Shopify Stock Reverses Up Amid Q3 Earnings, Revenue Miss – Investor's Business Daily + MORE Oct 28th

The “Big Five” Canadian banks offer investment funds and include Royal Bank of Canada, Toronto Dominion Bank (TD Canada Trust), Bank of Nova Scotia, Bank of Montreal and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC). Let’s explore the best place for you to invest.
Latest News

TFSAs & RRIFs: What’s the difference between beneficiaries, successor holders and successor annuitants? + MORE Jan 19th

A MoneySense reader writes:  I’m writing to ask about beneficiaries, successor holders and successor annuitants for TFSAs and RRIFs. What is the difference between these, and how do you choose the right one for each account? FPAC responds:  When you have a registered account, su.... More »
 assets

The 11 best travel credit cards in Canada for July 2023 + MORE Jul 13th

Credit Cards The 11 best travel credit cards in Canada for July 2023 Searching for the perfect credit card? In under 60 seconds, CardFinder narrows down your top matches without impacting your credit score, no SIN required. Find my perfect card* .... More »
 TSE

A company I hold stock in was acquired or merged—do capital gains apply? + MORE Aug 8th

Ask MoneySense A stock I used to own was recently sold to a private equity firm. Is there a strategy for avoiding a capital gain on a sale I did not authorize? I voted against the sale.—Mary Tax implications of acquisitions, mergers and spinoffs There are a few transactions that can have u.... More »

Corporate investments for retirees Feb 15th

I’m not using my Canadian corporate company anymore. I’m 67, delaying CPP and OAS. I have $210K in my company that I need to take out. What is the best way to do this with minimal tax?  My accountant is working with me but really doesn’t think it’s the best strategy. He has a three-y.... More »
 IPO

Reni Odetoyinbo on why you should pay yourself first and have multiple streams of income  Jun 6th

Social media content creator Reni Odetoyinbo started investing at age 18 and bought her first house at 23. Everyone wanted to know how she did it, so she started documenting her journey to home ownership on her YouTube Channel in 2020.   Odetoyinbo quit her full-time marketing job at a .... More »
Shopify Stock Reverses Up Amid Q3 Earnings, Revenue Miss  Investor’s Business DailyView Full coverage on Google News

Continue Reading On Articles »

It’s safe to say that not since the recession of 2008 has the employment sector faced as much rapid change as during these COVID-19 times. Marcie Pollack-MacMillan—the founder and self-described “President of Chaos” of Toronto’s Marketers on Demand and Executive Talent on Demand—remembers 2008 well, and was uniquely well-equipped for the pandemic’s upheaval, especially with a financial boost from BMO.

A noted visionary in the talent-placement space, Pollack-MacMillan (and co.) are known for sourcing workers for brands and agencies close to home in Toronto as well as far-flung locales like Miami—surely an agile godsend in a time of reduced budgets, hours, headcounts and overall HR uncertainty. In conversation with Mike Bonner, BMO’s Head of Canadian Business Banking, Marcie speaks to finding her niche, her personal guidelines for talent curation, and finding inspiration from her own life for her unique title.

First off, can you explain why you call yourself the ‘President of Chaos?’

Everyone has different degrees of chaos in their life, but I’ve got four kids and a dog, we just bought a couple of bunnies, I’m working full-time and there’s obviously extra chaos during COVID…

Continue Reading On canadianbusiness.com »

Share

PinIt
Compare insurance quotes through Kanetix.ca - save time and money!