News

Snip! A ribbon-cutting ceremony--with scissors wielded by Hope Anstett and family--marked the grand reopening of Anstett (formerly Gilbert) Hall.
Our recently announced redesign of the Oregon Executive MBA program in Portland is just one testament to our commitment to re-envisioning how we serve the needs of business.
The upcoming reunion of the Nyenrode Exchange Program, entertainment will include a mystery guest, the opportunity to record your favorite memories on camera.
Rather than wait for change to take place at a federal or international level, the director of the Center for Sustainable Business Practices argued that policy measures taken at the local, regional, and state levels are the most direct route to a utility structure built around clean energy.
Early last month, a group of first-year MBA students in the Lundquist Center for Entrepreneurship hit the road and headed north to meet with executives from thirteen companies.
With only twenty-four hours to prepare a twenty-minute presentation on the future of Louisville's Muhammad Ali Center, teams vying for the 2011 National Sports Foundation Case Cup had to move fast.

Solar energy has been around for decades. Why isn't it more widely used? PhD candidates Matthew Metzger and Jesse King looked for answers by examining influences on new product development in the solar industry. Recently, they were invited by the Green Product Design Network to present their investigations at a poster session associated with the second annual UO Graduate Student Research Forum. (Do you work in the solar energy industry? Matthew and Jesse want to hear from you.

Excitement ran high for the twenty-five students in the CEO Network when Dean Kees de Kluyver came to their Friday morning leadership seminar to facilitate the analysis of a case from the Harvard Business Review. "The students impressed me with their critical thinking and willingness to take on even the most complex issues," said de Kluyver. Launched this past fall, the network provides leadership coaching, mentoring, and networking opportunities to a culturally diverse group of pre-business undergraduates.

The back of a person taking a photograph.

What inspired CEO and founder of Mazama Capital Management Ron Sauer to travel from his company's Portland headquarters to Eugene to teach the five session portfolio management analysis course this winter term? The students. "They're like wet sponges," said Sauer. "They're very knowledgeable and very passionate about what we're talking about." For his students, the excitement is all about seeing the concepts they've learned at school used in the real world by an expert practitioner.

The back of a person taking a photograph.

Bright smiles, tables draped in vivid primary colors, and the hum of excited talk among the fifty female undergraduates matched with fifty professional women--all pointed to the success of the sixth annual student-run event. This year's theme was "Paint Your Own Picture," and the keynote speaker was business school alum Erin Tyburski, who recently served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Kenya. Catch the energy in this video.

The vision behind the upcoming revamp of the Oregon Executive MBA program .
The back of a person taking a photograph.
Introducing three initiatives that will help us differentiate ourselves in the future
Students in Jennifer Howard-Grenville’s industrial ecology course helped develop solutions for real-life issues in the city of Salem.
Held on Tuesday, January 25, the workshop gave students the chance to get candid, real-world feedback on their resumes, cover letters, and job/internship search strategies.

From vision to Venture Quest to reality—that's the course charted by sisters Lindsey and Sydney Swing and their start-up company Swing Mobility Aids, LLC. Their product? A souped-up walker geared to disabled youths and adults, as well as active seniors. After learning about the many injuries caused by devices currently on the market, current UO business major Lindsey sketched out a better product. Next, she and her sister Sydney—a UO alum—interviewed people currently using mobility aids.