Business Archives | Research & Innovation /research/category/business/ Thu, 30 Jan 2025 17:14:40 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Research identifies how to become the next Uber or Amazon /research/2021/09/07/research-identifies-how-to-become-the-next-uber-or-amazon-2/ Tue, 07 Sep 2021 15:30:55 +0000 /researchdev/2021/09/07/research-identifies-how-to-become-the-next-uber-or-amazon-2/ The success and proliferation of digital platforms like Uber and Amazon are increasingly inspiring entrepreneurs to build new ventures on similar lines. Despite the prominent success stories, many digital platforms fail to survive the startup stage. How can aspiring platform entrepreneurs overcome the early-stage challenge and enable the successful emergence of digital platform ecosystems? Professor Anoop […]

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The success and proliferation of digital platforms like Uber and Amazon are increasingly inspiring entrepreneurs to build new ventures on similar lines. Despite the prominent success stories, many digital platforms fail to survive the startup stage. How can aspiring platform entrepreneurs overcome the early-stage challenge and enable the successful emergence of digital platform ecosystems?

Professor , the Scotiabank Chair in International Business and Entrepreneurship at 91ɫ's Schulich School of Business, and his collaborator  from the Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (as well as a former doctoral student at Schulich) set out to answer this question.

Anoop Madhok

The challenge for the platform entrepreneur in the early stage is to secure the commitment and resources of autonomous third-party contributors for a little-known entity that is yet to emerge in the form of an ecosystem around the digital platform. The contributors are vital for the digital platform, as they create complements that enhance the platform’s value to consumers but are only motivated to produce complements for a platform that offers attractive platform resources and provides access to a large base of consumers. With an ecosystem that is yet to emerge, digital platform entrepreneurs, who are typically both owners as well as sponsors of their platforms, have few resources and avenues to attract these complementors (businesses that directly sell a product or service that complement the product or service of another company by adding value to mutual customers) in the early stages.

In their new study published in the Journal of Management Studies, Murthy and Madhok study numerous platforms in the incipient stage and demonstrate that the choice of platform sponsor scope offers a way to overcome the early-stage challenge of the emergence of digital platform ecosystems. Platform sponsor scope refers to the sponsor’s choice of value creation activities to perform internally as well as their decision rights over complements, a choice that shapes the opportunities subsequently available to complementors. When such opportunities seem beneficial, the complementors and consequently consumers are attracted to participate, leading to the emergence of the digital platform ecosystem.

The study develops a problem-solving perspective of the emergence of digital platform ecosystems and contends that the platform sponsor should choose their scope in alignment with the nature of the problem to find valuable complements efficiently. Such an alignment between problem and platform sponsor scope signals to complementors attractive opportunities and thus attracts their participation and, in turn, brings consumers to the ecosystem. Using a data set of crowdfunding campaigns to raise funds to launch digital platforms, they identify pathways for the successful emergence of complementary innovation ecosystems, open-source ecosystems and information ecosystems.

“The study highlights a novel set of considerations – problem and platform sponsor scope – that shifts the emphasis away from the actors (who) to the problem at hand (what) to explain platform ecosystem emergence, a hitherto understudied topic,” says Madhok.

Their findings suggest that aspiring entrepreneurs have agency in addressing this challenge and should focus on identifying the dimensions of the problem they confront and choose their scope accordingly to attract complementors and, consequently, consumers. Further, they demonstrate that multiple pathways exist for the platform sponsor to enable ecosystem emergence as long as the problem and their choice of scope are aligned. The underlying tenet is that the platform sponsor can shape attractive opportunities for the complementors when such an alignment is achieved.

Read the full study at.

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Successful Nigerian business-NGO partnerships rooted in collaboration /research/2017/11/03/successful-nigerian-business-ngo-partnerships-rooted-in-collaboration-2/ Fri, 03 Nov 2017 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2017/11/03/successful-nigerian-business-ngo-partnerships-rooted-in-collaboration-2/ 91ɫ Prof considers an unlikely partnership between an NGO and an oil company in Nigeria, and discovers under what conditions such partnerships thrive. What’s the key ingredient to successful partnerships? 91ɫ Development Studies Professor Uwafiokun Idemudia reviewed existing research on an unorthodox union between a non-governmental organization (NGO) and an oil company with […]

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91ɫ Prof considers an unlikely partnership between an NGO and an oil company in Nigeria, and discovers under what conditions such partnerships thrive.

