Less than a week after Target rolled out new goals for tackling climate change, the organization Customers Who Care has amassed more than 100,000 signatures on its petition urging the retailer to address its plastic waste output.
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Plenty of seating options are available on resale markets for last-minute buyers.
The digital world offers no safe zones for companies facing a crisis. But technology does provide tools for building and maintaining business reputations.
Minneapolis novelty goods maker 30 Watt is putting the "fun" back into funny.
With a couple apps and phone tricks, a lot of that daily anxiety can fall back under your control.
For the first time since being promoted to Land O'Lakes CEO, Ford talks in depth about her journey to the top and how she's steering Minnesota's $15 billion ag cooperative into the future.
Your top networking options this month.
Normally, I write an open letter to a presidential candidate after the Iowa caucuses, which are next year. Because you are smart and ultimately data driven, you will drop out of this race before Iowa.
The company, a subsidiary of Japanese company Daikin Industries, will lease new office space in Plymouth, adding to the 132 new jobs expected to be generated by a planned $40.3 million Faribault facility project.
Great Lakes Northern Outfitters’ New Swimsuit Line is Made of One Ingredient: Recycled Water Bottles
The Minneapolis-based apparel company has launched a new line of swimsuits made 100 percent from post-consumer recycled water bottles.
Breaking down Minnesota's path(s) toward legal recreational use of pot.
Toys R Us, Sears, Macy’s, wow. What’s going on? Better question, as author Mark Pilkington asks in “Retail Therapy,” how can we stop it?
Bucking the co-working trend, wealth advisor Nicole Mittendorf invests in her business by laying down roots in Minnetonka.
The St. Paul Saints, the minor league baseball team that plays home games at the heavily public subsidized CHS Field in Lowertown, is 1.2 miles away from the state Capitol.
One proposal, which has bipartisan support, would allow those who donate to affordable housing projects to take a dollar-for-dollar credit off of their state income tax bill.
The brand, which sells clothing for a wide range of body types, will hit the mall as an 1,800-square-foot pop-up shop later this spring.