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  #1  
Old Posted Feb 23, 2017, 10:41 PM
the urban politician the urban politician is offline
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Yay. Fill those apartment and condo towers. More haute cuisine, more people to hail cabs, walk around in suits, to wait in line at the food truck, and to be buzzed at happy hour in the bars. Long live the central area boom
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  #2  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2017, 7:20 PM
Justin_Chicago Justin_Chicago is offline
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PartySlate raises $1.6 million

PartySlate, an online platform to connect event providers with people looking to plan weddings, meetings and celebrations, has raised another $1.6 million.

PartySlate, which is similar to home-building and decorating site Houzz, went live in May. Event vendors, such as photographers, caterers and venue providers, post photos of their work and profiles. Consumers browse the site looking for ideas and providers. More than 2,000 vendors have posted so far on the site, says CEO and co-founder Julie Novack.

The company has 12 employees, up from five a year ago. PartySlate has expanded from Chicago to Dallas, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Next up is New York. Novack hopes to be in a dozen cities by year-end. Based at 1871, PartySlate has participated in both WiSTEM, an incubator at 1871 for women-led tech companies, and Techstars Chicago, an accelerator at 1871.

Article: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/artic...es-1-6-million

Last edited by Justin_Chicago; Feb 24, 2017 at 7:42 PM.
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  #3  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2017, 12:10 AM
Justin_Chicago Justin_Chicago is offline
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Chinese maker of Skil tools moving North American headquarters to Naperville

The Chinese maker of Skil power tools will move its North American headquarters this spring from Grand Rapids, Mich., to Naperville, where it eventually expects to have about 200 workers, as part of its recently completed purchase of the Skil brands from Robert Bosch.

Chervon recently finalized its previously announced acquisition of Skil brands, which include power saws, from Germany's Robert Bosch Tool, whose North American headquarters are in Mount Prospect. The deal gives Chervon control over the Skil and Skilsaw businesses in North America. Terms weren't disclosed.

By May, Chervon will have more than 100 workers in Naperville, with nearly 40 moving from Bosch operations in Mount Prospect and others from Chervon in Grand Rapids as well as from small offices in Geneva and South Barrington.

Chervon eventually expects to have about 200 workers over the next few years in Naperville in a new 124,000-square-foot facility at 1203 E. Warrenville Road. The property had been built for a Swedish company that never moved into it. The employee counts also include new hires.

"With the acquisition of Skil, we felt it was wise to centralize functions, and after many years of consideration, Naperville and the Chicagoland area really moved to top of list for several reasons," including proximity to current Bosch and Chervon workers and access to an airport, universities and talent, Chervon Chief Marketing Officer Joe Turoff said. He said no tax breaks were requested or received.

Article: http://www.chicagotribune.com/busine...224-story.html
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  #4  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2017, 1:42 PM
Justin_Chicago Justin_Chicago is offline
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Hickory Farms HQ moving to Chicago

Hickory Farms, the seller of gift packages featuring summer sausage and cheese, is moving its headquarters to Chicago from Ohio as the 65-year-old company looks to add products and hire new employees.

The privately held company today will open a headquarters with 15 relocated employees at 311 S. Wacker Drive in the West Loop, CEO Diane Pearse said.

Hickory Farms is moving the corporate headquarters from Toledo, Ohio, where a smaller office will remain, she said.

The company has leased about 7,300 square feet at 311 S. Wacker, or enough room for about 50 employees, Pearse said. She declined to say how many employees Hickory Farms is expected to have long-term in Chicago, but said the lease includes options to expand as it makes new hires in Chicago.

Article: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/reale...ing-to-chicago


Outcome Health plans huge new HQ in River North

Outcome Health is increasing its headquarters space by six times with a nearly 400,000-square-foot office lease in River North, signaling that one of Chicago's fastest-growing companies is keeping its foot on the gas.

The health technology company, formerly known as ContextMedia, has leased almost 400,000 square feet in the former American Medical Association headquarters building at 515 N. State St., according to people familiar with the deal. That is about 70 percent of the space in the 29-story tower at 515 N. State St., which has 664,158 square feet, according to real estate data provider CoStar Group.

Article: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/reale...s-hq-expansion


Guaranteed Rate hiring nearly 300 in Chicago this year

Guaranteed Rate, the fast-growing mortgage lender whose name now adorns the Chicago White Sox' ballpark, is leasing more office space and creating 280 new jobs in Chicago this year.

