Column

Preliminary Research on the Factors that Lead to Bankruptcy
On September 28, 2018, the Center for Business Analytics and Economic Research Director Michael Toma, Ph.D., delivered a presentation at the Coastal Bankruptcy Law Institute, Bankruptcy Seminar for Paralegals. His talk focused on factors that influence bankruptcy in coastal and central Georgia and across the United States. Locally, our team found that, for every one […]

Dr. Luke Pittaway contributes to Business in Savannah website
Recently, Dr. Luke Pittaway has been published on the businesssavannah.com website by writing two articles discussing entrepreneurship. Pittaway has been contributing to Business in Savannah for the past four years producing content twice a semester. His first article, entitled, “Free enterprise: Sharing and caring toward entrepreneurial success,” focuses on different ways to grow in entrepreneurial success […]

Alternative Forms of Credit Grow
In this week’s Eagle Executive Briefings column, “Alternative forms of credit grow,” published in Business in Savannah, Luke Pittaway explained the factors limiting job creation and economic growth. Luke writes: “If entrepreneurs can’t find funds to start and small businesses can’t find funds to expand, we face a serious investment crisis that will impact job […]

Service Industries Journal Editorial Board
The Center for Entrepreneurial Learning and Leadership would like to congratulate Dr. Luke Pittaway for being the newest member of the Editorial Review Board for the Service Industries Journal. The Services Industries Journal was founded in 1981 by five lecturers at Manchester Polytechnic in Britain (now Manchester Metropolitan University), as the first academic journal devoted […]

October Eagle Executive Briefing in Business in Savannah
Dr. Luke Pittaway contributed the latest Eagle Executive Briefings column titled “Free enterprise: Death of the lemonade stand.” Luke relates the recent media stories about authorities closing down children’s lemonade stands in Georgia, Iowa and Wisconsin to “… what might be going wrong with American capitalism and economic governance.” He writes: “It eventually happens to […]