Since opening in March, the Mayo Clinic Business Accelerator has filled its offices with 16 tenants, including medical startups and venture capitalists.
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The bank said it is scaling back its mortgage services due to higher interest rates, and it announced plans to cut 2,323 jobs nationwide—161 of which are reportedly in Minneapolis.
State lawmakers could not come to an agreement on the business-to-business tax repeals that should be discussed, so only disaster relief will be dealt with during the special legislative session.
Already charged with 20 counts of conspiracy and fraud, the founder of Select Comfort is now being accused of witness tampering.
The Nasdaq exchange—on which shares of Minnesota companies such as C.H. Robinson, Buffalo Wild Wings, and Fastenal are traded—temporarily ceased trading on Thursday.
A little too quiet on the set?
The Metropolitan Council is expected to vote on the transit project configuration—which could add $150 million to $330 million to the cost—on Sept. 25.
The former UHG CEO is a land collector.
Boulder, Colorado’s City Council voted to approve an ordinance that authorizes the purchase of assets from Xcel Energy.
Several months after local businessman Michael McFadden announced plans to run for the U.S. Senate, a Duluth attorney has joined the race with the support of Stanley Hubbard.
The Golden Valley-based food giant is returning its “Big G Monsters Cereals” exclusively to Target shelves by early September and for a limited time.
Best Buy said it is improving same-store sales and cutting costs, and its stock price climbed about 10 percent early Tuesday.
Minneapolis-based Medafor, which develops medical devices used to control bleeding, is the second Twin Cities med-tech company purchased by C.R. Bard, Inc., in recent years.
Inc. magazine included eight Minnesota-based companies on its recent list of the 500 fastest-growing privately held U.S. companies based on revenue growth over a three-year period.
Narrowed from a pool of 57 semifinalists, the 18 selected finalists will now compete for a share of $200,000 in prize money.
Beyond the buzzwords, what does it really mean?