YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
With a manufacturing labor shortage, educators in the skilled trades are fielding concerns by industry leaders.
The bar could return as soon as March.
The bar business is competitive and demanding. For dive bars, it’s about embracing the dive bar definition or moving away from it.
Greg Tigges embraces the adventurous world of travel to an unknown destination. He’s made a staff sales contest out of it.
So-called dark money is up as politicians run their campaigns.
DirectConnect Occupational Medicine is now available to injured employees working for companies contracted to receive CoxHealth Telemedicine services.
With globalization and population growth, farmland is becoming an increasingly hot commodity.
The newly elected Republican takes steps toward a female-friendly administration rarely seen before.
The 3500 S. Glenstone Ave. location outpaces nearly 1,500 nationwide.
Higher education is coming at a higher cost than expected in Missouri, despite legislators’ attempt to cap tuition increases through the Higher Education Student Funding Act of 2007.
The Prime Inc.-owned property joins the Ascend Hotel brand and drops Ramada after seven years.
The building is designed as a sustainable and collaborative structure with solar panels on the roof, a rooftop meeting and social area, a test kitchen for work between chefs and culinary teams, and an in-house bike shop and coffee shop.
As a voice for underprivileged children and families, Jody Glazner is helping fill the gap in Springfield’s impoverished Zone 1.
With a philosophy to promote from within, O’Reilly Automotive appoints co-presidents.
Runway to the next milestone paved by Springfield’s diversified economy and a shifting airline industry; it’s a couple of years on the horizon.
Relocating from Atlantic Street, the new church building is designed with a 400-seat auditorium, 13 classrooms, a coffee shop, kitchen and offices on 21 acres adjacent to Highway 13.
Part III: Farmers say there’s little stopping the global food machine, but they find hope in educated consumers.
Walk into a downtown Springfield gallery today and prices range from hundreds to thousands of dollars.
Business takes them elsewhere, but they stick their flag in the Queen City area.
CoxHealth this month signed a letter of intent to buy Citizens Memorial Healthcare in a deal valued at $120 million over seven years. It’s anticipated to close in mid-2017.
After discovering a niche for vintage typewriters, Laura Prather quickly grew a home-based typewriter sale and service business.
Physician sues CoxHealth, alleging business interference and defamation
Wendy’s franchisee ordered to pay $7M over harassment, PPP fraud accusations
Former PFH execs sentenced to prison time
Springfield CPA pleads guilty to embezzlement scheme
Updated: First Watch business partner sues another for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud
Travis Kelce becomes NFL’s highest-paid tight end
Breaking News: Dake Wells receives chamber’s Small Business Award