News
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March 16, 2022Howard Schultz returns to lead Starbucks on interim basisQuotes by assistant professor of management Timothy Hubbard about Starbucks' CEO stepping down were picked up by AP News and a dozen other news outlets.
AP News -
March 16, 2022Four ways the Fed’s interest rate hike could affect you“Even though much of this is anticipated, when short-term rates rise, there’s going to be a bump in mortgage rates and a bump in the cost of capital — and that will happen immediately,” said Jeffrey Bergstrand, an economics and finance professor at the University of Notre Dame and former economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, in a Washington Post piece.
Washington Post -
March 16, 2022Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson is retiring, and Howard Schultz is returning as interim chiefTimothy Hubbard, an assistant management professor at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business, was quoted by CNBC in a story about the return of Howard Shultz as interim CEO of Starbucks.
CNBC -
March 16, 2022Charities can benefit by giving contributors more control over their donations, study showsDonors feel more personal control over how their time (versus money) is used, according to research from John Costello, assistant professor of marketing at Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business.
Shannon Roddel -
March 16, 2022Why Starbucks naming Howard Schultz as interim CEO is a huge red flag"For a company the size and stature of Starbucks not to have a solid succession plan is surprising,” management professor Timothy Hubbard said in a Forbes piece about interim CEO Howard Schultz.
Forbes -
March 15, 2022I Am ND: Meet Joe Holt — not an average JoeJoseph Holt, the Audrey M. and James E. Jack Professor of Business Ethics in the Mendoza College of Business, was featured in ND Works for his volunteer work during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Gwen O'Brien -
March 15, 2022Companies that haven’t left Russia may be too late to win back AmericansManagement professor James O'Rourke was interviewed by Newsweek about how companies can potentially damage their brand image by continuing to operate in Russia.
Newsweek -
March 14, 2022What’s your seat worth?New research by Robert Easley, the John W. Berry Sr. Department Chair and Professor of Information Technology, Analytics, and Operations (ITAO), helps sports ticket sellers accurately determine what a ticket should be worth.
Brandi Wampler -
March 14, 2022Putin threatens to nationalize Western companies that exit Russia"Some businesses, some manufacturing operations, might well fit the Russian model," James O'Rourke, a professor of Management at the University of Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business, told VOA.
Voice of America News -
March 11, 2022Dozens of corporations are still in Russia. It’s getting harder for them to leaveManagement professor James O'Rourke was quoted in a Washington Post story about the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the potential damage to brands companies face for continuing to do business in Russia.
Washington Post