Thandi Khumalo's boutique tourism collective is turning neighbourhood storytelling into a multimillion-rand business that's putting Johannesburg on the global travel map.
From currency volatility to shipping delays, entrepreneurs in Sandton and Braamfontein are learning that what happens in Venezuela, Iran and Pakistan lands squarely on their doorstep.
Rising visitor numbers and foreign investment in hotels and attractions signal confidence in the city's recovery, but economists warn the gains remain fragile without sustained infrastructure spending.
As hybrid work reshapes demand and Sandton faces stiff competition from emerging nodes, commercial property players are adapting strategies to stay ahead.
As skills shortages deepen and remote work reshapes hiring patterns, employers across the city face a critical moment to adapt recruitment strategies or risk losing talent.
As the city's retail and food sectors recover from pandemic disruptions, a homegrown success story in fine-casual dining is setting the template for others to follow.
While ordinary residents struggle with soaring petrol and food prices, savvy investors and fintech platforms are capturing billions in a rapidly expanding financial services sector.
As geopolitical tensions reshape supply chains and currency volatility peaks, local businesses must act fast to protect margins and explore new markets.
As tech talent and venture capital converge on the city's rejuvenated core, early movers in Joburg's startup ecosystem are building empires while the window of opportunity remains wide open.
As hybrid work reshapes demand and interest rates bite, commercial property in South Africa's economic hub is entering a period of selective opportunity and hard-nosed reality.
From Sandton's trading floors to Soweto's retailers, geopolitical tensions and supply chain upheaval are forcing local companies to rethink strategy and pricing.
As manufacturing output shifts and foreign direct investment patterns evolve, entrepreneurs in Braamfontein and beyond must decode the signals shaping their survival and growth.
A Johannesburg startup founder is proving that transformative innovation doesn't require Silicon Valley—it requires grit, local insight, and a willingness to solve Africa's most urgent problems.
Rising tensions in the Middle East, currency volatility and shifting trade patterns are forcing Joburg's entrepreneurs and consumers to rethink spending and investment strategies.
Supply chain disruptions, currency volatility and geopolitical tensions are forcing local hospitality businesses to rethink pricing, sourcing and expansion plans.
As South Africa's renewable energy sector accelerates, a skills shortage is opening doors for those who've retrained—and employment agencies are racing to match them with six-figure opportunities.
As venture capital floods into Johannesburg's startup ecosystem, early movers in the city's digital heartland are cashing in—but the rapid transformation is reshaping neighbourhoods faster than regulation can keep pace.
Operators across the city's dining and shopping precincts grapple with electricity tariffs, wage pressures, and changing spending patterns as margins shrink.