मूवी का प्रीमियर रखा गया था। इस दौरान भगदड़ में एक महिला की मौत हो गई थी।

पुष्पा 2 एक्टर अल्लू अर्जुन को हैदराबाद पुलिस ने पूछताछ के बाद गिरफ्तार कर लिया है। थोड़ी देर पहले खबर आई थी कि पुलिस उनके घर पहुंची है और फिर एक्टर को गाड़ी में थाने ले जाते देखा गया। अब पुलिस ने खुद इस बात की पुष्टि की है कि एक्टर को इस मामले में गिरफ्तार किया गया है।

दरअसल मूवी रिलीज से एक दिन पहले प्रीमियर रखा गया था जिसमें एक्टर की एक झलक पाने के लिए फैंस बेताब हो गए और भगदड़ मच गई। इस हादसे में एक महिला की मौत हो गई थी। इस मामले को लेकर अल्लू अर्जुन पर FIR दर्ज की गई थी।
दरअसल मूवी रिलीज से एक दिन पहले प्रीमियर रखा गया था जिसमें एक्टर की एक झलक पाने के लिए फैंस बेताब हो गए और भगदड़ मच गई। इस हादसे में एक महिला की मौत हो गई थी। इस मामले को लेकर अल्लू अर्जुन पर FIR दर्ज की गई थी।
क्या है पूरा मामला?
चार दिसंबर की रात को पुष्पा 2 की रिलीज से पहले संध्या थिएटर में फिल्म की स्क्रीनिंग रखी गई थी। जहां एक्टर को देखने के लिए भारी भीड़ जमा हो गई। इसके बाद उन्हें कंट्रोल करने के लिए पुलिस ने लाठीचार्ज किया जिसकी वजह से भगदड़ मच गई। इस दौरान 35 वर्षीय महिला जिनका नाम रेवती बताया जा रहा की मौत हो गई थी। महिला का 13 वर्षीय बेटा भी हादसे में घायल हो गया था जिसे अस्पताल में भर्ती कराया गया था।
इसके बाद पुलिस ने पांच दिसंबर को महिला के परिवार द्वारा दर्ज कराई गई एक शिकायत के आधार पर अल्लू अर्जुन, उनकी सुरक्षा टीम और थिएटर प्रबंधन के खिलाफ केस दर्ज किया। एक्टर पर भारतीय न्याय संहिता (बीएनएस) की धाराओं 105 और 118 (1) के तहत चिक्कड़पल्ली पुलिस थाने में मामला दर्ज किया गया था।
अल्लू अर्जुन ने की थी FIR रद्द करने की मांग

वहीं इस मामले में एक्टर ने तेलंगाना हाई कोर्ट का दरवाजा खटखटाया था। एक रिपोर्ट के मुताबिक,सुपरस्टार अल्लू अर्जुन ने बुधवार को तेलंगाना हाई कोर्ट में याचिका दर्ज की थी। इसमें उन्होंने महिला की मौत के मामले में उनके ऊपर दर्ज हुई FIR को रद्द करने की मांग की थी। उन्होंने याचिका पर सुनवाई होने तक गिरफ्तारी समेत अन्य कानूनी कार्रवाई पर रोक लगाने का अनुरोध किया था।
अल्लू ने किया था मुआवजे का एलान
हालांकि इससे पहले भी एक्टर परिवार के प्रति संवेदना जता चुके हैं। उन्होंने मुआवजे की भी अनाउंसमेंट की थी। एक्स पर पोस्ट करते हुए अल्लू ने लिखा था,’हमारी संवेदनाएं पीड़ित परिवार के सदस्यों के साथ हैं। मैं उन्हें इस बात का भरोसा दिलवाना चाहता हूं कि वे इस दुख की घड़ी में बिल्कुल भी अकेले नहीं हैं।’ अभिनेता ने परिवार को 25 लाख रुपये देने की घोषणा भी की थी।

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The nearly 3 million rivers that weave across the world are experiencing rapid and surprising changes, https://nationnews.in/the-nearly-3-million-rivers-that-weave-across-the-world-are-experiencing-rapid-and-surprising-changes/ https://nationnews.in/the-nearly-3-million-rivers-that-weave-across-the-world-are-experiencing-rapid-and-surprising-changes/#respond Thu, 12 Dec 2024 23:27:03 +0000 https://nationnews.in/?p=6868 The nearly 3 million rivers that weave across the world are experiencing rapid and surprising changes, with potentially drastic implications for everything from drinking water supplies to flood risks, according to a new study. Scientists mapped the flow of water through every single river on the planet, every day over the past 35 years, using a combination of satellite data and computer modeling. What they found shocked them. Nearly half of the world’s largest downstream rivers — 44% — saw a drop in the amount of water flowing through them each year, according to the research published Thursday in the...

