State’s life sciences sector shed 500 jobs in 2017, even as economic impact soared
The industry’s payroll and average wages dipped last year, according the latest report from Indiana University and BioCrossroads.
The industry’s payroll and average wages dipped last year, according the latest report from Indiana University and BioCrossroads.
The company that makes the water-soluble film used to create products such as Tide Pods and Cascade ActionPacs plans to break ground on the 150,000-square-foot manufacturing plant this summer.
To use your words, Mr. Bezos, many of Indiana’s top business leaders didn’t look past inequality.
Roche Holding AG—the Basel, Switzerland-based parent of Indianapolis-based Roche Diagnostics—has enlisted a little green gremlin to help rescue its diabetes business after a decade of declining sales.
The improvisation-based company—now known as CSz Indianapolis—just celebrated its 25th year of making-it-up-as-it-goes-along fun. Along the way, it has weathered location shifts, the recession, the post-9/11 comedy crisis and, recently, an ownership change to become the longest-running theater production in the city.
In 57 of its 58 years, Indianapolis-based Markey’s Rental & Staging has experienced year-over-year revenue increases. Only the Great Recession, in 2009, derailed Markey’s amazing streak.
More deals could be on the horizon as dozens of companies—including local powerhouses such as Simon, Eli Lilly and Anthem—game out what Amazon’s huge ambitions could mean for their bottom lines.
The 5-year-old Carmel biotech has won plenty of attention from Wall Street and has secured more than $100 million through licensing deals and a stock offering to help fund expensive clinical trials.
Patel and her family, who started their business with a single hotel, now have 23 hotels with 3,000 rooms.
A new ownership group based in central Indiana recently acquired the 193,000-square-foot building, which now is vacant.
Jennifer Zinn, once an aspiring opera singer, instead became a key player at Roche Diagnostics.
Joyce Irwin directs the Community Health Network Foundation, which is dedicated to serving the needs of both patients and caregivers with funding for programs such as an Oncology Assistance Fund.
Erin Albert is a leading podcaster on pharmaceutical subjects, a prolific writer of books and a full-time consultant.
The Indianapolis-based drugmaker is collaborating with CureVac AG to develop up to five cancer products. The products will be based on a new field of biotechnology sweeping the industry.
A locally-based subsidiary of Japan-based Toyota Industries Corp. plans to spend $8 million to build a 90,720-square-foot factory east of U.S. 31 near 196th Street.
li Lilly and Co.’s experimental breast cancer drug abemaciclib, when combined with standard therapy, slowed the progression of tumors in patients with an advanced form of the disease.
The Paris flights, announced Wednesday, may lessen the urgency local officials feel to attract a direct flight from Indianapolis to London. Delta Air Lines stands to land $5.5 million in incentives if it can keep the flights filled.
Indiana appears to have reached a new normal when it comes to ISTEP scores: For the third straight year, about half of the students taking the exam passed it.
David Broecker was founding CEO of the four-year-old Indiana Biosciences Research Institute, which aims to bridge the gap between research universities and industry in life sciences.
Naomi Pescovitz, a North Central High School graduate, will help to launch a 7 p.m. newscast at KMSP-Fox 9, which she said will “give me my weekends back and I’ll be able to turn off that 1:30 a.m. alarm clock.”