An expert from the Association for Consulting Expertise responds to a reader's question about how to keep pace in the new virtual working environment, especially when it comes to the day-to-day, personal interactions of a brick-and-mortar workplace.
After starting 20 years ago as its first staff attorney, she's now executive director of Maine’s only statewide immigration legal services organization. Despite the "increasingly unjust immigration system," she's also optimistic about the future.
With high demand and low overhead, the industry provides a reliable return on investment. Now more Mainers are getting into the business and developing more space, as more people look to store their "stuff."
Six experts take a look at what's on the horizon over the year ahead for Maine business real estate and development. The predictions confirm some trends, but also contain a few surprises.
The entry of JPMorgan Chase into southern Maine's retail banking market, will make the crowded field more crowded, but other banks have expansion plans of their own. And they include the use of bricks and mortar.
Like much office space, coworking sites are largely empty these days. Former members say they long for not only a place to do business, but the community and culture that came with it. It's not clear how long the coworkers will have to wait.
The Mainebiz roundup of businesses and businesspeople that have been making changes in recent weeks. Check out our compilation of new hires, promotions, accomplishments and more.
Cross Insurance and Bangor Savings Bank will share a building on the "best corner" in the town, an arrangement that's unusual for both businesses. In other construction news, a spring groundbreaking is expected for a vertical greenhouse in Westbrook.
Bank branches, warehouse space, multistory greenhouses, self-storage units, hotels, retail redevelopment, coworking spaces.
It’s not just home sales...