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The nearly 3 million rivers that weave across the world are experiencing rapid and surprising changes, with potentially drastic implications for everything from drinking water supplies to flood risks, according to a new study.

Scientists mapped the flow of water through every single river on the planet, every day over the past 35 years, using a combination of satellite data and computer modeling. What they found shocked them.

Nearly half of the world’s largest downstream rivers — 44% — saw a drop in the amount of water flowing through them each year, according to the research published Thursday in the journal Science.

Rivers such as the Congo, Africa’s second largest river, the Yangtze, which weaves through China, and South America’s Plata saw significant declines, said Dongmei Feng, the study’s lead author and a hydrology professor at the University of Cincinnati.

Previous studies have tended to focus on water flows through only the biggest rivers and produce results limited to specific locations at specific points in time, said Colin Gleason, a study co-author and a professor of civil and environmental engineering at UMass Amherst.

The methods used in this research allowed them to look “everywhere all at once,” he told CNN. While this may not yet give the local precision of other studies, “we think this is maybe the most accurate map of river flow ever made,” he said.

Gleason’s conclusion: “Holy cow, the rivers of the world are a lot different than we thought.” Some are changing by 5% or 10% a year, the report found. “That’s rapid, rapid change,” he said.

Significant decreases in downstream rivers mean less water is available on the largest parts of many of the planet’s rivers, the report noted. This translates to less freshwater for people to drink, to water crops and to sustain livestock.

Slower flows also mean rivers have less power to move sediment, made up of dirt and small rocks. This has big impacts further downstream as sediment is vital to build river deltas, which provide natural protection against sea level rise.

For the smallest rivers, many of which are affected by increasing ice and snow melt as the world warms, faster flows can have some positive impacts, such as providing nutrients to fish and helping with their migration.

But it also causes problems. Faster flow may “throw an unexpected wrench” in hydropower plans in areas such as the Himalayas as more sediment is transported downstream, potentially clogging up infrastructure.

The next step is to unpick exactly why these river flows are altering so rapidly and work out how to respond.

“There is a direct link between human activity and the changes to our life-giving water cycle,” Cloke told CNN. Protecting rivers means burning far fewer fossil fuels, adapting to changes already locked in and responding to knock-on impacts of human actions, such as altering river channels and building on flood plains, she added.

“Rivers are dynamic and beautiful beasts,” Cloke said, “and humans should never take them for granted or squander the resources they provide us with.”

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Chandigarh Sector 17 is a popular commercial and entertainment hub, known for: https://nationnews.in/chandigarh-sector-17-is-a-popular-commercial-and-entertainment-hub-known-for/ https://nationnews.in/chandigarh-sector-17-is-a-popular-commercial-and-entertainment-hub-known-for/#respond Fri, 11 Oct 2024 00:05:59 +0000 https://nationnews.in/?p=4647 Chandigarh Sector 17 is a popular commercial and entertainment hub, known for:Shopping centers like Neelam Cinema and Sahara MallRestaurants and cafes serving diverse cuisinesNightlife with bars, pubs, and discosCentral Plaza for community eventsConnectivity to major city areasWould you like more information? Chandigarh Sector 17 is a popular commercial and entertainment hub, known for:Shopping centers like Neelam Cinema and Sahara MallRestaurants and cafes serving diverse cuisinesNightlife with bars, pubs, and discosCentral Plaza for community eventsConnectivity to major city areasWould you like more information?

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Chandigarh Sector 17 is a popular commercial and entertainment hub, known for:
Shopping centers like Neelam Cinema and Sahara Mall
Restaurants and cafes serving diverse cuisines
Nightlife with bars, pubs, and discos
Central Plaza for community events
Connectivity to major city areas
Would you like more information?

Chandigarh Sector 17 is a popular commercial and entertainment hub, known for:
Shopping centers like Neelam Cinema and Sahara Mall
Restaurants and cafes serving diverse cuisines
Nightlife with bars, pubs, and discos
Central Plaza for community events
Connectivity to major city areas
Would you like more information?

