News

What a difference a year can make. More than eighty retailers now carry Red Duck Ketchup's three gourmet flavors, the company has secured financing, and that's not all.

A proposed new master of science presents an exceptional opportunity to support the more than 800 sports product firms that call Oregon home.
Ask good questions and keep moving forward, even when you don’t know what’s around the next corner. That’s the key lesson Nick Barton ’14 said he’ll take away from his two years in the Honors Program.
If Lundquist College educational experience of John Feeney ’08 had a theme, it would definitely be growth.
Amber Hull ’13, MActg ’14, was beginning her junior year at the Lundquist College when an advisor suggested she should apply to the Honors Program. It ended up being the best decision of her college career.
Aidan Parisian was accepted into the Honors Program and quickly flourished in the challenging, close-knit environment. He completed a double major in economics and accounting, and in 2008 he graduated summa cum laude.
For the second year running, this undergraduate venture competition brought together startup teams from the UO and its rival up the road in Corvallis.
This student-organized event brought together undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty with sustainability leaders from a variety of the region’s leading businesses.

Three Oregon MBA students are gaining valuable career experience by working on a project that promises to make a significant impact on the region's economy.

First-year students in the Oregon MBA program took a trip to the Bay Area where they visited a variety of high-profile organizations and connected with program alumni and supporters.
Virtual networking sessions are just one of new resources the college's Career Services office offers our students.
This April, Lundquist College undergraduates had the opportunity to get better acquainted with representatives from six high-profile employers.
Three Lundquist College students helped experienced investors determine which early-stage companies will present in the 2014 Willamette Angel Conference.

Does living through a disaster as a child make a CEO more willing to take risks? It depends, reveals a study coauthored by assistant professor of finance Vineet Bhagwat.

Entering the real world—it’s a phrase that’s tossed around with some frequency. At the Lundquist College of Business, it means making connections for life with professors, peers, and working professionals.