51勛圖厙

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TalentEgg recognizes innovation in the 51勛圖厙Desautels Career Management team

The 51勛圖厙Desautels Career Management team has taken home the TalentEgg Special Award For Innovation By Career Centre, announced at the 12th annual TalentEgg Recruitment Excellence Awards and Conference on Wednesday, June 7, 2023.

Published: 8 Jun 2023

BCom graduate Julia Ayim named Black Grad 2023 valedictorian

One of this years three Black Grad valedictorians, Julia Ayim (BCom23) has just completed a Bachelor of Commerce specializing in Strategic Management and Organizational Behaviour at the Desautels Faculty of Management. She and fellow graduates were celebrated at the annual Black Grad gala on April 30, a sold-out event organized by the Black Students Network of 51勛圖厙(BSN).

Published: 12 May 2023

How the Chickasaw Nation grew its economy

Located in Oklahoma, the Chickasaw Nation operates more than 100 businesses and employs nearly 14,000 people. The federally recognized Native American tribe has come a long way since Governor Bill Anoatubby began working there as health director in the 1970s. We had to use ingenuity because we did not have a lot of resources. We had the human resources that we needed to mobilize.

Published: 26 Apr 2023

A Recap on BHM 2023 at Desautels

This Black History Month, 51勛圖厙Desautels hosted a lineup of five in-person and virtual events that not only promoted equity in the workplace for Black people, but also highlighted uplifting aspects of Black culture through enterprise.

Published: 31 Mar 2023

Okimaw Community & HR Solutions works with First Nations leaders to implement effective human resources

First Nations band managers typically play dual roles, serving as both finance and human-resources manager, but finances are often their primary focus, says Miranda Kennedy, the Vice President of Human Resources at Okimaw Community & HR Solutions, a company that works with First Nations and related organizations. Rarely is anyone in the band office equipped to manage employee grievances, workplace safety or updating policies and procedures, Kennedy told Prof.

Published: 14 Feb 2023

Dean Yolande Chan seeks to foster inclusivity, to generate future successes

The Dean of the Desautels Faculty of Management wants to give out keys to doors that were once locked. The hope and dream is to create opportunities for others, Yolande Chan told Bill Brownstein in an interview for the Montreal Gazette. As a Black dean, Im not about exclusion. Im about inclusion. We want to be representative of the markets we serve as businesses.

Published: 14 Feb 2023

Corporate gender dynamics are an important factor in womens job-seekers decision-making

Male-dominated startups have more difficulty hiring female talent, and their companys gender dynamics play a role. An article in Forbes.com cites research from Desautels Prof. Elena Obukhova, which has shown that female job-seekers give consideration to how women are treated in their prospective workplaces.

Published: 3 Feb 2023

Delve: How Organizations Can Increase Gender Diversity by Rethinking Job Recruitment, with Brian Rubineau

In the past few years of the Covid pandemic, many people have left or lost their jobs and sought out new ones. Who has succeeded and who hasnt depends not only on merit and ability, but on who you knowword-of-mouth is one of the most common ways that people learn about and are encouraged to apply for jobs. And who you know typically reflects your gender, race, and other influential differences that in policy terms are markers of diversity.

Published: 20 Jan 2023

Cheekbone Beauty founder Jenn Harper incorporates Indigenous teachings into company culture

Many companies have missions and visions, and ours is helping every Indigenous person see and feel their value in the world, said Jenn Harper in an interview with ProfessorKarl Moore for The Globe and Mail. Harpers company is called Cheekbone Beauty, and it seeks to make sustainable cosmetics that wont end up in a landfill.

Published: 19 Jan 2023

National Indigenous Economic Strategy is a road map for building Indigenous economies

There are more than 50,000 Indigenous businesses in Canada. They operate in every sector of the economy, and contribute $32 billion to the countrys GDP. And Indigenous businesses are poised to grow further, said Dr. Marie Delorme in an interview with Prof. Karl Moore for The Globe and Mail. Economic prosperity is critical to achieving reconciliation, says Delorme, who is CEO and founder of the Imagination Group of Companies.

Published: 19 Jan 2023

Delve: Why Environmental, Social, and Governance Investment Standards Need an Indigenous Perspective

In the high-stakes realm of finance and investment, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria play a larger role than ever in companies decision making and commitment to creating shared value. In this accelerated transition toward cross-sector economic change, whose interests are centred and whose concerns are left out of the sustainability conversation?

Published: 16 Dec 2022

Business leaders now operate at the intersection of business operations and global trends

Politics has pervaded the world of business, writes Prof. Karl Moore in Forbes.com. Environmental, social and governance (ESG) and equity, diversityand inclusion (EDI) are bothchanging corporate practices.

Published: 14 Nov 2022

Chef Rich Francis revives Indigenous culinary traditions

Rich Francis, owner of Seventh Fire Hospitality Group in Six Nations in Ontario and Alberta, never set out to be a chef, but leveraged his time on Top Chef Canada to launch a prominent culinary career. Francis focuses on the precolonial culinary traditions of Indigenous peoples, but there are limits on what hes able to do. Most of my work is in First Nations communities, Francis told Prof.

Published: 8 Nov 2022

Inauthenticity in the workplace can harm diversity and inclusion

Leaders are often faced with being their authentic self or doing what it takes to succeed. Decisions taken by senior management in the face of this authenticity dilemma can set a negative example for their juniors. This can be particularly insidious for people from underrepresented groups who may feel the need to suppress their identity to progress in their career.

Published: 31 Oct 2022

More guns and drugs on the street fuel perception of increased violent crime in Quebec

Quebecs homicide rate is lower than it was a decade ago, but a slight majority of people that live in cities arent feeling as safe as they used to. This rests in the publics perception that there is a lack of organization, according Fady Dagher (EMBA12), Chief of Police in Longueuil, in an interview with TVAs Le monde lenvers.

Published: 28 Sep 2022

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