|
Amazon Body Care |
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 135 guests online |
|
Statistics |
Members: 494
News: 11474
Web Links: 0
|
|
Related Items |
-
No Tears Shed for Windows in Brazil
-
Brazilian Micros Get a Larger Share of Exports
-
Micro and Small Firms Booming in Brazil
-
Brazil's Domestic Market Picks Up Strength
-
Brazil Makes It Much Easier for Foreign Investor
-
Brazil's Businesses Eager to Invest in 2005
-
Brazil Gearing Up for 2005
-
Brazil: Software Firms Join the Free Software Bandwagon
-
Never So Many Jobs in Brazil
-
Brazil's Lula Fears "Delicious Risk" of Doing Too Well
-
Brazil and Vietnam Exchange Favors
-
Brazil's Micro Credit Program a Hit. Default: 1.2%.
-
Brazil's Micro Credit Program a Hit. Default: 1.2%.
-
Brazil's Lula Wants to Take Colleges to the Interior
-
Brazil Needs Reforms, Says Country's Industry Leader
-
Another Push Far from Microsoft, in Brazil
-
A Banner Year for Brazil's Industry
-
88% of New Exporters in Brazil Are Micro and Small
-
Brazil's WSF to Be Powered by Linux
-
Free Software Is Major Theme at Brazil's World Social Forum
-
Brazil Breaks Several Economic Records
-
Hacker Is Beautiful and I Am One, Says Brazilian Minister
-
Brazil's Accor Hotels Go Totally IT
-
Come and Get It, Says Brazil's BNDES with a US$ 22.2 Billion Stash
-
Brazil Opens Microbe Bank to the World
-
Jobs Keep Growing in Brazil for 14th Consecutive Month
-
Brazil Joins Java Community to Spread Free Software
-
Brazil Gets a Microsoft Gift: the XP Starter Edition
-
Industry Gets Lion Share of Brazil's Development Bank
-
A Map to Lower Brazil's Interest Rates from 19.5% to 4%
-
Industry Wants to Bar Chinese Goods from Brazil
-
Tears and Laments Won't Help Relations, Brazil Tells Argentina
-
Brazilians Approve Government Work on Hunger, But Not on Jobs
-
American Bell Micro Buys Brazil's Net Storage
-
Industry Jobs Grow 6.5% in Brazil, But Unemployment Is Still 10.2%
-
Brazilian Industry Blames High Interests for Slow Growth
-
Industry Leaders Hand Lula Minimal Agenda to Avoid Brazil's Paralysis
-
In New York, Lula Paints a Promising Brazil to Microsoft & Co.
-
Despite PR Job, Only 29% of Brazilians Approve of Lula Administration
-
Brazilian Small Companies Increasingly Find Clients Overseas
-
Brazil's Industry Leader Calls for Control on Chinese Imports
-
Political Uncertainty Keeps Brazil from Getting Better Credit Rating
-
Small Brazil Companies That Export Are Few, But on the Rise.
-
81% of Brazilian Industries Are Investing in R&D This Year
-
Brazil to Grow a Mere 2.3% in 2005, Says IPEA
-
Low Dollar and High Interests Reduces Brazil's GDP to 2.5%
-
Economic Institute Joins the Bears: Brazil to Grow a Mere 2.3%
-
US Boost Gives Brazil a High
-
Jump in Oil Prices Gives Brazilian Market the Chills
-
Microfinance Program Started in Brazil Gets US$ 5.8 Million from Gates Foundation
-
Brazil's Small Businesses Grow Modest 1.9% in 2005
-
Brazil's Industry Lauds Tax Exemption for Foreign Investor
-
Brazil Promises Free College to 125,000 New Students
-
Hint of Scandal Involving Finance Minister Shakes Brazilian Market
-
US, EU and Asia, All Interested in Making Microchips in Brazil
-
International Small Companies Hold Conference in Brazil
-
Brazilian Industry Laments Palocci's Resignation and Calls for Serenity
-
Investing in Environment Becomes a Trend in Brazil
-
Brazilian Industry Raises Brazil's 2006 GDP Growth Estimate to 3.7%
-
Industry Revises Brazil's Growth Up. GDP Expected to Grow 3.7%.
