The entrepreneur's five-year journey transforming Madrid's innovation district into a hub for sustainable technology has attracted €47 million in Series B funding and caught the attention of European venture capitals.
As venture capital flows into the Spanish capital's startup ecosystem, established players and newcomers are racing to secure prime real estate and talent in areas far beyond the traditional Salamanca corridor.
As tourism rebounds and locals reclaim the city's dining scene, established players and nimble newcomers are capturing unprecedented growth across the capital's restaurant and bar landscape.
Record visitor numbers obscure a crucial rebalancing in where money flows through Spain's capital, reshaping everything from hotel portfolios to neighbourhood economics.
As Spain's capital pivots toward sustainability, a new class of jobs is emerging in renewable energy, urban planning, and clean tech—and early movers in the Salamanca and Chamberí districts are pulling ahead.
As housing and living expenses surge across the capital, employers in Spain's business hub face a critical skills gap as mid-career professionals flee to cheaper cities.
As Spain positions itself as Europe's gateway to Africa, Madrid-based firms are already capturing millions in new business—but not everyone in the capital's trading floors has equal access to the windfall.
As foreign capital retreats and vacancy rates climb, commercial real estate data reveals a city at a crossroads between pandemic recovery and economic uncertainty.
As capital flows shift across Spain, local entrepreneurs in Malasaña and Salamanca are learning to decode the indicators reshaping their market opportunities.
As housing and transport costs surge across the capital, companies face a talent exodus and are forced to rethink salary structures and remote work policies.
Hotel operators, restaurant owners and tour guides across the Spanish capital face their toughest year yet as economic headwinds and global instability threaten the city's €18 billion visitor economy.
While traditional financial districts face headwinds, emerging neighbourhoods and flexible workspace operators are capturing the city's transformation—and profits.
As economic indicators flash mixed signals worldwide, Madrid's business leaders are learning to decode which flows of capital matter most for the city's future.
Restaurants and hotels across the Spanish capital are competing fiercely for talent while investing in technology, forcing a fundamental reset in how the city attracts and retains service workers.
As young professionals ditch corporate hierarchies for their own ventures, recruiters scramble to adapt while neighbourhoods from Malasaña to Chamberí transform into incubator ecosystems.