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How billion-dollar store makeovers are taking on the ‘retail apocalypse’ https://nationnews.in/how-billion-dollar-store-makeovers-are-taking-on-the-retail-apocalypse/ https://nationnews.in/how-billion-dollar-store-makeovers-are-taking-on-the-retail-apocalypse/#respond Thu, 07 Mar 2024 16:42:06 +0000 https://nationnews.in/?p=54 Retailers from JCPenney to Tiffany & Co are funnelling huge sums into store renovations. They’re hoping massive makeovers will drive shoppers to spend. A At JCPenney stores across the US, shoppers may notice a fresh paint smell, better lighting and shiny new signage – with even more improvements planned for the coming months. Centralised checkout counters are replacing registers once spread across multiple departments, and posters promise a “new and improved shopping experience” once the remodels are complete. Change is afoot at the retailer, and not just in the form of upgraded carpet (though that, too, is on the list)....

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Retailers from JCPenney to Tiffany & Co are funnelling huge sums into store renovations. They’re hoping massive makeovers will drive shoppers to spend.

A

At JCPenney stores across the US, shoppers may notice a fresh paint smell, better lighting and shiny new signage – with even more improvements planned for the coming months. Centralised checkout counters are replacing registers once spread across multiple departments, and posters promise a “new and improved shopping experience” once the remodels are complete. Change is afoot at the retailer, and not just in the form of upgraded carpet (though that, too, is on the list).

The updates are part of a $1bn (£808m) investment the company announced in late August – a pricey effort to reinvigorate the brand following a high profile 2020 bankruptcy and subsequent restructuring. The funds will be partly dedicated to slicker technology and improved e-commerce features, but much of the focus remains on JCPenney’s more than 650 physical stores. 

As a numbers game, this makes sense for the American department store chain: brick-and-mortar sales account for about 70% of the company’s revenue, so enticing people to keep making those in-person trips will be crucial to recovery.

Beyond that, in surveys and focus groups, shoppers continue to emphasise the importance of stores, says Katie Mullen, JCPenney’s chief customer officer. “Our customer tells us that they care about the store environment,” she says. “They tell us that they care about product availability, and they tell us that they care about inspiration.”

JCPenney is among the companies doubling down on their retail presences, for many different reasons. It may be surprising amid the recent narrative, in which experts and shoppers alike have declared once-thriving malls dead due to retailers’ losing battles against Amazon, economic challenges, demographic shifts and better-managed competition. Indeed, vacant storefronts across the US have been converted to apartment complexes, pickleball courts, medical centres, coworking spaces and entertainment venues.

But while these trends paint a bearish picture of the future of traditional physical retail, some companies are making moves that suggest they still see in-store shopping as an opportunity for growth. Their strategies differ, but each are catering to what consumers say they want – and need.

Revamping forgotten stores

In-person shopping hasn’t stopped, but it has slowed down. About 78% of global retail sales occurred offline in 2022, down from 85% in 2019. And amid the widespread growth of online shopping, especially throughout the past few years, brick-and-mortar stores have become an afterthought for many consumers. This behavioural transition has meant many middle-market retailers closed doors and tightened purse strings amid frenzied efforts to create glossy, easy-to-use e-commerce portals. It came at the cost of maintaining an inviting in-store experience.

But now, companies are pouring money back into neglected stores – and they’re investing in more than just repairs. Across the US, retailers in all sectors are snapping up leases and placing big bets on brick-and-mortar. At the end of the second quarter of 2023, just 4.8% of all retail space in the country was available for lease, according to a report from commercial real estate information company CoStar, which noted the US retail space market was “at its tightest level on record”.

What retailers are doing with that space is what sets today’s approach apart from past endeavours. Yes, they’re making sure the storefronts shine – but they’re also building different kinds of physical spaces than they have in decades past. That’s because consumer preferences have changed, and in many cases, they have even become more demanding.

“Consumers are looking for fast and easy checkout. They’re looking for retailers to have the products they want in stock when they make the trip to the store,” says Michael Brown, a partner and Americas retail leader at the global strategy and management consulting firm Kearney. “They’re expecting a little bit more technology to help them navigate stores’ assortments and aid their shopping experience, but not necessarily to just replace it.”

Saks is pouring $250m to $270m (£202m to £218m) into upgrading its Fifth Avenue flagship, with features like a photogenic Rem Koolhaas-designed escalator, scaled up handbag department and dedicated shop-in-shops for brands like Alexander McQueen and Burberry

Shoppers, many retailers have discovered, are hungry for holistic experiences that go beyond two-dimensional images on a tiny screen. Offline, brands can invite people to linger at cosy in-house cafés, court VIPs with invite-only events and offer personalized styling and tailoring services. They can also simply give customers a place to try on a new lipstick shade or compare bedding sets – a valuable enticement after one too many online shopping fails.

