Professor Profile: Adam Grant, Wharton
When attending Ivy league schools like The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business, students are guaranteed to have professors with impressive resumes leading lectures and projects. One such professor at Wharton is Adam Grant, 34, who is a New York Times best-selling author as well as the youngest tenured professor at the renowned business school. Continue reading…
Where to Get Your Green MBA
While traditional MBA degrees require coursework and experiential learning in finances, analytics, management, economic theory, and business ethics; a sustainable MBA program, or green MBA, includes these subjects, but taught within the imposed limits of managing for environmental and social sustainability. Continue reading…
LFGSM Introduces New Members of Business Leader Faculty
The Lake Forest Graduate School of Management prides itself in being the Chicago Metro’s only MBA program taught by 100% Business Leader Faculty, meaning that all adjunct professors come from leadership backgrounds in the business world.
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University of Baltimore MBA: Leading 9 of 25 Metro’s Largest Accounting Firms
Patrick Byer, University of Baltimore MBA ’94, is the managing principal of the Maryland Region at CliftonLarsonAllen LLP — the fourth largest accounting firm in the Baltimore Metro. In fact, of the 25 largest accounting firms in the region, nine are led by alumni from the University of Baltimore. All but one of them earned a graduate degree from UB’s Merrick School of Business or the School of Law. Continue reading…
DEGREE SPOTLIGHT: George Washington World Executive MBA With Cybersecurity
Are you interested in pursuing a World Executive MBA program? Are you into cybersecurity? Than George Washington University’s newest degree offering is right up your alley. Continue reading…
Are MBAs Good Writers?
It’s tough goings for a writer nowadays. In post-Recession America, students majoring in English, Creative Writing, and (sadly) Journalism degrees are less likely to find employment in their desired industries.
Part of it is job climate, part of it is just a matter of too many people getting degrees in subjects with weak job markets. Continue reading…