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13 Apr 2021
SINGAPORE, 13 April 2021 (Tuesday) – The Business Innovations Generator (BIG) Incubation Programme offered by the Institute of Innovation and Entrepreneurship (IIE) at the Singapore Management University (SMU) organised its first Brand Hackathon of 2021 at The Greenhouse, located at the SMU Connexion. (Please refer to Annex A for more information about the seven startups that participated in Brand Hackathon.)
Held on 9 and 10 April 2021, the Brand Hackathon brought together business-to-consumer (B2C) startups and designers from the branding and creative industry in Singapore to co-create compelling brand stories, re-assess the startups’ marketing message and even packaging. Guided by Christina Lim, Curriculum Director of Brand Hackathon 2021, who is also the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) in Residence at SMU IIE, the Brand Hackathon is one of the many coaching platforms that BIG incubation programme offers.
Job prospects for fresh graduates from private education institutions (PEIs) continue to lag behind those from autonomous universities (AUs), the latest graduate employment survey released yesterday showed.. Read more at straitstimes.com.
In one email released to CBC, Realgoal a Canadian company based in B.C. confirms it provided accommodation and food for employees of its Chinese parent company, Heilongjian Realgoal Technology Co. Ltd., while they were in Canada for the installation and [commissioning of] equipment for Canada Royal Milk in Kingston.
In June and July of 2019, fire inspectors found a total of 88 workers living at the five addresses.
Handwritten notes from one visit say the inspector was told by someone at the property there were more people staying at these residences, but the first wave of workers had already left.
Inspectors determined the homes should be classified as rooming houses under the fire code and documented a range of fire and building code violations, including unsafe cooking facilities and partitioned sleeping quarters constructed without proper permits.
Posted by John Chan | Apr 12, 2021
Six months after abruptly calling off fintech giant Ant Group’s IPO and launching an investigation into Alibaba for antitrust violations, Chinese regulators have at last announced their penalties against the two affiliated companies. Over the weekend, the State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) announced a record 18.2 billion RMB ($2.8 billion USD) fine on Alibaba for its anticompetitive “two choose one” policy. But as the Wall Street Journal’s Keith Zhai reported,
China’s State Administration for Market Regulation said Saturday in Beijing that Alibaba punished certain merchants who sold goods both on Alibaba and on rival platforms, a practice that it dubbed “er xuan yi” literally, “choose one out of two.”