Canadian grocery industry’s ‘mushy middle’ — the conventional brands — are most vulnerable to being left behind in challenging landscape
Bill Blair, the minister in charge of cannabis legalization in Canada, said Wednesday that there is “sufficient supply” to meet existing demand, despite many retailers attributing staff layoffs and store closures to an ongoing nationwide inventory shortage.
In a series of recent tweets, Blair, the Minister of Border Security and Organized Crime Reduction and former Toronto chief of police, pointed to Health Canada figures that showed there was nearly 18 times more supply than reported monthly sales in December.
Businesses that aren’t “purpose-led” stand to lose out in an era when consumers see brands as extensions of themselves.
Canada Post is transitioning to a new courier service that has resulted in a shortage of drivers and delays in delivery of parcels to customers on the city’s north side
A Canadian-listed company has won the right to use the most coveted ticker symbol in the cannabis world — but the winner hasn't been announced.
The Hudson's Bay Company decided to forego the fur business after finding that furs weren't flying off the shelves in 1991
Tim Hortons says it plans this fall to sell something it's calling a double-double coffee bar, a chocolate bar-sized edible snack made from the chain's coffee.