San Diego State Sports MBA Program Discuss Baseball
Sports business can be complicated, particularly when discussing global growth. At least that’s what Chris Park, Major League Baseball’s (MLB) Senior Vice President for Growth, Strategy & International, had to say at a recent event hosted in San Diego and attended by SDSU Sports MBA students. In his talk, Park explained that doing business internationally means that “you are always the road team,” a challenging prospect. Continue reading…
Entrepreneurs at Bauer Get First-Hand Look at Japanese Business
Students at the University of Houston – C.T. Bauer College of Business recently had the opportunity to travel across the globe for a week-long exploration of Japanese business and culture.
D’Amore-McKim Student Biz Pitches Japanese Organic Green Tea
Northeastern’s D’Amore-McKim School of Business recently published an article on Velvetea, a student-owned and operated organic Japanese green tea trader. Velvetea focuses on “importing and selling matcha green tea, a powdered green tea that can be stirred into hot water to drink or added to recipes for additional flavor.”
Continue reading…
CBS’s Joseph Stiglitz Dissects Japan’s Potential to Finally Rebound
Columbia Business School (CBS) recently published an op-ed article by Columbia Professor and Nobel Laureate in Economics Joseph Stiglitz on a golden moment for Japanese economic growth following “a quarter-century of malaise.”
Center for Asian Business Helps Students Study in Asia
The Center for Asian Business at Loyola Marymount University organized two international business courses for students at the LMU business school, according to a press release from the school. “Global Sustainability: Challenges and Prospects in Asia” and “Exploring Asian Culture” both gave students an opportunity to travel to and learn about South Korea, Japan, and China. Continue reading…
Loyola Marymount MBAs Visit Asia
This summer, 35 MBA students from Loyola Marymount University had the opportunity to spend three weeks in Asia as part of their education, according to a press release from the school. The students, who were accompanied by five faculty members as well, made stops in Seoul, Korea, Beijing and Shanghai, China, and Kyoto and Tokyo Japan as part of the Comparative Management Systems (CMS) Program. Continue reading…