As startup hubs sprout across Gurugram, Bangalore Urban, and South Delhi, traditional corporate hiring is being turned upside down—and local professionals are seizing unprecedented bargaining power.
As hybrid work reshapes demand and rents stabilise across the capital, companies face a window to reassess their real estate strategy before the next cycle begins.
As bootstrapped startups flourish in Sector 62 and beyond, the city's job market is shifting away from traditional corporate hierarchies toward flexible, skills-based hiring.
As international visitor numbers surge to pre-pandemic highs, hospitality entrepreneurs and heritage curators are positioning themselves to capture a windfall.
From Middle East tensions to Venezuela's crisis, geopolitical shocks are reshaping everything from ingredient costs to tourist flows in the capital's booming F&B sector.
With traditional supply chains shifting and new bilateral agreements reshaping commerce, a clutch of Indian capital-based businesses are seizing the moment—and profits are already flowing.
As thousands of small business owners launch ventures from Karol Bagh to Greater Noida, they're creating a parallel economy that's luring talent away from traditional corporate roles.
As multinational firms and startups redesign their workspace footprints, a new class of commercial landlords in the capital's premium zones is reaping significant returns.
As foreign direct investment slows and unemployment ticks upward, Delhi's business leaders decode what the numbers mean for hiring and growth across the capital.
Rising inflation, geopolitical volatility, and strained household budgets are forcing Delhi's affluent investors to reassess portfolios and consumption patterns.
As visitor numbers surge, hospitality and service sectors are competing fiercely for talent, driving wage growth and forcing businesses across the city to rethink recruitment strategies.
Geopolitical instability across Venezuela, the Middle East and South Asia is already reshaping costs and logistics for manufacturers in Okhla, Naraina and beyond.
As landlord disputes and ingredient inflation squeeze margins across the capital's restaurants and cafes, industry operators warn of a potential contraction in the latter half of 2026.