What’s the key ingredient to successful partnerships? 91ɫ Development Studies Professor Uwafiokun Idemudia reviewed existing research on an unorthodox union between a non-governmental organization (NGO) and an oil company with a history of spills in Nigeria. He found that collaboration was beneficial even when innate creative tensions exist, and to reach sustainable targets, the company needs to align its overall strategy with the goals of the partnership.

Uwafiokun Idemudia

Uwafiokun Idemudia

This work, published in Business Strategy and the Environment (2016), fills an important void. “Different strategies adopted by NGOs for working with businesses have remained relatively unexamined,” Idemudia explains. “Ultimately, we’re looking for the necessary tools or approaches for sustainable development in developing countries,” he adds.

This is Idemudia’s forté. He is a thought leader in the area of critical development studies, political economy and political ecology approaches to natural resource extraction in developing countries, business and development, issues of governance, transparency and accountability in resource-rich African countries.

Most business-NGO partnerships fraught with mistrust

Business–NGO partnerships are based around the idea that by combining complementary core competences, resources and skills and sharing associated risks, business would achieve something it otherwise would not have achieve alone.

This is easier said than done. In reality, these partnerships can be fraught with tensions and complexities that introduce instability and precariousness. The relationship is often characterized by hostility and mistrust.

Idemudia’s research focused on two unlikely partners in region of environmental crisis

In this research, Idemudia focused on the Niger Delta, home to the Nigerian oil and gas industry. This is a region of crisis. “Environmental degradation, loss of livelihood, lack of social infrastructure and a high rate of poverty have, over time, transformed the Niger Delta into a volatile region where conflict is now endemic,” he explains.

In this research, Idemudia focused on the Niger Delta, home to the Nigerian oil and gas industry. Map of Niger Delta region courtesy of Professor Etim, Department of Chemical Sciences, Federal University, Wukari, Nigeria.

In his study, Idemudia examined the partnership between the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and the National Coalition on Gas Flaring and Oil Spills in the Niger Delta (NACGOND), a coalition of 20 civil society groups that seek to collectively address the issue of environmental degradation in the Niger Delta by advocating for changes in governmental and corporate policies.

SPDC does not have a good environmental track record in the region. From 1976 to 2005, a total of 9,107 oil spills were recorded in the Niger Delta, and from 2003 to 2007, SPDC alone recorded 1,243 spills. Making matters worse, often 70 per cent of the oil spilt into the environment is not recovered. Contamination, in other words, is chronic, making this the world’s most long-term environmental disaster.

SPDC joined into partnership with NACGOND mainly to improve its reputation after the series of oil spills.

From 1976 to 2005, 9,107 oil spills were recorded in the Niger Delta, making this the world’s most long-term environmental disaster. Photo courtesy of Stakeholders Democracy Network.

From 1976 to 2005, 9,107 oil spills were recorded in the Niger Delta, making this the world’s most long-term environmental disaster. Photo: Ed Kashi/VII

Idemudia’s research had two main goals: To critically examine the challenges and opportunities confronting a business–NGO partnership in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria; and to consider the theoretical and practical implications for business–NGO interactions in the case of a coalition of NGOs within Africa.

Engagement at heart of NGO/oil company collaboration

In studying how the collaboration took shape, Idemudia realized that engagement was key. This took shape in many ways, for example:

  • Quarterly NACGOND–SPDC meetings where NACGOND raised issues of concern and, in response, SPDC addresses the concerns.
  • Joint investigation visits where SPDC invited NACGOND to participate as an external third party observer in its process.
  • Both parties invited each other to participate in various capacities in a number of their individual organizational activities related to environmental management issues in the Niger Delta. This ranged from advocacy and research projects by NACGOND to field visit invitations extended by SPDC to NACGOND to see remediated sites.

“The participation of both partners in each other’s projects gives these projects credibility and ensures adequate representation of stakeholder groups in such events,” Idemudia explains.

Interestingly, the working atmosphere in this partnership was described as respectful, constructive and even friendly. Although both parties admitted that they came to the table lacking trust for the other, over time they gradually came to build trust. There seemed to be a consensus that the interaction was mutually beneficial.

