The oft-stated rationale that a CEO's reputation is valuable because it increases a firm's credibility doesn't correlate with a company's bottom line, University of Illinois researchers say.
Changes in federal regulation giving chemical companies flexibility in deciding how to reduce toxic pollution are producing measurable results, according to researchers at the University of Illinois who studied the impact of the 33/50 program started by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1991 to encourage firms to reduce pollution emissions.
While many Americans hate their jobs and are badly in need of career consulting, an almost equal number of individuals eagerly look forward to going to work every day, according to an article in Across The Board, The Conference Board magazine.
The pace of economic decline in most Asian countries is slowing, particularly in Korea and Thailand, according to an analysis released today by The Conference Board.
While the field of information technology has often been thought of as a male-dominated profession that attracts only "computer nerds," those demographics are changing, according to the director of the Information Technology Program (ITPro) at Old Dominion University.
The cost of wafer fabrication equipment used to make semiconductors has soared tenfold about every decade, and the future of the industry may be limited by capital costs. One way to cope with this problem is the development of modular capacity, a concept Stanford Business School faculty members have examined closely.
A University of Kansas economics professor and associate director of KU's Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, is currently in Moscow and is available to discuss Russia's economy on a first-hand basis.
While corporate community economic development programs are continuing to focus on big cities, a new study from the Conference Board shows that some of the most effective models are now in America's suburban and rural regions.
Using a complex economic model, Stanford researchers found that the monopoly pricing associated with quality name-brand products can be sustained in certain cases using the Internet as a channel of distribution. They show that the Internet can actually discourage consumers from searching or window shopping for competing products.
The signs of a healthier economy are not resulting in secure jobs for many Americans, said the director of the Labor Education Program at the University of Missouri -Columbia Extension Division.
A Stanford Business School professor has found that stock options are a useful tool in start-up companies where incentives and financing are much more closely linked than in big companies.
Derivatives do not get recorded on corporate financial statements, but that will change as of June 15, 1999, because of a new requirement by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), a private independent body that sets and interprets generally acceptable accounting principles, according to a University of Connecticut professor.
When it comes to equal pay for equal work, one would expect women in the '90s to have a stronger sense of entitlement and self-esteem than women did two decades ago. But an experiment conducted by Stanford Business School assistant professor John Jost found that women paid themselves 18 percent less than men paid themselves for the same work.
Cutting spending doesn't have to be painful, says Janet Bechman, Cooperative Extension Service specialist in family resource management at Purdue University.
In order to provide state-of-the-art training and consulting services for the New York City and Long Island area business community, St. John's University has announced the establishment of a new Office of Executive Education.
Two researchers from the University of Missouri-Columbia are helping them sort out training in the information age. Their study says that the trend toward other learning methods should not phase out traditional face-to-face sales training in the classroom.
The AFL-CIO, over time, has become more interested in issues of concern to women in its policy agenda, which has major implications for the revitalization of the labor movement.
Institutional investors now control approximately 60% of the outstanding stock of the largest 1,000 U.S. corporations -- with control becoming more and more concentrated among the largest 25 of these institutions, The Conference Board reports today in its Institutional Investment Report.
Workplace teams remain a hot trend in American companies, but new research suggests they may not be the key factor in determining how workers behave on the job.
As the "father" of airline industry deregulation, Cornell University's Alfred E. Kahn discusses how to best deregulate the electric power and telecommunications industries in his new book.
For the fourth consecutive year, the entrepreneurial studies institute at the University of Illinois at Chicago has been named one of the best programs of its kind by Success magazine, ranking 10th nationwide.
The Cornell University Food Industry Management Distance Education Program (DEP) is now offering a food-safety certification programs for food retailers at both the state and national levels.
Immigration is an increasingly important source of economic growth in the face of low unemployment and tighter labor markets, according to a report released today by The Conference Board.
Falling grain and livestock prices, depressed export markets and severe weather have hurt farm incomes from the northern plains to Texas. To worsen matters, 1996 farm legislation took away the so-called "safety net." Federal payments to farmers, in times of low prices for commodities, are only a fraction of what they were in past years.
