
Ian Wylie
Job role
TwitterEdit
Ian's biography on Twitter reads: Freelance journalist, TV specialist, exiled Geordie and ever hopeful tennis player. Available for hire at reasonable rates.
@ianwylie has 3,551 followers.
See how Ian compares to other Twitter users at Manchester Evening News and those who work in newspapers.
@ianwylie has 3,551 followers.
See how Ian compares to other Twitter users at Manchester Evening News and those who work in newspapers.
The inevitable result of editorial cuts. RT @CoroStreetBlog: @ianwylie can you have a word with the editor, please? http://t.co/sORUB3vw5t
— Ian Wylie (@ianwylie) 18 Jun
Tweets are Ian's personal views and not those of Trinity Mirror or other employers.
Latest articles by Ian Wylie
Research? Most people cannot understand it
Larry Zicklin believes that business school professors need to focus far more on teaching and far less on being published in academic journals
Larry Zicklin believes that business school professors need to focus far more on teaching and far less on being published in academic journals
How business data has evolved
The FT explains the history of business data
The FT explains the history of business data
Bogus certificates cost business schools time and money
Efforts are underway to deal with an increasing number of forgeries, many of them the work of fake universities
Efforts are underway to deal with an increasing number of forgeries, many of them the work of fake universities
Entrepreneurs learn to work together on the road to Mendeley
Making full use of business school networks has been crucial in the creation of one of the largest research databases in the world, writes Ian Wylie
Making full use of business school networks has been crucial in the creation of one of the largest research databases in the world, writes Ian Wylie
Supply chain of information offers a vital link
MBA students are helping BMW to create a system that will alert the carmaker to events that could disrupt production, says Ian Wylie
MBA students are helping BMW to create a system that will alert the carmaker to events that could disrupt production, says Ian Wylie