The best opportunities for networking this month.
Post Type of: Article
How much should we trust the monthly unemployment reports?
More than 300 musicians are booked for the Twin Cities Jazz Festival in 15 venues in Lowertown St. Paul, but the main draws are Mears Park headliners Francisco Mela and
Metrosexual may be overplayed, but men's grooming is in.
Blood Sweat & Tears plays the Dakota.
Fastenal's industrial vending machines are not designed for coffee breaks.
Opera under the stars.
Branding and design agency Franke+Fiorella rebrand businesses—including its own—for multi-channel communications.
Art, love and politics in the 1980s.
The bank, which previously imposed a monthly maintenance fee for customers who didn’t meet certain requirements, has returned to an earlier policy of offering free checking to all customers.
UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday announced plans to hire 1,500 employees to staff four Texas locations.
The company says the cash and stock awards are “necessary to enable a stable CEO transition and appropriate continuity of leadership”; Best Buy’s founder, meanwhile, is reportedly attempting to take the company private.
This year’s fair will feature 40 new food items and a variety of musical acts, including Alan Jackson and Motley Crue.
Plymouth-based The Tile Shop intends to start trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market after it merges with JWC Acquisition Corporation.
The Twin Cities ranked high for education but received low marks for job growth and cost of doing business; overall, however, the metro area moved up considerably in this year’s ranking.
About a week after Farley’s & Sathers completed its merger with Ferrara Pan Candy Company, the combined business announced plans to shutter facilities in Minnesota and Tennessee, resulting in an unspecified number of layoffs.
Best Buy’s bylaws now require that an investor own at least 25 percent of the company’s stock in order to call a special meeting related to a “change of control”; founder Richard Schulze and entities that he controls own 21.2 percent.
The City of Minneapolis spent $467,139 on staff and contract lobbyists last year, the most of any local government in the state.