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Springfield, MO
An independent panel of judges chose 40 rising professionals for Springfield Business Journal’s 2021 40 Under 40 class.
Local firms submitted 26 projects showcasing their expertise and portfolios.
This package features five small-business owners who make their goods in the Ozarks
They said it. We're reporting it. Fourteen industry forecasts lead the way into 2021.
Reflecting on 2020, the SBJ newsroom compiled the top 10 stories that impacted Queen City business.
Read about the interview guests selected by SBJ's newsroom.
Officials discuss the survey results.
Officials discuss the survey results.
If there’s one constant in 2020, it’s change. And this year’s class of Most Influential Women honorees have shown that harnessing change can transform a community.
Workforce Strategies for Post-COVID-19 Recovery.
Twenty are celebrated in the 10th annual event.
How to navigate through this crisis and prepare for the next.
SBJ connected with five businesswomen to hear their best advice in the areas of leadership, stepping up, motivation, mentoring and innovation.
SBJ recognizes up-and-comers in the area.
SBJ honors the fastest-growing companies in the Ozarks.
SBJ compiles news on the respiratory virus outbreak.
Buying tax credits can help nonprofits. Michael Pruett, partner with Elliott, Robinson & Company, LLP, says the Neighborhood Assistance Program, or NAP, is a State of Missouri incentive program that …
Paula Adams, president of Penmac, says they try to help clients find gainful employment regardless of whether they have a permanent address. She says they partner with Council of Churches to try …
Parks play a large role in our quality of life, from creating memories to generating more than $15 million in annual visitor spending. Diana Tyndall, marketing & sponsorship coordinator with the …
Five Springfield-area small businesses produce items ranging from graphic T-Shirts to spicy salsa, but all of these concepts are all driven by entrepreneurial passion.
A new and improved Reed Academy is being constructed on the middle school’s original site to preserve a neighborhood connection that goes back a century.