Why Business School Grads Should Consider HubSpot
Massachusetts-based tech development company HubSpot builds tools and software for marketing and sales teams to help make their lives a little more organized and easier. It’s not only a godsend for its customers but also for its employees. Glassdoor dubbed HubSpot the “Best Place to Work in 2020.” For the last 12 years, Glassdoor ranks the top 100 companies by user data, such as a company’s culture and workplace ratings. So, actually, that means employees choose the winner.
Continue reading…Hubspot, Bain & Company Top Glassdoor’s 2020 Best Places to Work List
In the annual Glassdoor Best Places to Work list, Cambridge, MA’s HubSpot has earned top billing for the first time.
Continue reading…Lehigh MBA Success, and More – New York City News
Let’s explore some of the most interesting stories that have emerged from New York business schools this week.
Extraordinary Outcomes for Lehigh’s 1-MBA and M2 Programs – Lehigh College of Business and Economics
This past spring saw Lehigh graduates from the College of Business and Economics’ inaugural 1-MBA (1-year full-time MBA) cohort, as well as the third cohort of its M2 (MS in Management) complete the transition from the classroom to the boardroom.
Employers like Tesla, QVC, and Hubspot snatched up 1-MBA graduates while Amazon, Bloomberg, IBM, KPMG, and more extended offers to nearly 80 percent of M2 graduates. This statistic is very much in line with figures from the 2017 graduates of the M2 program—96 percent of which were employed within three months of graduation by the likes of Deloitte, Vanguard, IBM, and Amazon.
You can read more about the recently Lehigh MBA success here.
School of Management Students Provide Support to Businesses Looking to Export – Binghamton SOM Blog
This semester, Binghamton SOM students took part in the six-month ExportNY “Launch into the Global Marketplace” program, a unique offering that adjunct assistant professor founding director of the Center for International Business Advancement (CIBA) Elena Iankova developed to help give “regional businesses [the] knowledge and resources needed to export their products.”
The basic idea that underlies the “Launch into the Global Marketplace” program is that students research, consult, and support the export plans of participating businesses. Iankova explains: “It’s a two-way street. The students provide the companies research assistance and consultation, and the companies provide the students real-life experiential learning opportunities, helping them develop their management research and consulting skills.”
The program is a partnership between the CIBA and the Alliance for Manufacturing & Technology (AM&T), the Global New York Program of Empire State Development, and the U.S. Commercial Service and the Small Business Administration.
One of the participating companies, Awestruck Ciders, “produces hard ciders from NY state apples” and hopes to export its product to the South African market. Co-founder Patti Wilcox writes: “We think it’s important to the local economy to expand our view of the market on a global scale. We’re fascinated by this idea of an international cultural exchange, and we think doing so commercially is very valuable.”
You can read more about the program here.
The Endless Scroll: How to Tell if You’re a Tech Addict – PC Mag
Just recently, PC Mag dropped its lengthy article “The Endless Scroll: How to Tell if You’re a Tech Addict,” written by Rob Marvin.
In the piece, Marvin highlights Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked from NYU Stern School of Business professor Adam Alter, who doesn’t mince his words when it comes to tech addiction.
“There’s a myth that there’s something different about people with addictions from people without addictions,” Alter explained in his interview with Marvin. “Right now, if you are a person who doesn’t have an addiction, does that make you in some qualitative or categorical way different from people who do? The more I’ve studied this, the more I realized that just isn’t true.”
You can read more from Marvin’s excellent piece, out now, over at PC Mag.
HubSpot Chief People Officer And Sloan Alum Hacks Diversity in Tech
Late last month, MIT Sloan spoke with Cambridge-based HubSpot Chief People Officer Katie Burke, MBA ’09, in advance of her talk at the upcoming Sloan Women in Management Breaking the Mold Hackathon whose prompt is “Hacking Diversity.”
Best Internships in Boston
The internship’s place in culture is heavily debated and often lampooned—for proof, see the 2013 Vince Vaughn/Owen Wilson comedy vehicle, “The Internship” or last year’s “The Intern” starring Robert DeNiro and Anne Hathaway. Or take Charlotte, North Carolina songwriter Sean Padilla’s project The Cocker Spaniels, whose lyrics to “The Overeducated Underclass” ponder the catch-22 of indebted post-graduates working pro bono. Continue reading…