The initiative is designed to give workers wanting to enter the mortgage field a decent-paying start in the business. The jobs, which will pay $50,000 to $75,000 to start, will train employees to become mortgage lenders, working to start in Guaranteed Rate's call center in Chicago.

In an interview, Guaranteed Rate CEO Victor Ciardelli III said he needs to more than double headcount in his company's call center to handle an increase in volume coming from the Internet.

Article: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/artic...cago-this-year
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Old Posted Mar 1, 2017, 1:55 PM
Justin_Chicago Justin_Chicago is offline
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AddStructure raises $1.4 million to bring voice search to more retailers

AddStructure, a Chicago startup building a voice shopping platform powered by machine learning, has raised $1.4 million in seed funding.

The company, which participated in Techstars’ inaugural retail accelerator, has been working with Target to launch a product that lets online shoppers search using natural language. AddStructure is working with Best Buy as well; the retail company also invested in the startup's seed funding round.

The funding will go to accelerating development of the voice shopping platform, which is the company’s fourth product targeted at e-commerce sites. Its other products are called Signal, Path and Scaffold, which all use machine learning to improve search, capture more organic traffic and structure-user generated content, respectively. The new platform doesn’t have an official name yet but is called “Conversational Commerce by AddStructure” for the time being.

Article: http://www.chicagotribune.com/bluesk...301-story.html
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  #6  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2017, 9:05 PM
the urban politician the urban politician is offline
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Great stuff. The Hickory Farms HQ move sounds like bigger news than it really is
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  #7  
Old Posted Mar 2, 2017, 1:47 AM
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Great stuff. The Hickory Farms HQ move sounds like bigger news than it really is
You know, it's a tiny company but there was that Crain's article a month or so back talking about just this sort of migration to Chicago from mid-sized metros.

There was a quote in this Crain's article describing how Chicago has exactly the logistical and talent edge they were looking for in transforming the company. That seems to be a common theme.

=======================

Now back to what gives me wood ... Chicago finance. CBOE, as of today, is the other big boy/girl in town having officially absorbed BATS. CME Group is the long time giant but I think that having another big-and-getting-bigger exchange in the Loop is good for both companies and Chicago as a whole.

Young graduates in finance and fin-tech now have more employment options in Chicago. The finance ecosystem just got a major boost. Plus CBOE just waded into the capital markets while CME is purely derivatives.

IFF the Chinese acquisition of CHX goes through, that could inject some much needed equities power into Chicago as well. That is still a little murky though.

Anyway, let's enjoy this bit of news:
CBOE reaches for new heights with $3.4 billion deal for Bats Global Markets

and another take:
Old School Trading Pits to Remain After High-Tech Exchange Deal
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  #8  
Old Posted Mar 2, 2017, 6:21 PM
Justin_Chicago Justin_Chicago is offline
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Farming tech firm picks larger office for new crop of hires

Farming technology firm Climate Corp. is moving to a larger Chicago office, where it plans to hire 40 to 60 employees in the next two years.

The San Francisco-based company aims to move by November to just over 21,000 square feet in the Fulton West office building under construction at 1330 W. Fulton Market, said Chicago office leader Corbett Kull.

Larger offices are part of rapid changes for an operation once known as 640 Labs, which Kull co-founded. 640 Labs was acquired by Climate Corp., a unit of St. Louis-based agriculture giant Monsanto, in 2014.

Article: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/reale...ng-adds-tenant
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  #9  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2017, 2:52 AM
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Short, sweet and rather nice.

Chicago's tech image is on the rise

Quote:
Chicago's reputation as a tech center is on the rise.

It ranked sixth among cities around the world among executives asked by KPMG to name three locations outside San Francisco/Silicon Valley that will be seen as leading technology innovation hubs in the next four years.

Shanghai ranked first, followed by New York, Tokyo, Beijing and London. Also tied with Chicago were Washington, D.C., and Berlin, followed by Tel Aviv and Boston. That's a big step up from last year's survey, when Chicago was tied for 18th.
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  #10  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2017, 2:55 PM
emathias emathias is offline
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Short, sweet and rather nice.

