These 10 local people, businesses, and nonprofits are working to improve lives in their communities.
Attorneys from Perkins Coie, an international firm, are joining Dorsey offices in Chicago and Boise.
The deal represents a consolidation trend in which Minneapolis firms join national firms to gain breadth and depth of services.Â
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Industry expertise and life experience are advantages for these Minnesota founders, who are starting new companies at an age when most of their peers are winding down.
The Cedar Avenue bar that put Minneapolis on the national food map faces an era of change—so it can stay the same.
Despite a trend toward communal office design, research shows the way to get employees back in the office is to give them their own quiet workspace.
These Minnesota business leaders are MVPs in their industries.
Our annual list of businesses' favorite vendors and service providers is designed to keep your operation running seamlessly.
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Set to launch in January, the Minnesota program will take on founders whose businesses earn between $5 million and $250 million annually.
App helps individuals make diet choices customized to personal health needs.
Attorneys from Perkins Coie, an international firm, are joining Dorsey offices in Chicago and Boise.
The deal represents a consolidation trend in which Minneapolis firms join national firms to gain breadth and depth of services.Â
These 10 local people, businesses, and nonprofits are working to improve lives in their communities.
Amid other retail layoffs, automation and AI may have turned this sector into a canary in the coal mine.
Mortgagor Onward Investors could take control of property.
LaunchPad Golf’s new Prior Lake location brings the Canada-based entertainment concept to the United States—and ushers another brand into a growing entertainment scene.
NAIOP, the commercial real estate development association, recognizes this year's best projects, from medical offices to industrial buildings.
A bailout could hold farmers over as they contend with market disruptions linked to Trump’s trade war.
TCB posed that question to three long-standing Minnesota companies with a history of community involvement and charitable giving.