Lessons learned point to collaboration, alignment

Idemudia’s research brought to the fore a few main take-away messages to building successful partnerships:

  • Collaboration is good for both parties. SPDC regained its reputation after years of oil spills, and also benefited from the dense network and far reach of NACGOND within the Niger Delta. NACGOND, on the other hand, benefited in terms of internal capacity building, better access to management to voice community discontent and the credibility to attract future partners that can be supportive of its cause.
  • Creative tensions exist, but that’s okay. They function as drivers of partnerships by creating enabling conditions for such partnerships to emerge and be sustained. This tension can serve as a source of discipline for both partners, but especially for the NGO partners because it moderates their tactics. It enables NGOs to maintain a critical distance from their business partners and thus not lose credibility.
  • Business should align partnership goals with company’s overall goals. Businesses that go into such partnership with the goal of sustainable development (not just profit), need to align and integrate the partnership goals with the company’s overall strategic goals. This will maximize the benefits of the partnership.
  • The best partnerships are where NGOs work with a non-NGO. Idemudia realizes that most NGOs might not be willing to collaborate on a one-to-one basis with a corporation. However, he believes they might be willing to join a coalition that is in partnership with a corporation. He also presses for more research in this area.

The article, “,” was published in Business Strategy and the Environment (2016). For more information on Uwafiokun Idemudia, visit his .

To learn more about Research & Innovation at 91ɫ, watch the , see the or visit the .

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

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Brexit analysis paints bleak picture for UK, potential for Canada /research/2017/05/08/brexit-analysis-paints-bleak-picture-for-uk-potential-for-canada-2/ Mon, 08 May 2017 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2017/05/08/brexit-analysis-paints-bleak-picture-for-uk-potential-for-canada-2/ 91ɫ’s Douglas Cumming writes comprehensive article on Brexit, tackling what is arguably the most pressing question: international business and entrepreneurship implications.

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91ɫ’s Douglas Cumming writes comprehensive article on Brexit, tackling what is arguably the most pressing question: international business and entrepreneurship implications.

Last year’s Brexit vote − the United Kingdom’s (UK) prospective withdrawal from the European Union (EU) − took the world by surprise and left even the most seasoned economists scratching their heads. The Schulich School of Business’ Douglas Cumming, Ontario Research Chair in Economics and Public Policy, has published a sound overview of this remarkably complex situation.

With funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and data collected immediately after the Brexit vote, Cumming researched the international business and entrepreneurship implications of Brexit, and came to a chilling conclusion for the UK, with some potential for Canada. His work, co-authored with the University of Minnesota’s Shaker Zahra and executed with the help of Schulich’s Sofia Johan, was published in the British Journal of Management (2016).

On June 23, 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union

On June 23, 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union

“We highlight some of the potentially negative consequences for markets in the UK and around the world that result from barriers to trade and immigration associated with the uncertainty created by Brexit,” says Cumming.

June 23, 2016, the day the world changed

Douglas Cummings

Douglas Cumming

It’s hard to image a single electoral event that would have such a ripple effect. This happened on June 23, 2016, with the Brexit vote. “There’s agreement that Brexit will unleash fundamental changes in the British business environment that will profoundly alter the dynamics of the relationship with the EU, North America and, in fact, the rest of the world,” Cumming states.

Immediate questions arose:

  • How would such a split be accomplished? What would this new world look like?
  • What does this mean for the existence of the UK, with Scotland and Northern Ireland indicating that they may be seizing the day to seek independence?
  • How would this affect the long-standing relationship between the UK and North America?
Study focuses on international business and entrepreneurship implications

In this paper, Cumming reviews the practitioner, policy and academic literature over the first month following the Brexit vote, and focuses on the issues associated with Brexit and international business and trade, multinationals and international entrepreneurship.

“There’s agreement that Brexit will unleash fundamental changes in the British business environment that will profoundly alter the rest of the world.” − Douglas Cumming

The existing literature indicates that North American companies will likely seek to retain their mutually beneficial relationship with the EU, one the world’s largest markets with advanced technologies and a highly skilled and educated labour force.

But predicting how the UK will fare with both the EU and North America is more difficult since, for many years, UK, Canadian and American companies have been collaborators as well as competitors. “Facing uncertainty, some of these multinationals have already expressed concern about declining profit margins causing them to reconsider the attractiveness of the UK as a place of business,” Cumming explains.

