Nous vous invitons à vous joindre à nous le 4 mars 2020 dans le cadre de notre prochain forum, intitulé Contrer le « burn out »: comment améliorer la santé mentale et le bien-être des employés. Un groupe d’experts de l’Université d’Ottawa, de Services publics et Approvisionnement Canada, et de Deloitte Canada feront part des connaissances et des pratiques exemplaires les plus récentes en vue de répondre aux questions suivantes :
Join us on March 4th, 2020 in our next Telfer Forum, Breaking Burnout: Improving Employee Mental Health and Well-Being. A panel of experts from uOttawa, Public Services and Procurement Canada, and Deloitte Canada will share the latest evidence-based insights and best practices to tackle the following questions:
Création et résilience de marques décentralisées : le cas du Bitcoin et des chaînes de blocs
L’École de gestion Telfer est heureuse de vous inviter à un Séminaire des nouveaux professeurs présenté par la professeure adjointe Mariam Humayun le mercredi 6 novembre 2019, de 12 h à 13 h.
Creation and Resilience of Decentralized Brands: The Case of Bitcoin & Blockchain
The Telfer School of Management is pleased to invite you for a New Faculty Seminar presented by Assistant Professor Mariam Humayun on Wednesday, November 6, 2019, from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m.
The business of brand building is not just limited to the organizations that create them. With the rise of social media, gig economy, and ideas such as crowdfunding, consumers have increasingly become major players in the process of brand creation and co-creating brand value.
The current wealth of health and performance data creates new opportunities for payers of health services - be it multiple payers as in the USA, or single payer as in Canada. Health insurance analytics implement data-driven solutions for health plan design, care management, responsive consumer reporting, and pay for performance initiatives; these are many of the same challenges and goals that health systems in Canada are focused on improving. Mr.
This presentation will examine the coopetition paradox that strategic alliances face when competing firms cooperate. Using a process study approach, we study the relationship between competition and cooperation in the formation of an industry-wide alliance of oil and gas companies in Alberta, Canada. Our findings reveal a dynamic oscillating pattern: the need to cooperate is threatened by competitive pressures and this tension requires an intervention by champions. Using both formal and informal practices, champions separate and integrate competitive and cooperative goals.
This seminar series was launched by the Telfer School of Management Research Office to promote its new professors. It represents an excellent opportunity for professors, students and community members to meet new faculty and to learn more about their research programs.
Please join us for a presentation by Peter Jaskiewicz: When and where do children of entrepreneurial business owners become entrepreneurial?