Chicago's tech image is on the rise
From tied for 18th to tied for 6th, not bad!
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  #11  
Old Posted Mar 7, 2017, 9:52 PM
bnk bnk is offline
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Chicago ranked #1 again at Site selection once again by a large margin.


This news has been out for days but no one is tooting the horn.



http://www.lawndalenews.com/2017/03/...secutive-year/

Chicago Ranked Top Corporate Metro for Fourth Consecutive Year

Posted by Editor on March 2, 2017 in Business | Comments Off on Chicago Ranked Top Corporate Metro for Fourth Consecutive Year




http://siteselection.com/issues/2017...ns-of-2016.cfm

Sorting the 2016 data by company name reveals that Accenture, for instance, has chosen to invest in locations in three Tier-1 Top 10 metros: No. 1 Chicago; No. 7 Washington, DC; and No. 8 Columbus, Ohio. Amazon ... well, they seem to be investing everywhere, don’t they? But everywhere in this case means multiple investments apiece in Chicago, No. 2 Dallas-Ft. Worth, No. 4 New York and No. 5 Cincinnati.



The Windy City keeps coming up.
There are reasons for that, says Matthew T. McGuire, who served under President Obama as the US executive director at The World Bank Group. A financial services executive from Chicago, he previously served as director of the Office of the Business Liaison at the U.S. Department of Commerce, which under Chicago native Obama was headed by a third Chicagoan, Penny Pritzker.

World Business Chicago worked with more than 180 companies in 2016, in coordination with the City, bringing nearly 9,000 jobs to Chicago. McGuire says Chicago is a great example of a competitive global city, due to such factors as its central location, a strong cadre of universities, hard-wired digital economy infrastructure from the days of the first Mayor Daley, and forward-looking transport infrastructure harkening to the city’s role as “hog butcher for the world,” in poet Carl Sandburg’s memorable phrase.

“It’s probably my favorite city,” McGuire says. As for its secret, “There is something to the agglomeration of young, talented, entrepreneurial people” in a place where they “want to be around other people doing exciting things.”

No wonder investment research firm PitchBook found early this year that the city led even the Bay Area and New York when measured by percentage of profitable startups.

...

Diversified and Dependable

In remarks at last year’s TrustBelt conference in his city, Mayor Rahm Emanuel offered ballast for those remarks, noting not only the metro area’s 16 four-year schools (more than any city but Boston) but its steady flow of talent from Big 10 universities throughout the Upper Midwest. “Every year and summer, like clockwork, around 140,000 freshly minted four-year degrees land in Chicago to start their career,” he said. Moreover, the city’s community colleges, which have about 115,000 enrolled, have been revamped to add more industry-sector specialization — for example, healthcare at Malcolm X, transportation and logistics at Harvey — to keep companies of all sizes supplied with the workforce they need.

Analysis released in February by Peter Bernstein, vice president at RCF Economic & Financial Consulting, Inc., shows that the Chicago area and the rest of Illinois both suffered substantial job losses during the Great Recession, but only the Chicago area has recovered its lost jobs, and in fact the area reached an all-time high in employment in 2016. Greater Chicago accounts for 85 percent of all private sector jobs added in the state of Illinois since the Great Recession.


Emanuel also noted the metro area’s leading position when it comes to economic diversification. “No one sector of our economy drives more than 13 percent of our employment,” he said. That’s why analyses from sources such as IBM, The Economist and A.T. Kearney keep ranking the city at the very top in terms of competitiveness and FDI attractiveness. He pointed to the four Ts: talent, transportation, technology and transparency. That final element has been crucial as the city has dug itself out of a structural deficit over the past five years, resolving pension fund revenue streams while still growing the economy. “Businesses small, medium and large want to see certainty, but also see the public sector use its political will to address its challenges,” Emanuel said. “We have not ever shrunk from it. Denial is not a long-term strategy. Our strategy is to double down on the key elements of our economic strengths while addressing the challenges.”

Parochialism isn’t a long-term play either. The stakes are too big.

“For 30 or 40 years, it was Chicago versus the suburbs.” he said. “It’s not true — it’s metro Chicago versus metro Los Angeles, metro Tokyo and metro Berlin.”

....








Texas brags though

http://www.bizjournals.com/houston/n...-expanded.html

Texas top state for number of new, expanded corporate facilities for fifth consecutive year

Mar 6, 2017, 1:05pm CST
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  #12  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2017, 5:34 AM
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Is Site Selection a legit source? Seems like Chicago always is on the top, yet it doesn't seem like we are leading in terms of job growth overall. I mean... I want to believe....
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  #13  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2017, 3:19 PM
the urban politician the urban politician is offline
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^ I find that believable.