International finance could move from London to New 91ɫ

After Brexit, Cumming explains, some anticipate a declining role for London as a global economic and financial centre – a position that this city has held since the 1980s. Additionally, the EU may enact regulations that limit London’s role, which would prompt financial services companies to relocate, possibly to Germany or the United States (US). New 91ɫ City seems to be the obvious choice as it’s already a global financial hub.

Interest rates would be low as a result, which would affect exports. “This is coupled with predicted slower growth rates in the UK and EU, which may have ripple effects on North American companies as it increases currency (and political risk) volatility,” Cumming clarifies.

Brexit may have triggered the declining role of London as a financial centre. Pictured is the Millennium footbridge looking towards St. Paul's Cathedral at sunset

Brexit may have triggered the declining role of London as a financial centre

All of this poses a risk for financial stability in both the US and UK. The triple threat of excessively high debt levels, excessively low interest rates and excessively low productivity growth pose a particular risk.

This uncertainty, naturally, creates a conservative environment in which companies would start to think about reducing their investment in long-term activities, such as research and development, technology and other start-ups, which could improve the business climate by introducing innovative ideas that would spur growth.

UK firms will take a hit, experience brain drain

In this scenario, institutions are under considerable strain, if not total upheaval. Paradoxically, these developments will make entrepreneurialism very important in the new, post-Brexit environment. “Politicians, business people and entrepreneurs will have to actively work to reform existing institutions, abandon some of them and create new ones,” says Cumming.

However, he underscores the fact that immigration drives entrepreneurialism. So if legal barriers to immigration are set up in the post-Brexit era, this will hinder economic progress.

Cumming also notes that Brexit is predicted to have dire consequences for new start-ups. This is because funders and investors will be more attracted to EU-based businesses. “The uncertainty created by Brexit is a major consideration in making these decisions; this uncertainty is multifaceted and is expected to persist for years,” Cumming says, suggesting that UK start-ups may want to consider relocating to Canada or the US.

Indeed, Brexit may have triggered a situation where UK entrepreneurs are effectively encouraged to set up shop in the EU or elsewhere. Cumming notes that these changes will not play out well in the long-run in the UK, because they will effectively rob the UK of the technological capabilities of younger companies, the source of growth and job creation.

Cumming suggests that UK start-ups may want to consider relocating to Canada.

To Cumming, the first look at evidence specific to Brexit paints a picture in which UK and continental European firms will both be hurt by Brexit – the UK being the worse for wear compared to their continental counterparts.

UK start-ups may want to consider relocating to Canada, which has created programs that aggressively seek global entrepreneurs with strong STEM skills. Pictured is a panorama of the Toronto skyline at sunset.

UK start-ups may want to consider relocating to Canada, which has created programs that aggressively seek global entrepreneurs with strong STEM skills

UK entrepreneurs may be attracted to Canada’s strong STEM programs

This potential brain drain from the UK could benefit North America. According to Cumming, Canada and the US are eager to attract this talent to spur entrepreneurial activities and fill certain voids in existing companies. In fact, both countries have created programs that aggressively seek global entrepreneurs with strong STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) skills.

The paper, “ was published in the British Journal of Management (2016). To learn more about the Schulich School of Business, ranked among the leading business school in the world and #1 In Canada, visit the .

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

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YCAR's 2013 Asia Lecture looks at value and waste in capitalist society /research/2013/10/04/ycars-2013-asia-lecture-looks-at-value-and-waste-in-capitalist-society-2/ Fri, 04 Oct 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/10/04/ycars-2013-asia-lecture-looks-at-value-and-waste-in-capitalist-society-2/ The 91ɫ Centre for Asian Research (YCAR) 2013 Asia Lecture will feature geography and global studies Professor Vinay Gidwani of the University of Minnesota talking about value struggles in Delhi. The talk, Value Struggles: Waste Work and Urban Ecology in Delhi, will be on Tuesday, Oct. 8, with coffee beginning at 10:30am, followed by the […]

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The 91ɫ Centre for Asian Research (YCAR) 2013 Asia Lecture will feature geography and global studies Professor Vinay Gidwani of the University of Minnesota talking about value struggles in Delhi.

The talk, Value Struggles: Waste Work and Urban Ecology in Delhi, will be on Tuesday, Oct. 8, with coffee beginning at 10:30am, followed by the lecture at 11.30am, at 519 Kaneff Tower, Keele campus. YCAR will also host a roundtable with Gidwani later in gidwanithe day for graduate students, from 3 to 5pm, at 857 Kaneff Tower.

