Are you looking to offer an education abroad program? This webinar will provide you with the knowledge, experience, and resources you need to design an education abroad program at the two-year college level. The workshop is specifically targeted towards educators and will focus on all aspects of education abroad and international internships.
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Please click the website link to register.
FREE and open to all, but registration is required. Recently, the nature of entrepreneurial activity has gone through tremendous change with entrepreneurs designing business models challenging even the strongest global players, and responding to urgent calls such as sustainability. Fashion industry have showcased numerous striking examples of how new ventures change the rules of the game in a well-established industrial domain. This has been traced in the rise of several international brands founded by fashion entrepreneurs (i.e., ACBC Shoes, Reformation, Everlane, Patagonia), in the increasing number of collaborations between incumbent firms, new ventures and NGOs (i.e., ACBC shoes collaborating with luxury brands like Missoni and Chloe, Gucci collaborating with Wordrise and Artolution, Adidas collaborating with Parley for the Oceans), as well as in criticisms towards the current business models of established global brands (i.e., fast fashion companies like Zara).
With the purpose of providing insight both from the academic domain and practice, this webinar will present a discussion to highlight following questions:
- How does a strong orientation towards sustainability transform the playground of big multinationals in the fashion industry? What kind of opportunities have emerged for international new ventures?
- How do digital technologies change the nature of fashion entrepreneurship and affect the achievement of sustainability-oriented goals? Is technology a part of the problem, or is it the solution?
- In the face of these changes, what are the high priorities on the agenda of practitioners? What are the striking research questions for academics?
Key take-aways:
Hearing about the personal experience of a fashion entrepreneur with international coverage.
Gaining a viewpoint on various business model implications of sustainability orientation with a special focus on how entrepreneurs change the face of international competition in the fashion industry.
Learning about new research questions and strategies
When Martin Richenhagen joined AGCO Corp. in 2004, it was already a $3 billion publicly traded firm. But sixteen years later, when he retired from his posts as chairman and CEO, it was a Fortune 500 powerhouse combining some of the biggest brands in the business of agricultural equipment. With $10 billion in sales, it doubled in size during his tenure to more than 20,000 employees around the globe.
This extraordinary growth story, rooted in metro Atlanta, is linked with Mr. Richenhagens vision to expand aggressively via acquisitions while peering constantly around the corner to see future trends in food and farming.
Key Takeaways:
-How multinational corporations should navigate a strategy of growth through acquisitions versus organic sales
-Lessons on hiring, training and deploying executives in various emerging and developed markets and across functions, from management to marketing to manufacturing
-How leaders can use embrace cultural differences as an advantage rather than a hindrance
A key concern in business education is creating solid and sustained bridges between school and career. Career readiness remains a central focus and challenge. Recent studies by Pew Research points to the lack of preparedness of college graduates for the workplace and the need for novel approaches in what we teach, and how we teach it, to address the skills gap. In international business, partnerships and virtual exchange are increasingly valuable ingredients in developing the skills required of todays global managers. Using selected virtual exchange projects with partners in North and South Africa, we discuss how global competencies, cultural awareness, and international virtual-teaming skills can be imparted as integral aspects of an international business curriculum. The three panelists representing academic and business groups will describe their roles in designing and implementing these collaborative cross-border projects, their value to different stakeholders, including students and employers, and propose ways to assess and sustain these career readiness, impactful initiatives.
Key Takeaways
Conceiving, implementing and assessing team-based, virtual exchange projects, involving international partners.
Leveraging academic-business partnerships to ensure career relevant virtual exchange initiatives for students.
Identifying funding sources for signature international business projects.
Join expert Jon M. Huntsman, Jr, former US Ambassador to Russia, China and Singapore,in the national conversation of US-China relations!
Jon Huntsman, Jr. began his career in public service as a staff assistant to President
Ronald Reagan, and served each of the five presidents since then in critical roles around
the world, including as deputy assistant secretary of commerce for Asia, U.S. trade
ambassador, and ambassador to Singapore, China, and most recently, Russia. Twice
elected governor of Utah, Governor Huntsman brought about strong economic and tax
reforms, tripled the states rainy-day fund, and helped bring unemployment rates to
historic lows. During his tenure, Utah was named the best-managed state in America and
ranked number one in the nation in job growth.
Ambassador Huntsman was a candidate for president in 2012. Previously he chaired or
served on the boards of several major companies, educational institutions, and nonprofits.
