by Stephen Chapman
A company aiming to “revolutionise” pricing strategies is targeting growth across Europe, South America and Asia Pacific this year.
Bubo.AI was recently named one of Tech Nation’s Rising Stars and earlier this month, moved into a larger office space in Middlesbrough.
“We are in active conversations with companies across a number of countries and regions, such as Columbia in South America, and across South East Asia, following our speaking at Singapore’s Week of Innovation and Technology, in December 2020,” Bubo.AI CEO & Co-founder, Alan Timothy says.
“There are tens of thousands of companies across the world with problems that our solutions can solve, and we aim to speak with as many of them as possible.”
By Rachel Conner-Hill echorachelc Chief Reporter (Tees Valley & North Yorkshire)
Bubo.AI’s Dr Huseyin Seker, Marcin Lisowski, Alan Timothy, Furkan Tektas and David Shell A TECH company using artificial intelligence to help other businesses adapt is planning to expand in 2021 and is in talks to secure contracts worldwide. Teesside tech firm, Bubo.AI, is putting plans in motion to expand its reach globally in 2021 as it looks to change the way businesses price their products. The company, which has previously announced plans to double its workforce this year, has been investing heavily in its marketing and sales activities over the past several months and is in advanced talks to secure contracts in Europe, South America, and the Asia Pacific region.
Teesside tech firm Bubo AI sets sights on global expansion gazettelive.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gazettelive.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Snehal Hora, doctoral student
School of Management
Studies have long shown that, on average, women lag behind men in creative performance, despite having the same skills and abilities. Now, as companies race to innovate, new research from the School of Management uncovers why this occurs and what organizations can do to level the playing field.
“Creativity is crucial for success in business today,” says Snehal Hora, a doctoral researcher and lead author on the study, which appeared online this month ahead of publication in the Journal of Organizational Behavior. “Creative thinking is how we develop novel solutions, grow companies and move the world forward. When organizations do not tap the full creative potential of every employee, they are at a competitive disadvantage and hurt the bottom line.”
Certainly, those are all respected business schools, but conspicuously absent are some of the “usual suspects” of elite MBA rankings.
For example, the top two schools from the Economist’s 2019 ranking, University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business and Harvard Business School, are nowhere to be found. How could that be?
The answer, it turns out, is that a number of top MBA programs simply decided to sit out the Economist’s ranking this year.
But their loss seems to be the gain of schools like IESE, which catapulted 9 spots to the top of the ranking, or EDHEC, which jumped an entire 25 spots.