
Yahoo! News Search Results for business-schools
Keeping pace with change today is harder than ever in the world of business education. Given the extraordinarily competitive market of business schools the need to keep pace with change however continues to remain critical for those MBA schools that set their sites on being the best in the world.
Lagos — As somebody who not too long ago finished academic studies in Berlin, with fresh memories of overcrowded auditoriums, seminars that never take place and spiritless lecturers, I am of course very interested in how people study in Lagos.
...and hard decisions become inevitable, talk about it honestly to your employees. It is possible, even in the worst of times, to speak the truth and to be empathetic while showing resilience and hope, thereby carrying people with you
Wayne Hale's NASA Blog: Management Training
...and hard decisions become inevitable, talk about it honestly to your employees. When we work with clients from across the globe, we find that communicating difficult news in bad times is one of the challenges they dread the most. “I really don’t know what to say”, is what we hear most often.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Long before cable television, spa treatments and eco-friendly soaps and shampoos became staples in hotel rooms, there was the Bible — the Gideon Bible.
By John Schwartz THE NEW YORK TIMES Nicolas Naranjo knocked on Evan Kimbrell’s door at midnight.
After my December column, some asked: How exactly do we make enough money to sustain, let alone grow, our newsgathering organizations? How do we continue to serve our communities' information needs adequately -- while making a profit?
Quinnipiac University student Trevor Menscher of Manalapan will experience doing business under much different circumstances during his winter break. Menscher is part of a group of 21 Quinnipiac business students joining Quinnipiac professors of management David Cadden and Ronald McMullen on a trip to Leon, Nica-ragua, from Jan.
PEAPACK-GLADSTONE – Marie Pace, Henry Warner and Anthony Palma, all college students from the borough, were the recipients of the 2008 Gallo Scholarships.


