Mountain View
Cincinnati Business Courier
Local company with 90-year legacy inks acquisition, expands C-suite
STORY HIGHLIGHTS<\p> A Cincinnati business with a more than 90-year legacy has wrapped its second acquisition deal in two years under new ownership. And the company has expanded its C-suite in lockstep as it looks to expand further in the market.<\p>
Arizona firm plans huge Cincinnati expansion amid 'explosive' growth
STORY HIGHLIGHTS<\p> An Arizona company that chose Greater Cincinnati for a second location in 2023 following a national search now expects to triple its local presence amid huge volume growth. <\p>
Five things you need to know today, and there are good surprises
Good morning, Cincinnati! Do you have your candy ready for Halloween night? And am I the only one who picks candy to hand out on All Hallows' Eve based on what I'd like to eat if there are leftovers? Our five stories you need to know might not be as sweet, but they're definitely more intellectually nutritious.<\p> Hit Promotional Products will build an 800,000-square-foot facility in Fairfield, Brian Planalp reports. The move will double Hit Promotional's current footprint and add 100 jobs.<\p>
Workers are burned out, and one group of employees is feeling it most
The last few years haven’t exactly been stress-free, and it's left a majority of frontline workers with a sense of burnout.<\p> New research from workforce-management company UKG and consultancy Workplace Intelligence shows that 75% of nearly 13,000 frontline workers from around the world say they feel burned out. That response was highest among Gen Z workers, with 83% of those frontline workers reporting a sense of burnout.<\p>
Landsman's opponent shifts position on key campaign issue
STORY HIGHLIGHTS<\p> Two years ago when he filled out Cincinnati Right to Life’s campaign survey for his Ohio Senate campaign, Orlando Sonza answered “yes” to a question of whether he favored federal legislation “to ban abortion-on-demand from fertilization to birth.” <\p>
Commercial foreclosures rise as lenders approach 'inflection point'
Commercial foreclosure activity across the nation crept up last month despite more positive sentiments overall across the commercial real estate industry.<\p> Foreclosure activity on U.S. commercial properties rose in September from the month prior, to 695, according to Attom Data Solutions LLC. The property data firm's analysis includes the total number of commercial properties with at least one foreclosure filing entered into its Data Warehouse during the month. It doesn't distinguish property types or sectors.<\p>
Cincinnati Business Courier
8K+
Posts
1M+
Views
The Cincinnati region's source for local business news, breaking news alerts, newsletters, business intelligence and local business networking. An American City Business Journals publication.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.