| Old Articles: <Older 131-140 Newer> |
 |
CFO October 1, 2003 CFO Staff |
The Big, Bad Big Four Is the Big Four too big?... hire private jets by the hour; what a formal investigation by the SEC really means... why energy deregulation needs more regulation... the IRS is faulted for lax pursuit of tax offenders... tc.  |
Inc. October 2003 |
Ask Inc.: Do I Have to Go to School? Sales strategies for people who positively hate to sell. Plus: Do you need a college degree to be an entrepreneur?  |
Inc. October 2003 |
Letters: Parley for Profit Savvy negotiating pays off... the one thing more painful than PowerPoint... hammering home the value of a sound business plan.  |
HBS Working Knowledge September 29, 2003 |
To Whom Should Boards be Accountable? Summing Up Reader comments suggest a wide divergence of views on the role of the board in the life cycle of a corporate entity. Interestingly, those who teach corporate law suggest that board accountabilities are subject to very broad interpretation.  |
Entrepreneur October 2003 |
Feedback Great Job, Coach!... Muzak to Our Ears... Youth Not Wasted... etc.  |
Entrepreneur October 2003 Kurlantzick & Pellet |
Money Buzz Simple tactics for avoiding bad credit... wooing top-notch talent to your board  |
Entrepreneur October 2003 Steve Cooper |
It Figures The number of small businesses receiving SBA loans... who's simplifying their life... etc.  |
Entrepreneur October 2003 Joanne Cleaver |
Management Buzz Rid your company of its jargon... why closing the last week of the year might be a smart idea... etc.  |
HBS Working Knowledge September 8, 2003 |
To Whom Should Boards be Accountable? Readers Respond It is imperative for each board to state its guiding principles publicly in advance of any pressing decision... When the board deviates from long- and short-term shareholder interests, it creates a vacuum that no other part of the corporation can fill.... etc.  |
CFO September 1, 2003 |
Windows into Valuation Microsoft weighs in on the debate over expensing stock options; the battle for shareholder proxy access heats up; health-care costs are still soaring; a conversation with FEI's Colleen Sayther; GM's record bond deal; and more.  |
| <Older 131-140 Newer> Return to current articles. |