News

Oliver Alexander's venture Remote.ly set out to address the lack of available coworking spaces in Portland, Oregon.
Management professor Lauren Lanahan and PhD student Nathan Warren were awarded funding from the Lundquist Center for Entrepreneurship to support their research.
The five-day event highlights research, creativity, and entrepreneurship across campus.
Research by management professor Alex Murray and coauthor examined why some tech ventures fail on crowdfunding platforms despite meeting their financing goals.
Jim and Andi Sandstrom pledged $250,000 to be divided equally among the education and business colleges.
Nico Fearn ’12 and Garren Strong ’07, both student athletes during their time at the UO, have found success in product marketing at Nike.
On Wednesday, May 12, three chief financial officers from three different industries will discuss their roles during a virtual roundtable.
Samantha Kin kept her wedding planning business going even in the face of a cancer diagnosis and a global pandemic.
Justice Vanguard, a nonprofit cofounded by UO student Kenan Moos, offers workshops and custom curriculum confronting systemic inequality and racial bias.
William Schoeffler founded real estate showing management app Instashowing while still a UO student. Now interest in his app is soaring.
The Lundquist College of Business is proud to announce the winners of the 2021 New Venture Championship.
A team of Lundquist College researchers explored the social-cognitive construct "theory of mind" in order to understand sales communications.
The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) has officially extended the Lundquist College of Business's accreditation in both business and accounting.
Justin Bean ’04, now global director of smart spaces marketing at Hitachi Vantara, has continued to maintain connections with the Lundquist College and the Center for Sustainable Business Practices.
A team of Oregon MBA students participated in the Turner MIINT competition, a year-long curriculum that trained them to think like investors.