entrepreneur
Carlo Habet Is Committed To Raising The Belize Market And Industry – Haute Residence by Haute Living Carlo Habet (SLU Entrepreneurship alum) is the consummate businessman cum power broker with an unparalleled network and unmatched communication and negotiation acumen.

Carlo Habet Is Committed To Raising The Belize Market And Industry – Haute Residence by Haute Living https://ift.tt/aEc1p2f SLU, SLUstudent, alum, entrepreneur, belize, PrincetonReview
Seoul Juice expands retail footprint in St. Louis as it lands in Dierbergs, looks to expand nationwide – St. Louis Business Journal Luis Manta had an allergic reaction to Gatorade while he was student athlete at Saint Louis University. That prompted him to found Seoul Juice, which — with the help of SLU — is now expanding its presence.

Seoul Juice expands retail footprint in St. Louis as it lands in Dierbergs, looks to expand nationwide – St. Louis Business Journal https://ift.tt/6HTXyUe esb8, 6210, 4200, SLU, SLUstudent, entrepreneur, studententrepreneur, manufacturer, athletes, bizjournal, vignette
SLU track athlete imports, roasts and sells coffee from Ethiopia, where he was born SLU runner Firaol Ahmed runs Moii Coffee, importing, roasting, packaging and selling coffee from three areas of Ethiopia, including the Harrar Region, where he was born and raised.

SLU track athlete imports, roasts and sells coffee from Ethiopia, where he was born https://ift.tt/ALGPNFY 6210, esb8, 3000, SLU, SLUstudent, entrepreneur, newspapers, post-dispatch
NYTimes: Bad Dates Turn Out to Be Excellent on TikTok In a corner of the platform sometimes known as #DatingTok, young women find comfort and cachet by turning dating mishaps into viral content.

NYTimes: Bad Dates Turn Out to Be Excellent on TikTok https://nyti.ms/3J0Cvni 6210, 3000, influencers, entrepreneur, tiktok, businessmodel
The Invisible Racialized Minority Entrepreneur: Using White Solipsism to Explain the White Space – Journal of Business Ethics Few studies in the business ethics literature explore marginalized populations, such as the racially minoritized entrepreneur. This absence is an ethical issue for the business academy as it limits the advancement of racial epistemologies. This study explores how this exclusionary space emerges within the academy by identifying white solipsistic behavior, an ‘othering’ of minoritized populations. Using a multi-method approach, we find the business literature homogenizes the racially minoritized business owner regardless of race/ethnic origin and categorizes them as lacking in comparison to White entrepreneurs. A critical discourse analysis of university entrepreneurship website language and images reveals that the racially minoritized are presented as the outgroup. The language used to describe entrepreneurs was found to be predominantly agentic, building a hegemonic categorization of White men dominating entrepreneurship. Troublingly, but consistent with the literature review, when racialized minorities were present in images, we found them to be marginalized. Employing an experimental design to mock-up four websites featuring student entrepreneurs differing by race and gender, we ask ‘what if we make these under-represented entrepreneurs visible?’ Results show that women, and specifically racially minoritized women, have a greater impact on the entrepreneurial interests of university students compared to men. Overall, the results provide empirical evidence for white solipsism in the business academy. We call for self-reflexivity to transparentize the ‘invisible’ racially minoritized entrepreneur and fill the ‘white space’ by changing the framing and context of business research to be more inclusive.

The Invisible Racialized Minority Entrepreneur: Using White Solipsism to Explain the White Space – Journal of Business Ethics https://ift.tt/m5HQn7N esb8, CH2, entrepreneur, minorities, research, experiment
Why Venture Backed Immigrant Founders Succeed Marc J. Sharpe, Andrew Probasco, Sunny Zhang, & Sandip Bordoloi Executive Summary Immigrant entrepreneurs outperform in founding U.S. unicorns and Fortune 500 companies, creating patents and jobs, and powering innovation in the U.S. economy. This white paper reviews findings from research to demonstrate the success of immigrant innovators and

Why Venture Backed Immigrant Founders Succeed https://ift.tt/rb4sG8d esb8, CH2, familybusiness, immigrants, entrepreneur, success, statistics, data
The Hidden Heroes of SLU: Our Dining Hall Workers (This feature was inspired by Student Life, the independent newspaper of Washington University in St. Louis.) Check out Chris Floyd, an entrepreneur and podcaster when he’s not cooking for SLU.

The Hidden Heroes of SLU: Our Dining Hall Workers https://ift.tt/MEXLNlc SLU, entrepreneur, staff, sidegig
NYTimes: The Rich Are Not Who We Think They Are. And Happiness Is Not What We Think It Is, Either. Today’s version of “The Millionaire Next Door “. There is still a lot we can learn from big data.

NYTimes: The Rich Are Not Who We Think They Are. And Happiness Is Not What We Think It Is, Either. https://nyti.ms/3FOrN04 esb8, ch1, entrepreneur, owners, ownerspay, ownerstake, happiness, industry
Young St. Louis inventor hits bullseye When St. Louis native Akeem Shannon launched a Kickstarter campaign in April 2018, he had no idea how successful his company and invention, Flipstik, would become.

Young St. Louis inventor hits bullseye https://ift.tt/RzyseKu esb8, vignette, STL, entrepreneur, minorities, POC, StLouis, Kickstarter, sharktank