Meet the MS in Accounting/MBA Class of 2027
This 53-person cohort brings a wide range of academic backgrounds—from business and economics to the arts and sciences—preparing them to lead with both depth and versatility.
This 53-person cohort brings a wide range of academic backgrounds—from business and economics to the arts and sciences—preparing them to lead with both depth and versatility.
D'Amore-McKim professors have been recognized in Research.com's latest rankings across several disciplines. This recognition highlights their significant contributions to advancing academic knowledge and shaping real-world business practices.
Each year the D'Amore-McKim School of Business honors a select group of business students who have demonstrated excellence on co-op.
“What impacted me the most during the Community Impact Initiative is seeing how directly analysis connects to business strategy and shapes where teams focus their time and effort. It made it clear how the work translates into real decisions and how analytics is used in practice.” – Eric (Yunke) Zhong, MS in Business Analytics'26
“Through the AI Strategic Hub, I developed a Bitcoin trading model for Vero Ventures that autonomously executes trades, allowing me to apply advanced analytics in a real-world setting.” – Govind Alagappan, MS in Business Analytics'26
Rich D'Amore, DMSB'76, was one of several esteemed judges evaluating pitches from across the University's entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Kathy Sun, DMSB'18, moderated a discussion during the seventh annual Northeastern Global Leadership Summit.
New research from Debashish Ghose suggests that allowing viewers to choose when they see ads may be quite effective.
Associate Dean Koen Pauwels' latest research examines why some negative retail incidents fade quickly while others escalate into crises. Analyzing 510 incidents, the study finds that patterns in stakeholder reactions, not the amount of attention an incident receives, are key to predicting financial impact.
Gary Young says that while BMC is having cash flow issues, they won't fail as a bastion of the research and care.
Jayanth Narayanan says that some return-to-office mandates may be an attempt to avoid layoffs.
Mark Esposito argues that the 2030s will not be won using export controls but by whoever is the most productive.