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What you get with BusinessMirror?
YOU get the “best-looking,” best edited front page, with top news in business and finance and, yes—even political news with an impact on the pocket—going hand-in-hand with newsfeatures that present the trends here and abroad way in advance.
The front-page signature teaser atop the masthead sums up with amazing visuals the day’s offering in “Perspective,” that unique page that gives readers a front seat to the day’s biggest developments here and abroad, either as a raging issue debated in symposium type; or an investigative newsfeature; or an in-depth look at breaking news, sometimes just before it even happens—all to provide a clearer, broader understanding of the news.
Cutting-edge reportage comes from a staff of veteran reporters, correspondents and photographers; their work in tandem with the output of such respected news organizations as Bloomberg, Associated Press, the Washington Post-Los Angeles Times News Service, and the New York Times News Service.
Here at home, it is in a content-sharing partnership with the respected ANC news channel of ABS-CBN.
The collaboration with global partners also allows it to give readers exclusive treats such as the “Monday Morning” service featuring short, practical advice to businessmen, from Harvard Business School; and the “Winning” column of former General Electric CEO Jack Welch and his wife Suzy, the former editor of Harvard Business Review.
BusinessMirror has its own homegrown “treats,” notably the monthly Jobs Advertising Monitor (JAM) by its topnotch Research Staff, which provides business, policymakers and planners, and labor timely information on how job ads signal where the economy is going—the data come with incisive, comprehensive analysis.
Companies and Markets
BEYOND the graphs and logos, there’s an exciting world where BusinessMirror takes the reader—a looksee at boardroom goings-on, at how companies big and small plot corporate strategy and investment moves, how markets respond to the political and social environment. Besides the news, some of the juicier details of these are found in columnist Margie Jao-Grey’s “Not Business As Usual.”
With its other columnists (Emeterio Sd. Perez, SEC Commissioner Jesus Martinez) BusinessMirror features in-depth discussions on regulatory policies that affect business—serving as a watchdog of the watchdog, giving timely commentary on the way government bodies deal with specific company issues, their implementation of policies that affect the very operations of companies, especially those that serve as drivers of the economy.
Key developments and issues in Shipping and Logistics may be found here as well.
Best practices of companies and significant achievements of those who propel the private sector are featured prominently in both the daily and its
monthly folio, “Personal Fortune.”
The Economy
In keeping with the ideal to provide an expansive view of the nation’s business, “The Economy” features not just the hottest news on the most important economic developments but their implications as well. And more, it alerts readers to economic trends, helping people plan. It provides a picture of what’s going on in the rest of the economy beyond the central business districts, what sectors are booming or failing and why, and what interesting developments are driving the regions.
Once a week it features the Department of Trade and Industry’s helpful Price Monitor on staples; and a column that provides consumers with actual cases, the regulations that govern them, and what to do.
Ah, Life!
The lifestyle and entertainment sections offer a full range of news as well as columns from some of the finest writers and experts in their own field: Frank Borja for Design and Space; Alice Guillermo for Art; Frederick Peralta for Fashion and Style; Jet Valle for Entertainment; Tito Genova Valiente for Culture and Academe; Ma. Stella Arnaldo for Relationships; Francine Medina-Marquez for Parenting; and Cricket Tantoco, sharing her interesting and incisive insights on anything about business and the business of life.
Sports
Find out why it’s the most-imitated sports format in town: watch athletes flying out of pages; read tightly written but complete stories capped by catchy headlines with that irrepressible wit; and enjoy columns written by the pros, but sans the self-conscious tone of “experts.”
BusinessMirror Sports veers away from the boxed-type and out-of-the-production-line sports pages typical of traditional dailies, focusing on A-sports ranging from football, golf, badminton, polo and equestrian to even rugby and cricket.
And, as readers would say, it’s the most “global-oriented” sports page in town—a treat to those who don’t have the time to be running after the TV news, or want to save on having to buy foreign publications for their updates.
Motoring
If Sports pages keep you on edge with excitement, the Motoring section, edited by multiawarded driver Popong Andolong, will send you literally rocketing off with its timely, complete, clear coverage of anything and everything in the car industry and on related issues such as road safety, traffic schemes, fuel R&D.
Special Sections
Besides Motoring, special sections on Infotech, Science, Environment and Properties also provide readers with timely, interesting information.
Opinion
From the eminent political analyst-satirist, Manuel Buencamino to John Mangun, the sought-after veteran watcher not just of the stock market but of the economy in general, BusinessMirror columnists complement the cutting-edge reporting with their timely commentary.
There’s also A-1 expertise: on intellectual property-rights issues, for instance, no less than the director general of the Philippine Intellectual Property Office, Atty. Adrian Cristobal Jr., does the explaining to BusinessMirror readers.
Besides the regular columnists (Raul Valino, Lito Gagni, Jonathan de la Cruz), rotating columns from prestigious partners round up the coverage: the Asian Institute of Management, the Registered Financial Planners Institute,
the professors from the De La Salle University School of Business, and noted Tax
lawyers and professors in the country.
Why, we even asked priests (Msgr. Sabino Vengco, Fr. Anton Pascual) to share their insights on the business of living good, worthy lives.
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