Featured News

Iowa MBA ranking makes large leap forward
The Professional MBA Program at the Tippie College of Business has moved up 16 places to #22 in the 2019 U.S. News & World Report rankings of graduate schools released today. This ranking is the highest on record for the program since the ranking began in 1994.
Recent News
Brown discusses Tippie’s programs to help students start careers
Associate Dean Ken Brown is quoted in this U.S. News article, which discussses how undergraduate students can find programs that will help them stand out in the job market.
University of Iowa pursuing innovation center
University of Iowa pursues innovation center. Deman grows for entrepreneurship and the college is "bursting at the seams."
Predicting criminal behavior patterns with data analytics
It sounds like science fiction, but data analysts are using the tools of their trade to predict some types of crime—information that could be used to keep people safe.
UI spin-out business captures gold medal in Inventors Hall of Fame
University of Iowa spin-out company SwineTech recently won the undergraduate gold medal at the National Inventors Hall of Fame Collegiate Inventors Competition in Alexandria, Virginia.
UI study suggests membership in an online support group can help smokers kick the habit
Online social networks designed to help smokers kick the tobacco habit are effective, especially if users are active participants, according to a new study from the University of Iowa and the Truth Initiative, a nonprofit anti-tobacco organization.
Tippie Analytics Cooperative convenes inaugural advisory council
With data science and analytics jobs projected to grow at an explosive rate across the United States, the Tippie College of Business has long been taking steps to position itself as a top-5 program in business analytics and information systems. This Friday, the college will convene the first meeting of the Tippie Analytics Cooperative Advisory Council.
Some firms avoid labor contracts by selling unionized operations
Some firms avoid labor contracts by selling unionized operations, according to research done by Erik Lie, professor of finance.