LLM Job #15246 - score_story_relevance
Conversation
You are a financial news analyst. Rate news stories based on their relevance to serious business and investment decision-making.
Rate this news story's relevance for investors and business professionals who manage investment portfolios and need to make informed decisions. This is ONE news story covered by MULTIPLE news sources. The titles below are from different outlets (Reuters, Bloomberg, CNBC, etc.) all reporting on the SAME business event. Rate the overall story's relevance. Article Titles: 1. Starbucks Barista Strike Reaches New Hampshire 2. Starbucks Workers United holds rally in NYC as strikes continue for a third week 3. ‘We’re not going anywhere’: how unionization ‘whirlwind’ set stage for historic Starbucks strike 4. 12 Starbucks strikers arrested outside Empire State Building Scoring Guidelines: - 9-10: Critical business news (earnings reports, Fed decisions, major M&A, sector-wide impact, regulatory changes) - 7-8: Important analysis (market trends, analyst insights, significant company developments, economic indicators) - 5-6: Relevant news (notable company announcements, industry developments, financial performance) - 3-4: Minor business news (routine updates, small moves, tangential business stories) - 1-2: Fluff/entertainment (celebrity CEO drama, viral marketing, cultural controversies, consumer complaints) High-value examples: - "Wall Street Sentiment on AI Companies Shifts as Earnings Disappoint" (9-10) - "Federal Reserve Minutes Reveal Concerns About Inflation Persistence" (9-10) - "Apple Supplier Cuts Production by 20% Amid Weak iPhone Demand" (8-9) - "Banking Sector Faces Regulatory Scrutiny After Failed Stress Tests" (8-9) Low-value examples: - "Starbucks Cup Design Sparks Outrage on Social Media" (1-2) - "CEO's Dog Makes Appearance at Company Event" (1-2) - "Company Changes Office Snack Selection" (1-2)
{
"explanation": "The news stories collectively describe a coordinated labor action by Starbucks workers, including strikes, union rallies, and arrests, all centered on unionization efforts and labor demands. While Starbucks is a major public company with significant market capitalization, these reports focus on labor unrest and protest activities rather than financial performance, strategic shifts, regulatory changes, or market-moving developments.\n\nThe unionization movement at Starbucks has been widely covered and represents a broader trend in labor organizing in the service sector, but the specific events reported—rallies, arrests, and strike continuation—do not constitute material business developments that directly impact investor decisions, such as changes in revenue, earnings, M\u0026A activity, or major policy shifts. These are operational or social events with potential long-term implications for labor costs and brand reputation, but they are not currently driving immediate market or portfolio-level decisions.\n\nTherefore, the relevance to investors and business professionals managing portfolios is limited to potential long-term reputational or operational risk, but not actionable insight for investment or strategic decisions at this time.",
"score": 5
}Debug Information
▶ Structured Output Schema (JSON Schema)
{
"json_schema": {
"description": "Business relevance score for a news story",
"name": "story_relevance",
"schema": {
"additionalProperties": false,
"properties": {
"explanation": {
"description": "1-2 sentence explanation of the score",
"type": "string"
},
"score": {
"description": "Relevance score (1-10)",
"maximum": 10,
"minimum": 1,
"type": "integer"
}
},
"required": [
"score",
"explanation"
],
"type": "object"
},
"strict": true
},
"type": "json_schema"
}▶ Token Usage & Performance
{
"completion_tokens": 227,
"predicted_ms": 0,
"prompt_ms": 0,
"prompt_tokens": 433,
"total_tokens": 660
}▶ Context & Parameters (Full JSON)
{
"article_count": 4,
"explanation": "The news stories collectively describe a coordinated labor action by Starbucks workers, including strikes, union rallies, and arrests, all centered on unionization efforts and labor demands. While Starbucks is a major public company with significant market capitalization, these reports focus on labor unrest and protest activities rather than financial performance, strategic shifts, regulatory changes, or market-moving developments.\n\nThe unionization movement at Starbucks has been widely covered and represents a broader trend in labor organizing in the service sector, but the specific events reported—rallies, arrests, and strike continuation—do not constitute material business developments that directly impact investor decisions, such as changes in revenue, earnings, M\u0026A activity, or major policy shifts. These are operational or social events with potential long-term implications for labor costs and brand reputation, but they are not currently driving immediate market or portfolio-level decisions.\n\nTherefore, the relevance to investors and business professionals managing portfolios is limited to potential long-term reputational or operational risk, but not actionable insight for investment or strategic decisions at this time.",
"finish_reason": "stop",
"google_story_id": 19836,
"max_tokens": 2000,
"relevance_score": 5,
"response_format": "json_schema",
"response_format_details": {
"json_schema": {
"description": "Business relevance score for a news story",
"name": "story_relevance",
"schema": {
"additionalProperties": false,
"properties": {
"explanation": {
"description": "1-2 sentence explanation of the score",
"type": "string"
},
"score": {
"description": "Relevance score (1-10)",
"maximum": 10,
"minimum": 1,
"type": "integer"
}
},
"required": [
"score",
"explanation"
],
"type": "object"
},
"strict": true
},
"type": "json_schema"
},
"temperature": 0
}