
www.nytimes.com
More than a million businesses use Google’s search advertising system to attract customers, a strategy combining gamesmanship with frequent data analysis.

Jennifer Freer - Business Librarian Highlights about Baby Boomers from the Census. Data is from 2006.
www.census.gov

www.nytimes.com
The trend of employers putting potential employees through a battery of interviews has intensified in the tough economic climate.

Jennifer Freer - Business Librarian Ron HIra, a professor here at RIT, is quoted in this article about high tech sweatshops.
www.businessweek.com
U.S. companies may be contributing unwittingly to the exploitation of workers imported from India and elsewhere by tech-services outfits.

www.businessweek.com
As CEO Schultz eyes a huge overseas market for instant coffee, will the new Via product damage the Starbucks brand? Enter the late Don Valencia.

www.nytimes.com
Amazon is expected to soon sell more general merchandise than media products like books and DVDs.

www.nytimes.com
A look at how some of the people who worked at Lehman are faring now, and how they have survived the emotional tumult of the firm’s sudden collapse.

Jennifer Freer - Business Librarian Friday concluded the first week of the Fall Quarter. Hopefully your week went well and now you have some assignments and may need information help. Feel free to email me at jlfwml@rit.edu or during the week look for me on IM as bizlibrarian. In-person consults available by appointment.

Jennifer Freer - Business Librarian On Friday September 4th stop by the library from 10am-2pm for our annual Open House!
You’re the Star at RIT!
Location:Wallace Library Idea Factory
Time:10:00AM Friday, September 4th

bits.blogs.nytimes.com
Applying for a new job? You might want to consider cleaning up your online profiles first. In a new study, almost half of hiring managers questioned said they look at applicants' activities online.

news.bbc.co.uk
If you have worked in an office in the Western world in the past 25 years, you will probably have sat through a PowerPoint presentation. But there's a problem. They're often boring, writes presentation expert Max Atkinson.


























