What's inside this month
Report on Business magazine: The November issue
Published
Last updated
Scroll through a gallery of features and articles from the new issue
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Our 72-minute conversation with retailing god Mickey Drexler
by Kyle Pope
The CEO of J. Crew, which just moved into Canada, is a retail deity. You can understand why we took such meticulous notes when we caught up with him in New York
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Every book has an ending
by Susan Krashinsky
How Yellow Media—that of the fat directory growing mould on your porch—managed to lose 97% of its value. But don't feel bad for Marc Tellier. He's got a plan to get it back
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The one and only Bob Dhillon
by Nathan Vanderklippe
When others look at apartment buildings, they see flaking paint, dented drywall, stained appliances. Calgary real estate wunderkind Bob Dhillon sees art—and he's on the hunt for his next sweet, profitable masterpiece.
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Nice place for a mall
by John Lorinc
The impending arrival of a Walmart has divided the residents of picturesque Salmon Arm, B.C. But SmartCentres' Mitch Goldhar, the man who paved the way for the Bully of Bentonville's march north, knows people will come around. They always do.
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Vital signs
by Shane Dingman
Good thing you got that new smartphone. It might just save your life
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Turbo charged
by Paul Waldie
Last May, Mark Chipman brought the Jets back to Winnipeg. Now his real work begins
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The fear factor
by Tony Keller
If you want to save a fairy, just clap your hands and believe. Could the same be true for markets?
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Withering heights
by Derek DeCloet
Canada's biggest tech giant is looking tired. Come to think of it, so are some American ones
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Shutting off the taps
by Eric Reguly
Read my lips: No new taxes... is a silly thing to say
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Dig deeper
by Fabrice Taylor
Yes, friends, gold is still golden. And if you've got the guts, gold producers could be too
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William Shatner: paper billionaire?
by Dave Morris
Did Captain Kirk's Priceline share turn him into a billionaire, at least on paper?
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Above and beyond
by Gordon Pitts
Goodbye, YYZ. Hello, ZZZs: Lloyd McCoomb bids farewell to the Greater Toronto Airports Authority
