From investigations to interviews to business features, here are 30 of the most-read stories of the year.
The great English clubs no longer look to Ireland for their players. Brexit has restricted options even further so where now for the gifted Irish footballer?
International backers are ploughing €30m into Exergyn, an Irish company developing a potentially game-changing technology. The investment secures the firm's future and will allow some older shareholders exit.
Loanitt is launching a new open banking brand called Kyiper, and it plans to make it easier for mortgage holders to access the best deals. Co-founder John Duggan talks about banking data, the future of finance and European expansion plans.
The Department of Communication has declined a fresh freedom of information request for the full National Broadband Plan contract. Its response reveals the volume of documents kept secret and the fact that the contract has changed multiple times since it was signed.
Eoin Ó Broin tells Stephen Kinsella that Sinn Féin is not anti-landlord and outlines the role the private sector can play in housing. He also talks about potential coalition partners and the relationship between the party's past and present.
By deploying the green jersey tax structure at its EMC and VMware divisions while growing the sales of Dell Products during the pandemic, the US technology multinational has reaped the maximum benefits from its Irish presence.
As promised, the European Commission has moved swiftly to translate the global agreement on a minimum corporation tax rate into EU law. A parallel move to restrict the use of structures like Section 110 companies and limited partnerships was not expected at the same time.
Adele Cooper could have stayed at the top of Silicon Valley. Instead, she explains why she decided to join the fast-growing gifting platform &Open and shares key advice to drive B2B sales.
Pat Farrell is CEO of Irish Institutional Property, and before that he was a senior banker and a banking lobbyist. Here he compares the old and new model for developing property in Ireland.
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