Displaying 121 - 130 of 192
10 April 2019
Yonsei Enterprise Support Foundation aims to become the best enterprise incubator in Asia. Learn more about its history, and how it has been providing start-ups with the support they need.
10 April 2019
The State University of New York (SUNY) Korea houses the Center for Global Entrepreneurship (CGE) students and faculty a set of in-house programs. Learn more about CGE, and how it provides various services, including ideation hackathons to workshops on sales/negotiation and business modeling to…
9 April 2019
Korean startup ecosystem is thriving. One of the main reasons is certainly the strong support from the government. Check out this material to learn more about the other reasons that help boost Korea startups.
9 April 2019
Start-ups in Seoul Metropolitan Government (SMG) continue to thrive. Learn how SMG supports these start-ups through the policies it has rolled out.
9 April 2019
Start-ups are paving the way to innovation, and things could be improved if they would operate under the public-private partnership (PPP) model. This presentation discusses how the PPP model can benefit the start-up ecosystem.
9 April 2019
Seoul continues to promote itself as a city conducive in building start-ups. Learn more about the Seoul Startup Hub, a place and platform for meet-ups and co-working opportunities for startups.
9 April 2019
Seoul Startup Hub is the Republic of Korea’s largest incubating facility that provides a total periodic support to those who want to start their business or grow their start ups. The Hub also pushes for the Asia Startup Ecosystem Alliance to work with those based outside the Republic of Korea.…
24 January 2019
Government policies aim to attract foreign workers for the sectors where domestic professional workers are not sufficient.
24 January 2019
Labor migration is growing although at a lower rate than in the late 2000s. Asia continues to account for a growing share of overall migration to OECD countries.
24 January 2019
Overall migration flows continue to decline from almost 6 million workers in 2015 to 5.24 million in 2017. Reduced recruitment in the Gulf Cooperation Countries is the main driver behind this downward trend.