-
North Korea Missiles Scare Off Brazilian Investors
-
Brazil's USP Is Latin America's Top University in Number of Research Papers
-
Brazil Breaks Record on Income, Jobs and Inflation Satisfaction
-
2007 Forecast: Brazil Will Grow 3.4% and Export Record US$ 150 Billion
-
Brazilian Companies Go Looking for Foreign Partners
-
A Bullish Brazil Betting on 4.2% Growth for 2007
-
French Expert Sees Brazil as World's Number 6 Investor in R&D
-
Brazil to Invest US$ 18 Bi in Gas and More than Double Production
-
Brazilian Industry Urges Bilateral Agreements with US and EU
-
Brazil Industry Will Spend US$ 5 Billion to Educate 16 Million
-
How Brazil Has Learned Bangladesh's Microcredit Lesson
-
Small Companies Grow 8.6% in Rio, Brazil
-
Brazil's Petrobras Pushes Past Microsoft to Become Third in the Americas
-
Brazil Industry Loses Steam
-
Brazil's Industry Shows Signs of Cooling Off
-
Tourism and Goat Farming, Priorities of Brazil's Bank of the Northeast
-
Brazil Teaches 4,000 Small Businesses How to Sell Overseas
-
Brazil Sees 5,3% Growth with Domestic Market Making Up for Export Losses
-
Low Inflation and Low Unemployment Spur Brazilian Consumers Confidence
-
Microsoft Offers Free Computer Training and Email to 5.5 Million Brazilians
-
American Marketing Expert Tells Brazil How to Go Global
-
70% of New Companies Fail in Brazil
-
Exports by Small Brazilian Firms Reach US$ 2.1 Billion, a Record
-
Over Half of Brazilians Don't Expect Global Crisis to Hit Brazil
-
Brazil's Industry Leaders Want to Bypass Mercosur and Sign EU Accord
-
Over 70% of Brazilian Exporters Affected by World Crisis
-
Over 60% of Small Businesses in Brazil Feeling Financial Crisis
-
Bleak: Less than 1% of Brazil's Small Businesses Are Innovative
-
Brazil Offers US$ 11 Million to Help Small Companies that Innovate
-
Google, Hottest Internet Property in Brazil with 27 Million Visitors a Month
|
|
Contribution |
| Have you got news? Do you have news, comment or story on Brazil you want to share with Brazzil? Just send it our way to brazzil@brazzil.com. | |
|
|
|
The Latest from Brazzil Magazine |
|
|
|
|
Brazilian Businessmen Get Training in Marketing and Logistics |
|
|
|
|
Written by Newsroom
|
|
Sunday, 06 September 2009 |
|
Brazilian managers of micro and small companies from all over Brazil will receive support from the Brazilian universities of greatest renown in Business Management. Before the end of 2009, the Euvaldo Lodi Institute (IEL), in partnership with the Brazilian Micro and Small Business Support Service (Sebrae), is offering courses to managers of micro and small businesses.
The initiative, currently in its 3rd edition, should provide training to 1,500 businessmen and should tackle multidisciplinary topics such as marketing, finance and logistics.
"The matters to be approached during the courses will depend on the demand in different states of the country," informs Priscila Massot, an analyst with the IEL.
Another agreement, signed with the Sebrae and the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), of the Ministry of Science and Technology, is going to train 4,000 managers from micro and small enterprises across the country, in courses turned mainly to innovation management. The courses are scheduled to begin in 2010.
IEL analyst Eliane Menezes explains that the lack of practice in innovation management leads to companies' losing opportunities.
"Issues to be discussed," said Menezes, "include the importance of leadership for managing innovation and knowledge, and strategies for innovation."
|
|
|
|
|
Home
|
|
Brazzil Magazine - Since 1989 trying to understand Brazil |
|
|
|
|
|