Minnesota's hearing aid industry cluster is innovating fast—despite the fact that few people actually want to buy what it makes.
Author’s archive
Everybody is an environmentalist these days, or so it seems. According to the brochures, the product labels, and the corporate spokespeople, every company in America is a devoted friend of
State Demographer Tom Gillaspy says Minnesota will have a major labor shortage 10 years from now. Only productivity gains will save the state's economy.
Half of Damn Good Food, the new book from restaurateur-chef Mitch Omer, is an account of his journey through drug addiction and bipolar disorder. Long before opening Hell’s Kitchen in
Ask Public Radio’s Lynne Rossetto Kasper about meatloaf, and the Splendid Table host will tell you that it’s “a testament to what an ingenious cook can do with next to
Two Twin Cities entrepreneurs have plans to change the definition of "convenience foods."
Having shepherded the Minnesota Zoo and helped to save the Twins, Kathryn Roberts now leads the former Lutheran Board of Social Ministry into a new age of senior-living management.
Resolutions for the new one.
The difference between boards that "technically" fulfill their duties and those that really do.
A big customer pulls back. Revenues fall. Manufacturing capabilities fall short. Retool the plant? Winland Electronics changed everything.
Fredrikson asks: Does your hobby improve your work?
As modest as a Norwegian Lutheran prairie church, the Dome is an underappreciated asset.
The Eagan business that was once West Publishing now supplies its parent company with the intellectual firepower to outmaneuver Bloomberg and LexisNexis.
An invitation for 2012: What's red, all over, and in the black?
Effective leaders utilize crisis to force change.
Minnesota's largest developer and owner of multifamily housing is able to finance apartment projects that other developers can't by negotiating the red tape of tax credits.
Why Stop at junker cars?
We're fortunate to see a neglected friend return.