Podcast: 'Strategic' defaults in the recovering real estate market
The Phoenix resale home market rebounded slightly in February, according to the Realty Studies Report from the W. P. Carey School of Business. Compared to January, the number of transactions increased and prices were up a bit.
Reducing health care costs through supply chain management
In the national debate over how to make U.S. health care more efficient, one promising area for reform is often overlooked: supplies.
China's controlled currency
Is the Chinese currency undervalued? If so, by how much, and how does this impact global trade? "That's a profound question," said one expert at "The Currency of Trade," a forum convened recently in Beijing, hosted by Arizona State University, the Kearny Alliance and Tsinghua University.
Roll out the red carpet: A culture of service excellence
"There is no arrival at customer service excellence," said Terry Cain, vice president of operational excellence at Avnet, Inc.
Step-by-step: There's a process behind smart process improvement
There's little margin for error when you're in the business of selling electrons. After all, if an electron traveled around the world instead of bouncing around the nucleus of an atom, it would circle the earth some 8.3 times in one second.
How small businesses can survive and thrive in a recession — part one
Recessions are especially hard on small businesses. Few small firms have the resources to stay the course and wait out the bad times. Credit is scarce, and budget cutting difficult. In a small operation, there are not that many places to cut.
Nothing to sniffle at: Saving lives with software
Chaos in clinics" was what one TV news broadcast called 2009's shortage of H1N1 vaccine. Once vaccine did start trickling into the supply chain, it was up to county officials to decide which healthcare providers would get the few doses available, and those decisions had to be made on the fly.
Podcast: Phoenix housing market remains on shaky ground
Although the number of Valley home resales for June has improved over May, there's no doubt the market remains on shaky ground.
Temporary employment: This bellwether bears watching
Optimism about the strength of the recovery took another hit when the June employment numbers were released recently. Economy-watchers had expected at least modest growth, but seasonally adjusted nonfarm employment fell by 125,000 jobs from May.
Emergency programming: The mindset that makes it happen
The team from the Department of Information Systems that created decision-support software to help distribute crucial H1N1 vaccine knew that for this project, speed trumped all other protocols.