Business schools across the country are setting themselves apart by offering "niche" master's degrees. "It's definitely a response to increased market demand and business school competition," says Chuck Johnson, director of professional master's programs at Purdue University's Krannert School of Management.
Anyone who has ever worked in or had to deal with a large organization might wryly consider administrative bureaucracy to be a "necessary evil." Now, University of Missouri-Columbia professor Guy B. Adams' recent research and award-winning book, Unmasking Administrative Evil, takes a serious look at evil in administration.
Anthony J. Rucci, 47, a Chicago business executive for nearly 20 years, was appointed today as dean of the College of Business Administration at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
A new interactive World Wide Web site provides one-stop-shopping for marketing and advertising professionals. Purdue University management Professor Patrick Duparcq calls his new marketing resource Web site, TIMER, a global community service.
Are labor unions and ìlabor market rigidityî the root cause of EuropeÃs persistently high unemployment levels? This view, a truism among American policymakers, is examined in a series of essays in the upcoming issue of the Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal.
If the United States approves the climate change Kyoto Protocol, greenhouse gas emissions will have to be reduced to 7 percent below the 1990 level. Cornell economists have an idea on how to do it.
African Americans living in major metropolitan areas are 30 percent less likely to take jobs that requires them to relocate, according to an article published by an economist at the University of Connecticut in the Journal of Urban Economics.
After 21/2 weeks at Texas Tech University, Zhang Jin Zhi said American higher education is superior to Chinese. ''American is better. In Chinese class, we learn more knowledge, but in American class, we learn to practice it.''
Businesses need to become more aware of what is being said about them on the Internet, according to a consumer scientist. Electronic conversations on Internet discussion groups can reflect negatively on a business without managers even knowing what is happening.
A Colorado State University economic development project to grow barley in Colorado's San Luis Valley, build a small micromalting plant there and sell high-quality, fresh malt to the state's famed microbrewers is potentially so profitable that state development aid probably won't be needed, says economist Stephan Weiler.
"Meetings are one of the things many people hate most about organizational life," says a professor of management at the University of Missouri-Columbia. If he's right, people should be happy to hear about recent research, which shows that if you make one slight change to the conventional meeting format, meetings will be significantly shorter. The trick is to stand up.
A new study has found no statistical evidence that immigrants displace black-owned businesses in the United States. The study, coauthored by an economist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, used 1980 and 1990 Census data from 94 of the country's largest metropolitan areas to see if black self-employment levels are lower in areas with high immigrant populations. The authors found no evidence of a net loss of existing black-owned businesses.
The third edition of "Business Forecasting," coauthored by University of Notre Dame economist Barry Keating, recently became the first book on the subject to include a CD-ROM, making it possible to access all of the book's text and data sets without ever turning a page. Published by Irwin/McGraw-Hill and also available in Spanish, "Business Forecasting" is the best selling book in the field. It is both a trade and academic title, written for students as well as business professionals involved in market research, investments, auditing and sales.
Asia's return to strong growth depends on economic reforms that will increase competition, intensify the diffusion of foreign technology, and increase productivity, according to a report released today by The Conference Board.
Online education will come alive this fall for business students at the University of Iowa thanks to a first-of-its-kind educational technology center at the UI College of Business Administration. The college's New Media Center -- called COBALT (College of Business Advanced Learning Technologies) -- will provide business faculty, students and staff with instructional and technological support to create online lessons, assignments and other learning activities.
Workplace practices that help employees take care of family responsibilities benefit the employees affected, as well as co-workers and the company's bottom line, says the director of the Center for Families at Purdue University and of the Midwestern Work-Family Association.
Cornell University's new Master of Industrial and Labor Relations degree is hot: All 37 graduates of the program were hired months before commencement.
If the credit problem in Japan's banks doesn't worsen, the Japanese economy will begin to recover in the third quarter of 1998, according to an analysis released today by The Conference Board.
Universities and corporations nationwide are uniting to create graduate programs to meet industries' special needs. One recent example comes from the heartland where United Airlines Inc. and Purdue University, a national leader in aviation education, have joined forces to develop a anagement-focused master's degree in technology specifically geared for people in the airline industry.