Vinay Gidwani

Gidwani, who studies the layering of labour processes and ecologies in agrarian and urban settings, describes waste as the flip side of value, the antithesis of capitalist value. Waste is the byproduct of surplus accumulation.

“I suggest that by tracing the dialectic of value and waste[…]we gain insight into how capital always draws its economic vitality and moral sanction from programs to domesticate and eradicate waste,” says Gidwani.

Waste confounds capitalism’s attempts to discipline and contain life within the domain of utility and accumulation. Contemporary urban transformations in cities like Delhi, India, around the management of municipal solid waste, for instance, should be properly construed as the latest salvo in a long history of value struggles.

Gidwani is also an adjunct professor at the Graduate Center of the City University of New 91ɫ and is editor of Antipode, the leading journal of radical geography. He is currently involved in The Afterlives of Waste, a project that examines the spatial histories, political uses and contemporary global political economy of waste as both commodity detritus and social excess. His most recent book is Capital, Interrupted: Agrarian Development and the Politics of Work in India (University of Minnesota Press, 2008).

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91ɫ hosts a new knowledge translation group /research/2013/08/20/york-university-hosts-a-new-knowledge-translation-group-2/ Tue, 20 Aug 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/08/20/york-university-hosts-a-new-knowledge-translation-group-2/ 91ɫ’s Knowledge Mobilization (KMb)Unithas joined forces with NeuroDevNet, a Network of Centres of Excellence (NCE), to provide knowledge translation (KT) leadership and services within the University of British Columbia-based network. “91ɫ’s Knowledge Mobilization Unit is continuing to make an impact by supporting transformative research through knowledge translation,” said Robert Haché (left), 91ɫ’s vice-president research […]

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91ɫ’s Knowledge Mobilization (KMb)Unithas joined forces with NeuroDevNet, a Network of Centres of Excellence (NCE), to provide knowledge translation (KT) leadership and services within the University of British Columbia-based network.

RobertHache“91ɫ’s Knowledge Mobilization Unit is continuing to make an impact by supporting transformative research through knowledge translation,” said Robert Haché (left), 91ɫ’s vice-president research & innovation. “We are proud of the important work 91ɫ’s leading KMb Unit is providing to NeuroDevNet, and warmly welcome the new members of the knowledge translation team.”

“For seven years, 91ɫ's Knowledge Mobilization Unit has been providing professional knowledge mobilization services to 91ɫ's researchers, students and their partners to maximize the economic, social and environmental impacts of research," said Phipps_David_1David Phipps (right), executive director, research & information services at 91ɫ. "I am delighted to be the knowledge translation lead for NeuroDevNet and provide services to accelerate the impact of their research and training programs on the lives of children and families living with neurodevelopmental disorders."

Anneliese Poetz, NeuroDevNetknowledge translation manager, and Matt Calverley,knowledge translation coordinator, are being hosted in 91ɫ's KMb Unit, in suite 201, Kaneff Tower, as of this month.

“This is an exciting development for NeuroDevNet,” says Dan Goldowitz, the organization's scientific director. “With NeuroDevNet moving strongly towards a translational phase, we are going to have many great stories to tell and then move toward important outcomes. The expertise present at 91ɫ’s Knowledge Mobilization Unit and our new KT lead, David Phipps, is hugely welcome and the network members are enthusiastically looking towards engagement with his team.”

NeuroDevNet is in its fourth year as an NCE, and has drawn together world-class researchers and clinicians across the country with expertise in three initial areas of focus, in autism spectrum disorder, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder and cerebral palsy.Translation of research into practice and commercial ventures, as well as engagement with policy makers, are key elements of the NCE mission.Knowledge translation is a central pillar of the NeuroDevNet initiative, funded for an initial period of five years by the NCE and Industry Canada through the Tri-Councils.

One in six Canadian children is affected by a brain-based developmental disorder. “NeuroDevNet exists to help these children and their families overcome the challenges that stem from neurodevelopmental conditions,” adds Goldowitz. “NeuroDevNet’s research is making important strides towards that objective. I am confident our new KT team will help ensure our findings reach stakeholders who share our commitment and can put that knowledge into action.”

For more information, visit the website.

