Steve Jagler, for BizTimes Media
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Steve Jagler, former BizTimes Milwaukee editor.
Take your company to the ‘Next Stage’
Empower your people to think like entrepreneurs and serve your customers.
Suburban companies comprise ‘Fastest Five’
The Council of Small Business Executives recently unveiled its list of the “Fastest Five” companies.
Koss Corp. faces steep challenges
From this office, it's always been difficult to watch good Milwaukee people and companies endure hard times.
‘Get Smarter’ and jumpstart your career
“The Transfer of Knowledge and Power to the Next Generation” will be the theme of the 2014 BizTimes Get Smarter Talent Development Conference.
Wisconsin manufacturers are bullish
More than three-fourths of the manufacturing executives responding to The Paranet Group’s Mid-Year Survey are forecasting increases in sales at their companies, amplifying several...
CEOs to share insights at Manufacturing Summit
A panel of accomplished chief executive officers will discuss the challenges and opportunities for competing in a global economy at the 2014 BizTimes Manufacturing Summit.
Cool with an asterisk
I always have mixed emotions when Milwaukee finds itself ranked on a national list of cool places that you didn’t know were cool.
But that...
Call to executives to speak at Get Smarter Conference
“The Transfer of Knowledge and Power to the Next Generation” will be the theme of the 2014 BizTimes Get Smarter Conference.
Bowling centers fall into the gutter
If you do a Google search for the phrase “bowling is a dying sport,” you will discover that folks have been predicting the demise of keggling since the dawn of the digital age.
Arena needs public champions to get it done
The Milwaukee Cultural and Entertainment Capital Needs Task Force today conducted a discussion featuring business leaders from Oklahoma City, Denver and Cleveland, who shared insights about how their communities rallied to build public support to build NBA arenas and invest in other cultural and mass transit infrastructure projects.
Don’t be afraid to fire a customer
Chad Albrecht, president of Centare, drew some rather inquisitive looks when he told the audience at a recent business luncheon that the most important strategy driving growth at his Brookfield-based software development company is not “putting the customer first,” but instead is “putting employees first.”
Health care is due for next disruption
One of the coolest aspects of my job is that I get to meet and interview a lot of smart people.