Neil A. Carousso produces and co-hosts WCBS Newsradio 880’s Small Business Spotlight series with Joe Connolly. Click here to watch the weekly video segments featuring advice for business owners on survival, recovery and growth opportunities.

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  • How ‘SNL’ and Late Night Talk Shows Saved the Transportation Industry

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — One key linchpin is responsible for revving New York City’s economy, according to an influential transportation industry leader.

    “I got to give a heads up to Lorne Michaels,” said Jeff Rose, founder and president of Attitude New York on the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank.

    Michaels is the creator and Emmy award-winning executive producer of NBC’s “Saturday Night Live.” He also manages “The Tonight Show” and has an illustrious career producing NBC’s primetime television sitcoms and dramas, late night talk shows and films.

    “We do quite a bit of work for the late night talk shows,” said Rose.

    Attitude New York relies on the hospitality industry, chauffeuring A-listers to press events and dinners at restaurants across the city. Car and limousine services took a huge hit when the pandemic shut down Broadway and New York’s hospitality and entertainment sector.

    “All those shows getting back on the air were huge, not just for the work that they did, but because then, now that they’re broadcasting live, it forces people who have projects to promote to come to the studio, and while they’re in New York, they do other things,” he explained. “Entertainment is something that has a huge multiplier effect on the transportation industry in New York, so props to all those people who got entertainment back on the air and helped revive the city’s economy.”

    Rose told Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso that his business was down 98 percent at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, but since last September, Attitude has roared back; although, it faces drastically different travel habits.

    “Some of the not so strong operators are going to be out of it, but as I said, I think more capacity was lost than demand and when that demand comes back, I think it’s going to be a very healthy situation as folks are much more interested in having a cleaner cars, more reliable,” he said.

    Attitude New York added long-distance trips to meet shifting demand away from airline travel and ride-sharing apps in which some people are apprehensive over the volume of passengers in a still raging pandemic.

    “We got lots of calls from studios who were shooting movies up there to drive actors up to Montreal in Canada. We even had one case where we drove all the way from New York up to Plattsburgh, somebody flew in on a jet, and then, we just drove them across the border,” said Rose, adding, “We had a secret weapon and that we had a chauffeur with dual citizenship. He held a Canadian passport. So we kind of became the go to operator for all these companies that had to get actors up to Montreal and Toronto to get to film sets.”

    Rose also serves as president of the Limo Association of New York and sits on the board of the National Limousine Association. His father imparted on him the value of philanthropy and explained to Connolly and Carousso his philosophy of giving back during tough times.

    “Driving is the number one job in the country, not necessarily limousines or car service(s), but if you include truck drivers deliveries, FedEx, so on and so forth,” he said. “This is a job that doesn’t require a high school diploma, doesn’t require a college degree, English can be your second language. This is an important industry for moving people around and for the jobs that it creates.”

    He welcomes people into his growing industry with open arms.

    “That’s one of the things I do to give back,” Rose said.

    New people entering the vast transportation industry will face several bumps in the road, including an unprecedented and fast change of travel habits and the move to electric vehicles.

    Rose said on the Small Business Spotlight that executives at General Motors, Ford and Lincoln have told him there is not enough infrastructure, yet, to support a 50 percent national adoption this decade as the Biden Administration has proposed.

    “They’ve said it’s going to be a big problem in the Northeast. Electric cars are going to come on much more quickly in the South and much more slowly in the Northeast, and I asked about it. I said, ‘Is that about climate?’ They said no, it’s about in congested cities, they don’t have places to put charging stations. So, even if you had the charging stations, you don’t have the power generation nor the transmission infrastructure ready to support a significant number of vehicles going electric,” he explained.

    See more on the future of New York’s inter-connected transportation industry on the Small Business Spotlight video above.

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  • 880 Weekly Rewind: Hospitals Strained to the Max, Facing COVID Surge and Dire Staffing Shortage

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    Produced by Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Military doctors, nurses and paramedics are being deployed to hospitals in six states, including New York and New Jersey, to bolster overwhelmed medical staffs. Twenty percent of U.S. hospitals have a critical staffing shortage.

    https://omny.fm/shows/880-weekly-rewind/hospitals-strained-short-staffed-scotus-vax-mandat

    The 880 Weekly Rewind takes a look inside two New Jersey hospitals facing a dire staffing shortage with stressed health care workers.