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Harnessing the power of many: 91ɫ participates in crowdfunding summit /research/2013/08/20/harnessing-the-power-of-many-york-university-participates-in-crowdfunding-summit-2/ Tue, 20 Aug 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/08/20/harnessing-the-power-of-many-york-university-participates-in-crowdfunding-summit-2/ 91ɫ is an academic partner in a new summit exploring the power of crowdfunding. Hosted by the 91ɫ Region Business Innovation in Changing Times Conference Series, which focuses onproviding businesses access to ideas, insight and resources to help them adapt to the fast-changing marketplace, the Crowdfunding Revolution summit is set for Thursday, Aug. 22, […]

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91ɫ is an academic partner in a new summit exploring the power of crowdfunding. Hosted by the 91ɫ Region Business Innovation in Changing Times Conference Series, which focuses onproviding businesses access to ideas, insight and resources to help them adapt to the fast-changing marketplace, the Crowdfunding Revolution summit is set for Thursday, Aug. 22, from 8:30am to 12:30pm, at the Vaughan City Hall.

Crowdfunding, which is also known as crowdsourcing, crowd financing or equity crowdfunding, harnesses the power of a group of individuals who network and pool their money to support people or organizations, research or new business ventures. Crowdfunding is used by the film industry to gather startup costs for new productions, and it supports disaster relief, citizen journalism, new product development and more. The Crowdfunding Summit will highlight strategies to successfully crowdfund a business venture, social enterprise or social cause. Participants will have an opportunity to network with leaders in the field and hear about potential regulatory changes to address the opportunities presented by crowdfunding.

chandraDebra Chanda, founder of launch120.com and the global ambassador for Singularity University, is one of the featured presenters at the Crowdfunding Revolution summit

“We look forward to participating in the Crowdfunding Summit,” said Lisa Philipps, 91ɫ’s associate vice-president research. “Our involvement in this conference series highlights one of the many ways in which 91ɫ works with government, industry and community partners to mobilize knowledge to meet the needs of this rapidly growing, diverse region. These events are outstanding opportunities to learn about what is going on in 91ɫ Region and to network with potential research and learning partners.”

Those who attend will:

  • gain a better understanding of the impact of crowdfunding on business, not-for-profits and social ventures;
  • get an overview of crowdfunding platforms and systems available in Canada;
  • learn the steps to designing a crowdfunding campaign;
  • hear about best practices and strategies to employ;
  • receive updates on the innovative Social Venture Exchange (SVX) initiative from the MaRS Centre for Impact Investing;
  • get the latest updates on proposals and issues about crowdfunding for equity in Ontario; and
  • join a discussion with other organizations about collaborating on a crowdfunding pilot in 91ɫ Region.

This conference series is the result of a collaboration among the 91ɫ Small Business Enterprise Centre, chambers of commerce, and municipal, region and provincial governments. The Regional Innovation Centre, the United Way of 91ɫ Region and local enterprises of all sizes are also involved in the conference series. 91ɫ and Seneca College are academic partners in the series.

charlesCChristopher Charlesworth, co-founder of HiveWire.ca and Centre for Social Innovation’s Catalyst will also be a featured presenter at the summit

Speaking at the crowdfunding summit are: James Turner, vice-chair of the Ontario Securities Commission; Debra Chanda, founder of and the global ambassador for ; Adam Spence, manager of social venture exchange for the ; Christopher Charlesworth, co-founder of and Centre for Social Innovation’s ; Daniele Zanotti, CEO of the United Way of 91ɫ Region; and Jeff Dennis and Tracy Hooey of Fasken Martineau, an international business law firm based in Toronto.

Tickets are $50 plus HST. For more information, visit the website. Click to register for the conference.

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Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA number one in Canada /research/2012/10/17/kellogg-schulich-executive-mba-number-one-in-canada-2/ Wed, 17 Oct 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/10/17/kellogg-schulich-executive-mba-number-one-in-canada-2/ The Financial Times of London ranked the Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA (EMBA) at 91ɫ the number one EMBA program in Canada Monday. This is the sixth year that the Schulich School of Business has been eligible to participate in the Financial Times ranking and the sixth straight year that the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA program has been […]

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The Financial Times of London ranked the Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA (EMBA) at 91ɫ the number one EMBA program in Canada Monday.

This is the sixth year that the Schulich School of Business has been eligible to participate in the Financial Times ranking and the sixth straight year that the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA program has been ranked number one in Canada.