He has been a visiting fellow at the Kennedy School of Government, and a
distinguished lecturer at Duke Universitys Sanford School of Public Policy. Huntsman is a
seventh generation Utahn and has been married for 36 years to Mary Kaye Huntsman. They
are the parents of seven children, including two adopted daughters from China and India.
Huntsman is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and has ten honorary doctoral
degrees.
Registration in the website link.
In this webinar, four area editors of the Journal of International Business Studies will discuss key trends, topics and issues in IB research, as well as the best practices for publishing in leading international business journals. This webinar will include short presentations followed by a discussion moderated by the co-hosts, Dr. Ahmet Kirca and Dr. David Griffith.
Key Takeaways
Learn topics of significant interest to a variety of international business areas
Tips related to best practices for publishing international business research
Gain insights into the JIBS review process
Webinar Meeting Time Conversions:
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM (CDT)
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM (EDT)
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM (GMT)
Registration is not available, but you can view the recorded session in the website link
Rarely does a company sustain its global industry leadership for more than a few decades, and most that do so are very well-known global brands. YKK, an 87-year-old Japanese manufacturer of zippers, is not a household name, yet it has quietly and impressively, stayed atop of the global fastener industry for decades. It has remained relevant and preserved its leadership globally and in the U.S. market.
What enables YKK to do so well for so long? Join us for a conversation with senior leadership of YKK North America and learn how YKK has beaten the odds, and provides a possible roadmap for other companies looking to sustain a viable, profitable business in international markets.
Key takeaways:
Learn about key factors that contributed to YKKs longevity
Gain insights from YKKs senior leaders as to future challenges and prospects
Learn about implications for other firms seeking persistent success in global business
Click the website link for registration information
Exporting is arguably the most consequential international business (IB) and international marketing (IM) activity undertaken by firms. It is also the backbone of IB initiatives, with MNCs and other large international firms being among the largest exporters. Recently, the anti-globalization theme has regained momentum, especially following the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and subsequent supply chain bottlenecks. These disruptions have demonstrated the importance of exporting and importing not only for finished goods but also commodities. Paradoxically, as compared to the past, far less research on exporting topics is published in academic journals lately. Research activity on exporting as an alternative to more involved forms of IB/IM engagement does not appear to have gained much momentum among scholars. Our goal in this webinar is to present exportings role in IB/IM research and practice. We will also discuss how exporting strategy can respond to fundamental shifts in globalization (e.g., digitalization, anti-globalization, strong dollar), and disruptive changes in global climate (e.g., politics, economic, the pandemic). The webinar will highlight country and company illustrations and will provide various lenses through which scholars and practitioners might approach exporting.
The target audiences include academics, researchers, and practitioners
Key Takeaways:
The ubiquity and importance of exporting within IM/IB
Responding to fundamental global shifts and disruptive forces through exporting
Issues and topics for future export research consideration (areas, conceptualizations, and
methods)
To register click website link
For this webinar, we invited three supply chain scholars who have published important foundational work in the area of global supply chain management. Our panelists will discuss
their research addressing contemporary conceptual and methodological best practices as well as reflect upon the field. This webinar will include short presentations followed by a discussion moderated by the co-hosts.
Learn the current state of the global supply chain literature and areas of high future research opportunity
Gain insights into different theoretical foundations for advancing the global supply chain literature
Tips related to best practices for publishing research in the field of global supply chain management
Please see registration information under website
The Pacific Ocean is our planets single biggest feature. If western civilization was shaped by the Mediterranean Sea, and industrialization and hyper-globalization were marked by the Atlantic Ocean, it is clear that an important part of our future will play out in the Pacific, in environmental, security and economic terms. With the Indo-Pacific becoming a new epicenter of world affairs, a new kind of 21stcentury Great Game is taking place among global superpowers in the South Pacific. Home to fewer than 13 million inhabitants, yet covering 15% of the worlds surface, the South Pacific Island nations have been, for a long time, seen as simply a bunch of small remote islands, marred by the triple tyranny of colonial history, remoteness and size. Capturing human imagination and sparking geopolitical discourse for centuries, going back to James Harringtons utopian commonwealth of Oceana (1656), the South Pacific remains one of the neglected locations within the international business discipline, despite its growing security, economic and environmental relevance. Joined by three experts on and from the region. For additional information, go to registration site by clicking the website link.
Time of event is Eastern Time (US and Canada)