    Plus, Rewind talks to Dr. Irwin Redlener, founding director of Columbia University’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness and a pandemic advisor to many institutions, including the City of New York, about the impact of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling allowing vaccine mandates for many health care workers but blocking vaccine or testing requirements for private companies.

    On a lighter note, WCBS sports director Brad Heller tells us about the New York Yankees’ groundbreaking promotion of Rachel Balkovec to be the first woman manager of a Major League Baseball affiliate. And, WCBS Mets Radio broadcasters Howie Rose and Wayne Randazzo chat with legendary Mets first baseman Keith Hernandez whose number 17 will be retired by the New York Mets on July 9 at Citi Field.

    Listen to The 880 Weekly Rewind Podcast with Lynda Lopez for a deep dive into the top stories of the week, produced by Neil A. Carousso for WCBS-AM New York.

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  • Small Business Spotlight: Biggest Financial Pitfalls to Avoid in 2022

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Mistakes can be costly, especially during such an uncertain time.

    On the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank, Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso talked to Jean Chatzky, an award-winning financial journalist and CEO of HerMoney Media, Inc., who shared some of the most common mistakes business owners make and new businesspeople should avoid.

    1. Not Enough Working Capital

    Chatzky says a common mistake new business owners make is failing to plan for how much capital they need beyond getting started.

    “Particularly right now with so many people joining the great resignation, leaving their workplaces, we’ve seen a lot of people, particularly women, launch businesses, hang out a shingle, take their skills, and try to turn it into a revenue stream for themselves,” she said, continuing, “If you could do it with a client or two under your belt, that’s fantastic, but you need to also understand what it’s going to cost you not just to get going but to keep going as you gain some ground.”

    Chatzky advises business owners to plan for enough working capital to see some success. She also tells budding entrepreneurs to pay close attention to what people tell them that they are good at and pursue an area where they can charge for their skills.

    The so-called “great resignation,” she alluded to, is putting pressure on the most hard-hit industries struggling to recover from the pandemic. A record 4.5 million Americans quit their jobs in November, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Workers in the hospitality industry were most likely to leave for higher paying jobs.

    Chatzky said preventing costly turnover comes down to managing relationships.

    “If you’ve got people on your team that you want to help grow, that you want to encourage to grow, you need to know what they want, right? If you’re not asking them what they want, then they’re going to look for what they want elsewhere,” she said.

    2. Operating Too Big

    “You got to be scrappy, especially when you’re bootstrapping,” said Chatzky.

    The financial expert recalled an instance early on at HerMoney Media, which Chatzy co-founded in 2018, when a client left a big investment bank to start his own company.

    “He wanted to do some focus grouping,” she said. “His idea was, ‘Well, you hire a focus group company.’ And, my idea, was, ‘No, you send out some feelers through your social channels and your newsletter and you ask people to show up for a Zoom call that costs you nothing.'”

    The small business mindset will help owners and managers serve their customers and turn profits while operating lean.

    3. Underestimating the Hiring Process

    Chatzky explained on the Small Business Spotlight that business owners often underestimate the importance and difficulty of hiring.

    “Realize what you can’t do. Realize what you’re not good at. And, as you start to bring in other people to support you whether they’re employees or contractors or freelancers, look for people who do those things better than you do. Don’t be threatened by the fact that they have skills that you don’t,” she said.

    She told Connolly and Carousso that she hires people in their 20s for their social media skills. The HerMoney Media CEO recommends contracting out to potential employees for a period before putting them on payroll to see if they are a good fit for their company.

    Despite all the challenges businesses face with the ongoing COVID threat, Chatzky believes business owners are more optimistic than most people.

    “I think business owners have an inherent sense that this is going to work, that I can do this,” she said, adding, “They’re more confident in their own abilities. That can be good and that can be bad, right? If you’re overly confident, you can lead yourself astray, but I do think they’re different in that way. Some business owners just don’t want to work for anybody else. I think there’s definitely a breed like that; I think it’s a growing breed.”

    She told WCBS 880 she sees her customers and her employees as her bosses. It helps keep her grounded and her firm growing.

    Chatzky co-hosts a new national radio show with journalist Soledad O’Brien called “Everyday Wealth,” presented by Edelman Financial Engines.

    “The listeners are anybody who is looking to make more of their money,” said Chatzky.

    Everyday Wealth airs Sundays at 11 AM on WCBS Newsradio 880.

    Watch Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso’s full conversation with Jean Chatzky on the Small Business Spotlight video above.

