Three local businesswomen will be at this year's Winter Olympics. They're competitors in both sport and work.
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After a half decade when it seemed to lose its way, the iconic ad agency has reorganized and landed one of its biggest accounts ever. In its work for Chrysler, look for signs that a once TV-centric Fallon is taking alternate routes.
PaR Nuclear, a long-ago spinoff of General Mills, is fueling a global resurgence in nuclear energy.
How do companies decide which green initiatives bring real value to customers, the business, and the environment?
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How do companies decide which green initiatives bring real value to customers, the business, and the environment?
U.S. Energy Services became one of Minnesota's fastest-growing companies thanks largely to natural gas deregulation. Climate change legislation could fuel its next boom.
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.
A big customer pulls back. Revenues fall. Manufacturing capabilities fall short. Retool the plant? Winland Electronics changed everything.
Any guy in a red suit can generate a little mall traffic. But an extraordinary Santa can build a small dynasty.
Hot drinks to warm your inner warrior.
At Frattallone's Ace Hardware, the handyman's creative side gets its due.
Back from the brink of bankruptcy, ShopNBC has re-adjusted and refocused. Will consumers and investors buy what it's selling?
Upsher-Smith’s move into developing innovative drugs gained momentum in July 2008 with its equity
Café 128 tames "the stinking rose."
After a career of formulating time- and money-saving pharmaceuticals at his Minnesota business, Upsher-Smith Laboratories, Ken Evenstad started blending one of the most prestigious pinot noirs in the country.
Is the sum of the parts greater than the whole?
Despite some flat moments, First Avenue has been the epicenter of the Twin Cities music scene for nearly four decades.
The Eagan business that was once West Publishing now supplies its parent company with the intellectual firepower to outmaneuver Bloomberg and LexisNexis.
News bits from around Minnesota.