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This description-based critical incident focuses on the onboarding lessons associated with the British royal family and their business that can be applied to anyone entering a family that concurren
This decision-based critical incident describes how Operations Vice President Cody of Bigfoot Heating and Air should deal with Nate, his competent but overstepping customer service specialist.
Diegnau Farms was quickly approaching the renewal of a farm rental agreement.
Nick Oda was a marketing consultant hired by Momo Ltd, a lingerie manufacturer based in Tokyo, Japan.
The critical incident explores the complexities Jan, owner of JDD Rockway LLC, faced in navigating the challenging U.S. freight market post-COVID-19 pandemic.
Business instructors face significant challenges.
This decision-based critical incident considers how Lourdes should deal with her combative but competent office manager Dixie.
This paper develops a novel Ignatian-based entrepreneurship education model that integrates dark-side theories of entrepreneurship into entrepreneurship teaching to supplement traditional process
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
Since its founding as three internet genealogy sites in 1996, Ancestry.com (Ancestry) evolved as a public and private firm consisting of four product lines, each with different growth potentials
This decision-based critical incident describes Jorge’s concern about how to deal with the double bind of customer backlash caused by charging large deposits for propane tanks while facing a seve
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
In this paper, we share learnings from a decade-long experiment in developing a bridge course that integrates a theological perspective into business education at a Catholic University.
Amy Hill had hiked to the top of her 44-acre property with her six-year-old son and was having second thoughts about starting a woman-owned small seasonal business, Creekside Maple Syrup.
The critical incident considers how innovative business models deployed by new entrants have the potential to serve as agents of disruptive or discontinuous change.
The Economy of Communion (EoC) is a worldwide entrepreneurial movement which sees the person, rather than profit, as the most important focus of business.
In January 2009, Ed Huegel, owner of InsulTec, a small foam insulation installation company in Alta Vista, Iowa, needed to make a decision. Ed had owned InsulTec for nine years.
This case explores the costs and benefits of being a ride share driver as either a full or part-time job.
Leslie Arbury, a young graduate student and lover of clothes and shopping, was intrigued by the idea of opening her own boutique.