BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — As we all know, COVID-19 has had a profound effect on the workplace. Many working from home have faced the additional challenges of caring for children and other family members and other concerns normally outside the job environment. But what about for those with disabilities? Marianne DelPo Kulow, the Gregory H Adamian… Read more »
Kelley School of Business
Full-Time MBA Program moves into top 20 among U.S. schools in Financial Times rankings
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – The Full-Time MBA Program at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business continues to move up in rankings from the Financial Times, moving from 40th to 38th worldwide and from 22nd to 18th among U.S. schools. As with the Economist’s rankings released last month, several MBA programs chose not to participate, but… Read more »
Good customer service can lead to higher profits, even for utilities without competition
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – In Lily Tomlin’s classic SNL comedy sketch, her telephone operator “Ernestine” famously delivers the punchline, “We don’t care. We don’t have to. We’re the Phone Company.” But new research finds that satisfied customers mean increased profits even for public utilities that don’t face competition. Little is known about effect of customer… Read more »
Entrepreneurs benefit more from emotional intelligence than other competencies, such as IQ
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Running a successful business has its challenges, but the COVID-19 pandemic has required many owners to pivot and look for new ways to operate profitably while keeping employees and consumers safe. Research from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business found that emotional intelligence – the ability to understand, use and… Read more »
Operations and Decision Technologies is fourth worldwide in terms of research contributions
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – According to new journal publication rankings from the Association for Information Systems, the Indiana University Kelley School of Business ranks fourth worldwide in terms of research contributions by its faculty in the Department of Operations and Decision Technologies. The rankings are based on the number of publications by Kelley ODT faculty in… Read more »
Kelley’s Full-Time MBA Program ranked among top 15 worldwide in Economist’s annual rankings
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – In new MBA rankings from The Economist, the Full-Time MBA Program at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business jumped from 40th to 13th worldwide and from 22nd to eighth among U.S. business schools. Normally, the Economist announces its rankings in the fall, but the Covid-19 pandemic created data collection issues and… Read more »
Prebys Scholar Nick Lugo strives to create meaningful change in other people’s lives
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Podcaster, book author and entrepreneur. With the support of family, friends and a Conrad T. Prebys Scholarship from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, Nick Lugo already has achieved all three important life goals in less than two years at IU. In December, Lugo, a sophomore double majoring in marketing at… Read more »
Looking back at great things that happened in 2020, Kelley’s historic centennial year
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – As we turn the page on another calendar year, a somewhat muted centennial celebration of the Indiana University Kelley School of Business also comes to an end. As we reflect on what has been a tumultuous 2020, it remains true that students, faculty and staff at Kelley continued a 100-year legacy of… Read more »
Kelley School’s HOPE Digital Project helps more than 360 Hoosier ventures through pandemic
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – During the pandemic, more than 360 small businesses and public organizations in Indiana in 52 counties across Indiana – half of them owned by women – have been helped through a no-cost assistant program by the Indiana University Kelley School of Business. Working in partnership with the Indiana Economic Development Corporation… Read more »
As many of us want to forget 2020, Kelley School experts offer a glimpse of next year
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — It has been said that after this year, there will be fewer people suggesting that hindsight is always 2020. More than ever, many are looking ahead to the following year, a process that began in November at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business with presentations of its Business Outlook forecast… Read more »