Happy, shiny stores

Retailers are trying a number of tactics to capture what people want in today’s shopping landscape. First, there are stores like JCPenney that are betting on operational and aesthetic upgrades to appeal to middle market shoppers who prefer the in-store experience: a kind of if-you-build-it-they-will-come approach.

Similarly, international fast fashion chain Primark is ramping up its expansion efforts stateside, opening its 21st US store in September, with the goal of scaling to 60 US stores (and 530 globally) by 2026. Along with expansive inventory, the company is also luring people into physical stores with ultra-discounted prices and a limited presence online.

Other companies are using their brick-and-mortar outposts as convenient hubs to complement their online storefronts and meet shoppers where they are. In contrast to the massive footprints of previous decades, Macy’s, Target and Bloomingdale’s are opening small format stores shops in urban centres and college towns that carry limited inventory selections. They come in at about a quarter of the size of the chains’ typical footprints. 

The model gives big-box retailers a way to stay connected with customers in places they couldn’t previously reach. With tailored assortments of fast selling products and opportunities for e-commerce add-ons like click-and-collect, they’re a popular and growing segment.

In the world’s luxury corridors, destination-worthy redesigns have become a differentiator. Saks is pouring $250m to $270m (£202m to £218m) into upgrading its Fifth Avenue flagship, with features like a photogenic Rem Koolhaas-designed escalator, scaled up handbag department and dedicated shop-in-shops for brands like Alexander McQueen and Burberry.

A few blocks north, Tiffany & Co reopened in April after a four year renovation that reportedly cost as much as a half-billion dollars. The iconic location, canonised in pop culture history by the film Breakfast at Tiffany’s, is now home to ten floors of big ticket artwork by artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Jenny Holzer, an elegant in-house restaurant and an Audrey Hepburn-themed “experience room”.

Last year, Tiffany parent company LVMH similarly upgraded Dior’s Avenue Montaigne flagship in Paris – which now includes a spa, rose gardens and a museum dedicated to the brand’s namesake designer. The company is banking on Tiffany’s similar overhaul to brighten this beacon: more than two million people are expected to visit the flagship this year, many of whom will be drawn to its splashy exhibitions and cultural attractions as much as its diamond rings.

Experiential considerations are also at the forefront of the reinvention of Toys R Us and Babies R Us. Under the guidance of their new owner, the brands – which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2017 and liquidated more than 700 stores – have recently opened flagships at the American Dream complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The stores are significantly smaller than previous iterations, and feature a host of new experiential elements, such as a stroller testing track, parenting classes and a nursery design centre in Babies R Us. At Toys R Us, shoppers can find a two story slide and ice cream parlour. 

Ultimately, if retailers can convince customers to shop both online and in stores, they can reap significant rewards in terms of sales and loyalty. At Saks, a recent push drove a 26% increase in cross-channel shoppers. Among this segment, there was a 19% increase in orders per customer and a 9% increase in average order value.

Gold or gamble?

One unifying factor among stores that are defying the so-called “retail apocalypse” is a commitment to standing out and adapting to what shoppers want, especially as their dollars are not going as far. But that doesn’t mean people are going to stop shopping: “When we enter a downturn, the consumer is still going to spend. Spending doesn’t fall off 100%,” says Brown.

Indeed, retail sales have remained relatively strong as consumers draw on their savings and charge purchases to credit cards. For businesses, this scenario presents both a challenge and an opportunity. “Retailers can’t sit back and just look for a tide that’s going to raise everybody’s boats,” he says. “They have to really make sure that they’re stepping out there and doing something different and new to grab the share they can get.”

Of course, heaping precious capital into store improvements is a gamble for any company – after all, these investments come with trade-offs. For instance, in JCPenney’s case, if it goes after younger audiences, it risks alienating its older base; but if it sticks with what it knows, it might compromise future growth. Likewise, spending on upgrades now may mean sacrificing short-term profitability, but hopefully, these investments will pay dividends down the road.

These are the decisions every retailer today must face, says Brown. “Are they going to improve their supply chain? Their online experience? Their in-store experience? It’s a matter of choices, and they’re choosing the things that they can and can’t afford to do at any given time.”

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