“We’re pleased to have been rated the number one EMBA program in Canada for the sixth straight year by the Financial Times of London and among the top EMBA programs globally,” said Schulich Dean Dezsö J. Horváth.

Dezsö J. Horváth

The Kellogg-Schulich EMBA program placed 27th globally in the 2012 Financial Times ranking, finishing ahead of the Stern School of Business at New 91ɫ, Michigan, Columbia, Cornell and UCLA, and behind Kellogg and IMD. Among EMBA programs based in North America or involving North American schools, the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA ranked seventh overall. Among programs based outside of North American or involving schools outside North America, the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA placed 15th. And among consortia programs (EMBAs delivered by two or more schools), Schulich was 10th in the world. Among the top 10 consortia EMBAs, three belong to the Kellogg network of EMBA partner schools: Kellogg-Schulich, Kellogg-WHU Beisheim (based in Germany) and Kellogg-Hong Kong University of Science & Technology (which ranked number one in the world for the third straight year).

For complete details regarding the ranking, visit the website.

Other Survey Highlights

The Kellogg-Schulich EMBA ranked among the top 20 in the world in the following categories:

  • 15th in the world in the “Research” category, which measures the number of articles published by the entire Faculty in leading academic and business practitioner journals.
  • 17th in the world in the “International Students” category, which measures international diversity and experience in the classroom.
  • 17th in the world in the “Work Experience” category, which measures the seniority and international experience of the EMBA program’s students.
  • 17th in the world in the “International Course Experience” category, which measures the percentage of classroom teaching hours that are carried out in countries outside of the country where the program is located.

Monday's Financial Times survey marks the third straight ranking in which one of Schulich's MBA or EMBA programs has been rated number one in Canada. Earlier this month, Schulich's MBA program was ranked number one in Canada by The Economist magazine and 16th in the world; and in September, Schulich's MBA program was ranked number one in Canada by Corporate Knights magazine.

For complete ranking details, visit the website.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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Schulich team aces accounting Case Competition /research/2012/03/19/schulich-team-aces-accounting-case-competition-2/ Mon, 19 Mar 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/03/19/schulich-team-aces-accounting-case-competition-2/ Schulich School of Business students – Team ACE – won gold at theCertified Management Accountants of Ontario's seventh annual Case Competition, winning $5,000 and the coveted CMA Ontario Case Competition Cup. “The Case Competition was an excellent way to apply what we’re learning in our program,” said Latursia Kathiraveluppillai, of the winning team. “The added […]

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Schulich School of Business students – Team ACE – won gold at theCertified Management Accountants of Ontario's seventh annual Case Competition, winning $5,000 and the coveted CMA Ontario Case Competition Cup.

“The Case Competition was an excellent way to apply what we’re learning in our program,” said Latursia Kathiraveluppillai, of the winning team. “The added pressure of the time limit and the interactivity of the stakeholder groups made the experience much closer to solving real-world issues in the market.”

Members of Team ACE from 91ɫ's Schulich School of Business: from left, Arnold Lai, Karen Tran, Latursia Kathiraveluppillai and Shelley Li

The other three victorious team members were Arnold Lai, Shelley Li and Karen Tran. In second place, Team Tryhard from Conestoga College in Waterloo, won $2,500. In all, 100 students competed from 16 Ontario universities and colleges. This year's competition was held at McMaster University in Hamilton.

During the competition, students were invited to put their management leadership skills to the test. The teams used ExperiencePoint, a computer-based, decision-driven simulation, where they were challenged to strategically advise a fictional company's senior management on a change management plan given limited resources of time and money. ExperiencePoint offers a range of award-winning web-based simulations that are used in top business schools and executive programs around the world.

This year, the teams were challenged to take on the role of a senior adviser to the fictional Global Tech Inc., a manufacturer of global positioning systems (GPS). Students were challenged to diagnose the business issues and using change management principles, plan and implement a solution.

Each team player taking part was a and had completed, or is in the process of completing, a .

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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Financial Times ranks Schulich EMBA number one in Canada /research/2011/10/25/financial-times-ranks-schulich-emba-number-one-in-canada-2/ Tue, 25 Oct 2011 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/10/25/financial-times-ranks-schulich-emba-number-one-in-canada-2/ The Financial Times of London yesterday ranked the Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA (EMBA) at 91ɫ the number one EMBA program in Canada and number 11 in the world. This is the fifth year that Schulich has been eligible to participate in the Financial Times ranking and the fifth straight year that the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA program […]

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The Financial Times of London yesterday ranked the Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA (EMBA) at 91ɫ the number one EMBA program in Canada and number 11 in the world.

