WBN News Nashville
WBN News Nashville delivers local business news, insights, and stories tailored for Nashville. Created by business people for business people. Publisher - Wendy S. Huffman
The U.S. has led peace talks between the DRC and Rwanda, resulting in a draft agreement linking peace to economic incentives and mineral investment. While progress is made, rebel activity and resource transparency remain key concerns ahead of a potential June signing at the White House.
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News Nashville & WBN News Africa
This Mother’s Day, we celebrate the women who shape our world with strength, love, and legacy—honoring all mothers, everywhere, since the holiday began in 1914.
by WBN News Global & WBN News - South Delta & WBN News Langley & WBN News Abbotsford & WBN News Okanagan & WBN News Winnipeg & WBN News Africa & WBN News Vancouver & WBN News Sea To Sky & WBN News Kitsilano & WBN News Nashville
Nashville’s iconic Bridgestone Arena is set to transform into a high-energy rodeo ground as the inaugural Music City Rodeo kicks off from May 29 to May 31, 2025.
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News Nashville
In a major privacy showdown, Italy’s Data Protection Authority (Garante) has launched legal proceedings against U.S.-based Lusha Systems Inc. for allegedly breaching the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
by Gianni Dell'Aiuto & WBN News Nashville
In today’s high-stakes talent market, contingent search is a gamble, and most companies are losing. Contingent firms flood inboxes with résumés, hoping one lands. Retained search, in contrast, is a strategy: deliberate, discreet, and outcome-driven. It starts with understanding the company’s DNA
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News Nashville
Today, May 8, 2025, history was made as Robert Prevost of Chicago was elected the next pope, taking the name Pope Leo XIV. An American with deep roots in South America, Prevost’s election marks a new era—one that may subtly echo ancient resolve.
by Sophia Olivas & WBN News Nashville
Hiring isn’t about volume—it’s about velocity. Every day your executive seat sits vacant, your company loses time, direction, and momentum. Worse still? Hiring the wrong leader. Experts estimate a bad executive hire costs 6–18 months of recovery, lost trust, burned-out teams, and delayed strategy.
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News NashvilleCory Vanderpool spent 12 years helping homeowners go solar, saving them money and energy. But when those same people tried selling their homes? Their solar investment's value vanished in the eyes of real estate agents. Equity lost. Hundreds of thousands of dollars in savings dismissed.
by Nikhil Sachdeva & WBN News Nashville