But it doesn't grab headlines, or inspire TV shows (Silicon Valley) the way some of these bloated tech companies do. A warehouse on the prairie is just not cool, and doesn't make you think about Carrie drinking a martini in Sex and the City so it's clearly not relevant. Much easier narrative to just keep talking about poor widdle Chicago and its widdle crime pwobwum and how it struggles while all the great things are only happening on the coasts
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  #14  
Old Posted Mar 8, 2017, 3:25 PM
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Has anyone heard anything about the DMDII / UI Labs since opening? I'm interested in seeing if we can link our newly strengthened position in tech with our manufacturing/industrial legacy.
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  #15  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2017, 1:51 AM
the urban politician the urban politician is offline
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New Biomedical research park to open in Lake County:

http://www.chicagobusiness.com/artic...dical-research
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  #16  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2017, 9:49 PM
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ardecila ardecila is offline
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^ I find that believable.

But it doesn't grab headlines, or inspire TV shows (Silicon Valley) the way some of these bloated tech companies do. A warehouse on the prairie is just not cool, and doesn't make you think about Carrie drinking a martini in Sex and the City so it's clearly not relevant. Much easier narrative to just keep talking about poor widdle Chicago and its widdle crime pwobwum and how it struggles while all the great things are only happening on the coasts
For awhile Chicago flew under the radar with little mention in the national discourse. Now our problems are being trumpeted globally by conservatives, the same way they love to point the finger at New York and California and coastal elites. New York wasn't buried, long-term, when Gerald Ford told the city to "drop dead". Los Angeles wasn't buried after the Rodney King riots. I don't see why Chicago should have anything to fear from Trump's constant banging of the drum on Chicago's crime rate.

In a weird way I'm glad Chicago is such a bogeyman to Trump and Trumpsters alike. Any publicity is good publicity, and the 54% of America that didn't vote for Trump probably understands it's overblown anyway. Trump's rhetoric at the very least sends the message that Chicago is an important place and the events that happen here have national significance.
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  #17  
Old Posted Mar 12, 2017, 9:29 PM
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A nice conversation about Chongqing Casin's attempt to buy the Chicago Stock Exchange. Hopefully the current administration doesn't fuck this up.

CHX could see some substantial growth from this acquisition. Being acquired is not always a bad thing.

Chicago Exchange Wants to Be Hub for China Stock Trading

The city is already tops in derivatives fintech talent. Seeing that pool expand to include equities talent enriches Chicago's position as a global financial center.

Plus CHX has a really good building.

PS. Shame of Bloomberg for showing so many images of CBOT in this story.

Not. The. Same. Thing.
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  #18  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2017, 1:32 PM
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A nice conversation about Chongqing Casin's attempt to buy the Chicago Stock Exchange. Hopefully the current administration doesn't fuck this up.

CHX could see some substantial growth from this acquisition. Being acquired is not always a bad thing.

Chicago Exchange Wants to Be Hub for China Stock Trading

The city is already tops in derivatives fintech talent. Seeing that pool expand to include equities talent enriches Chicago's position as a global financial center.

Plus CHX has a really good building.

PS. Shame of Bloomberg for showing so many images of CBOT in this story.

Not. The. Same. Thing.
Don't hold your breath. The Trump administration has pretty much fucked everything up since taking office. A bunch of lightweight idiots.
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  #19  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2017, 8:08 PM
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Don't hold your breath. The Trump administration has pretty much fucked everything up since taking office. A bunch of lightweight idiots.
Yeah, this one worries me. The political winds would appear to be against it but I am still waiting for Trump to demonstrate that he has the power to follow through on a single one of his campaign pledges.

As long as CHX flies below his radar and does nothing to personally offend him, then there is still a chance.
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  #20  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2017, 2:09 AM
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Don't hold your breath. Trump is an average at best business person currently who seems to think the best way of making America get ahead in various industries is but making cuts to public education but still expecting Americans to stay competitive in talent compared to some other countries. It's so idiotic it's not even funny. Whatever good is in this, he probably will not see as he will not want an entity in China having power over a very large American market.
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