Performance: Management must communicate with employees
It’s your company versus the competition. You both have equal talent, equal intellectual capability, and a competitive product/service set....
Company Doctor: Be proactive to help the next generation succeed
Many business owners who are also parents have a recurring nightmare. The business enterprise that they built with their...
Ambitious capital campaign will fund campus renovations
Marquette University High School plans to embark on a building project this spring that will solidify its commitment as the anchor of the Merrill Park neighborhood.
Hilltoppers
This year, Marquette University High School will celebrate 150 years of educating young men who have gone on to shape Milwaukee’s political power structure and its businesses. The Jesuit, all-boys college preparatory school on the corner of North 34th Street and West Wisconsin Avenue stands tall above its Merrill Park neighborhood.
RedPrairie could anchor proposed Park East tower
A prime site in the Park East freeway corridor in downtown Milwaukee is being pitched as a potential site...
Making progress
A Mequon sales consulting company leveraged its supplemental software products to redefine its business model and plans to nearly...
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Personnel File
Accounting Komisar Brady, Milwaukee, promoted Stacey Hamilton to senior accountant and hired Ann Hooper to staff accountant. Hamilton joined...
Economist foresees sluggish start for 2007
The U.S. economy will struggle to shrug off a cooled housing market and a burgeoning fiscal deficit in the first half of 2007, but will regain some momentum in the second half of the year. That’s the prognosis of Michael Knetter, dean of the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business.
Biz Notes
Community Memorial Hospital The Cardiac Strength and Rehabilitation Program at Community Memorial Hospital, Menomonee Falls was recognized in the...
ECONOMIC TRENDS 2007: Milwaukee companies brace for a slow climb in 2007
Tempered by a housing market hangover, a slumping American automotive industry and the costly war in Iraq, most economists are projecting slow growth of 2 to 3 percent for the U.S. economy in 2007. As the figures suggest, growth will be attainable. However, that growth will have to be earned, and it will usually come in small increments, as companies that are prepared to make the slow climb are able to grind through or around the obstacles in their paths.