This is the fifth year that Schulich has been eligible to participate in the Financial Times ranking and the fifth straight year that the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA program has been ranked number one in Canada.

“We’re pleased to have been rated the number one EMBA program in Canada for the fifth straight year by the Financial Times of London, and we're especially pleased that we strongly improved our overall global position this year and now rank among the very best EMBA programs in the world,” said Schulich Dean Dezsö J. Horváth (right).

In placing 11th globally in the 2011 Financial Times ranking, the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA program finished ahead of IMD in Switzerland, the Stern School of Business at New 91ɫ and the Berkeley/Columbia EMBA, and just behind London Business School and Wharton. Among EMBA programs based in North America or involving North American schools, the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA ranked sixth overall and was the only Canadian program to make the world’s top 25.

Among Canadian-based programs, the Kellogg-Schulich EMBA placed ahead of the EMBA programs delivered by the Rotman School of Management, which ranked 28th; the Ivey School of Business, ranked 36th; the Cornell-Queen’s EMBA, ranked 44th; the Alberta-Haskayne EMBA (a joint program delivered by the University of Alberta School of Business and the University of Calgary’s Haskayne School of Business), ranked 73rd; and the Queen's EMBA, which ranked 84th overall. For complete details regarding the rankings, visit thewebsite.

Other survey highlights

The Kellogg-Schulich EMBA ranked among the top 15 in the world in the following categories:

  • Third in the world in the “International Students” category, which measures international diversity and experience in the classroom.
  • Eighth in the world in the “Work Experience” category, which measures the seniority and international experience of the EMBA program’s students.
  • 12th in the world in the “International Course Experience” category, which measures the percentage of classroom teaching hours carried out in countries outside of the country where the program is located.
  • 14th in the world in the "Career Progress" category, which measures rises in the seniority of job positions held.
  • 15th in the world in the “Research” category, which measures the number of articles published by the entire faculty in leading academic and business practitioner journals.

۱ٱ岹’s Financial Times survey marks the third straight ranking in which one of Schulich's MBA or EMBA programs has been ranked among the world's best. Earlier this month, Schulich's MBA program was ranked number nine globally by The Economist magazine and ranked number two in the world by the Aspen Institute, a US-based leadership think tank.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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Professor Emeritus Ronald Burke: What to say when your business takes a body-blow /research/2011/09/13/professor-emeritus-ronald-burke-what-to-say-when-your-business-takes-a-body-blow-2/ Tue, 13 Sep 2011 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/09/13/professor-emeritus-ronald-burke-what-to-say-when-your-business-takes-a-body-blow-2/ Your small business has just taken a serious blow – a key customer cancelled a big order for the fall. How do you deliver the bad news in-house? It’s best to take an upfront, honest approach, wrote The Globe and Mail Sept. 9. Share industry reports to support your case: “If the world is getting […]

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Your small business has just taken a serious blow – a key customer cancelled a big order for the fall. How do you deliver the bad news in-house? It’s best to take an upfront, honest approach, wrote The Globe and Mail Sept. 9.

Share industry reports to support your case: “If the world is getting tougher, then provide documentation that shows how tough things are,” says Ronald Burke, professor emeritus, organizational studies, at 91ɫ’s Schulich School of Business in Toronto. “You can say, ‘Here's the industry picture, and here's our company picture. Here are the changes going on, and the threats we are facing. We need to do more, with less, if we are going to survive this together.’”

Communicate that you, as owner-manager, are in the same boat: “It's critical for the person at the top to say, ‘I'm going to make sacrifices, too,’” says Burke, who is co-editor of a textbook titled Human Resource Management in Small Business: Achieving Peak Performance.

Encourage employees to come up with cost-saving ideas: “Employees know how the business can save money and operate more efficiently,” says Burke. “I would certainly encourage them to find ways to cut costs without cutting people.” In this lacklustre economic environment, employees are keen to ensure the business's survival. “The job market is not that great,” says Burke. “People are interested in keeping their jobs, and making sacrifices is easier to pull off in a small business.”

Some cost-saving measures include short-term salary reductions, shorter work weeks and an end to merit pay. “There are a lot of ideas that a small business can tap into, without layoffs,” says Burke.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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