News

Rachel Todd is the new director of the Lundquist College's Portland-based executive MBA program.

Writer, speaker, and strategist Cortney McDermott served as keynote speaker for the 13th annual Women in Business gala held April 18.

Inaugural Workshop to be held July 13 in Atlanta for experienced professionals interested in the exponential growth of esports industry.

Molly Malone, former vice president of sales for Kroger, defines professionalism as a refined sense of tenacity and discusses the power of the B student.
The podcast welcomes Henry Abbot, who founded the NBA blog TrueHoop in 2005 after a decade as an award-winning journalist. ESPN acquired TrueHoop two years later, and he became ESPN’s first blogger.

Lundquist College of Business PhD candidate Brandon Reich is finding links between the phenomenon of victim blaming and the free market.

Students' extensive professional backgrounds make Oregon's only executive MBA program a standout.

The James H. Warsaw Sports Marketing Center’s Advisory Board announces the addition of Greg Lawrence.

Three students from our inaugural Master of Science in Finance cohort won the Peeptrade University Challenge Investment Competition in Chicago.

Paul Greene, founder of Global Sports Advocates, provides an account of how his career in international sports law has grown and evolved over time.
Mike Belcher, vice president of marketing business development and partnerships at T-Mobile, provides great insights into sponsorship strategy and evaluation.
Nathan Lindberg, director of sponsorship sales at Twitch, discusses the evolving sponsorship landscape in esports.
The Warsaw Sports Business Podcast welcomes Adam Masterson, manager of affiliate operations at Disney ABC Television Group.
Cory Berstine of MiLB, Allan Benavides of the Eugene Emeralds, and KL Wombacher of the Hillsboro Hops discuss their work with Minor League Baseball's Copa de la Diversion campaign.
The episode begins with a metaphor: "Finance is a grocery store." The financial system brings things together for convenience, but just like a grocery store, there are good and rotten deals.