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This special edition is a celebration of everything the 40 Under Forty has meant to the Central Massachusetts business community over the last 25 years, with a heavy focus on the incoming Class of 2024.
This year’s winners were chosen from 398 nominations submitted for 221 professionals in 2023 and 2024.
Jusme is a talented multitasker, a skill she picked up during her years at AIC pursuing a business management degree, where she balanced classes, being a member of the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, supporting her household, and raising a child.
A number of 40 Under Forty alumni saw themselves receive promotions in the aftermath of receiving the award, but Cormier went straight to the top.
Upon receiving her master’s degree from Worcester Polytechnic Institute in 2019, Molstad quickly got to work tackling the issue of sustainability by co-founding VALIS in 2022.
Each year, these small 40 Under Forty groupings are challenged to top each other to take the best photos, and every year people rise to the occasion.
After two years of development at MBI, a research-and-development startup has graduated to a new headquarters.
Marlborough-based pharmaceutical company Sumitomo Pharma America, a U.S. subsidiary of Japanese parent company Sumitomo Pharma, is set to lay off 53 employees, as the company continues to reduce its workforce.
AMSC seeks to bolster its growing presence in the defense sector through the $61.4-million purchase of a NWL, a New Jersey-based firm.
A Fitchburg-based cannabis cultivation is seeking to construct a new extraction lab to its facility, but lingering odor issues impacting neighbors near the site are creating complications.
Milford-based Waters Corp. saw declining sales across markets in the second quarter of 2024, as the company disclosed it has scaled back its employee headcount, primarily in China.
House leadership took one issue off the table ahead of the term's final day of formal sessions, announcing plans for autumn hearings on the structure of the Cannabis Control Commission rather than attempting a late-session push to reshape the
Worcester-based software company Valis Insights received a $20,000 grant from a Michigan-based foundation seeking to assist female-owned businesses in making a social impact.
Two lawsuits by former employees of the dispensary accuse the company of a number of wrongdoings.
“Central Massachusetts will complement the existing strengths in Greater Boston, accelerating the momentum for the Commonwealth to lead the emerging biomanufacturing sector in the U.S.,” the report reads.
Uxbridge-based manufacturer Lampin Corp. appointed president and CEO John Biagioni to its board of directors.