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  • 880 Weekly Rewind: Mayor Adams Unveils Plans to Jump-Start NYC’s Economy, Keep Schools Open

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    Produced by Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams had a busy first week in office that included a focus on the economy and schools as parents and kids returned to their routines following the holiday break.

    https://omny.fm/shows/880-weekly-rewind/new-mayor-schools-struggle-with-covid-and-remember

    Mayor Adams discussed his plans to get the city’s economy moving again and his reasons for keeping kids in school on The 880 Weekly Rewind with Lynda Lopez.

    Listen to The 880 Weekly Rewind Podcast for a deep dive into the top stories of the week, produced by Neil A. Carousso for WCBS-AM New York.

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  • NYC Comes to Grips with New Normal, Changes Ahead for COVID-Battered Economy

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    By Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso

    NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — The changes brought on by COVID-19 are being cemented this year.

    As cases and hospitalizations continue to soar amid a new wave fueled by the highly contagious Omicron variant, companies have been forced to nix plans to bring remote workers back to the office. The longer people work from home – some for nearly two years – the more difficult it will be to get them back into the workplace, said Kathryn S. Wylde, president and chief executive officer of the Partnership for New York City.

    “It’s a big setback in the sense of the psychology more than the economy,” she said. “As long as people are functioning remotely and buying their stuff on the Internet rather than patronizing our local stores, we’re going to see a slowdown in the recovery of our brick-and-mortar economy.”

    On the WCBS Small Business Spotlight, sponsored by Dime Community Bank, Wylde told Joe Connolly and Neil A. Carousso that employers are facing the reality that remote work is here to stay.

    “Our survey says 80 percent of companies are looking at what’s called a hybrid work schedule where people will at least work two or three days in the office, the other days at home, and that’s going to be the new normal post-pandemic,” the business leader said.

    She told WCBS 880 many younger people prefer working remotely, but they’re missing out on mentorship. Partnership for New York City members JP Morgan Chase & Co, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs have all continuously delayed their return to the office despite their leaders being staunch proponents of in-person work.

    “We’ve had a Manhattan-centric economy for a very long time, at least since the 1970s,” said Wylde, noting a seismic shift in the local economy because of the pandemic.

    As the head of the city’s foremost business group, Wylde has had numerous conversations with Mayor Eric Adams since being elected. Their professional relationship goes back years since Adams served in the NYPD, and later, Brooklyn Borough President. She told Connolly and Carousso the Adams Administration is considering new ways of spurring growth in neighborhoods outside Manhattan where people have been working from home.

    “So, I think your point that we’re going to see business interests and real estate interests across the five boroughs actually benefit over the long-term of the de-concentration of economic activity across the city is very appropriate,” said Wylde.

    The Partnership for New York City reports about 19 percent of Manhattan office towers are vacant. Wylde believes many of the old buildings will be torn down and replaced by residential apartments.

    “There are a number of old buildings (in Midtown East) that don’t lend itself to residential conversation or any other conversation that will probably come down as you’re seeing happen with the RXR (Realty) project where they’ve taken down the Grand Hyatt and they’re going to rebuild a whole new setting that includes all these mixed-use and entertainment to retail as well as office structures,” she said, adding, “That’s going to be the plan of the future.”

    New York City’s unemployment rate of 9 percent is more than double the national average of 4.2 percent. New York has added back a little more than half the jobs it lost in the pandemic, according to the U.S.
    Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    “We still have 360,000 people who have lost their jobs during the COVID and may not be qualified – probably most are not qualified – for the available job openings,” said Wylde.

    She told Connolly and Carousso that Mayor Adams has been all ears on solutions.

    “Closing that skills gap is another priority he has, and rather than telling us how he’s going to do it, he’s asking us how we can do it together with employers, with entrepreneurs, how we can do this together.”

    Wylde said on the Small Business Spotlight the mayor wants to start internships for high school students and improve job training for college students to get them jobs in their hometown.

    The business group is also working with the city to connect small businesses with big corporations as clients.

    “Individual businesses have their own set of procurement with small and minority-owned businesses, but often, if they’ve got somebody good, they don’t want to share them or that small business may not have access to the support and the financing they need to grow and serve more customers,” explained Wylde.

    She is hopeful Mayor Adams and Gov. Kathy Hochul will see the value in unlocking city and state resources to help small businesses meet the demands of big companies as vendors.

    “We have to organize it and create a system,” she said of the vetting process.

    See more on the reshaping of New York City’s economy on the Small Business Spotlight video above.

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