Eller College Earns Top National Rankings—and Gives Southern Arizona’s Talent Pipeline a Boost

Eller College

TUCSON, AZ (September 30, 2025) — The University of Arizona’s Eller College of Management has once again put Southern Arizona on the national stage. In U.S. News & World Report’s 2026 Best Colleges rankings, Eller’s Management Information Systems (MIS) undergraduate program is No. 2 overall and No. 1 among public universities, sustaining a decades-long run near the top of the field.

Eller’s new undergraduate business analytics major, which officially launched in Fall 2025, made an immediate splash, debuting at No. 28 nationally and No. 12 among publics. That’s a notable first-year showing for a program designed to meet fast-rising employer demand for data literacy across finance, logistics, health, and defense.

Beyond those headline programs, Eller notched strong placements across several disciplines. Entrepreneurship ranked No. 23 overall and No. 8 public, Accounting placed No. 37 overall and No. 17 public, and Economics came in at No. 44 overall and No. 15 public. As a college, Eller’s overall undergraduate business program ranked No. 32 nationally and No. 21 among publics—a solid indicator of breadth beneath the marquee specialties.

Why this matters for the business community: rankings are not just bragging rights—they’re a signal to employers, investors, and recruits that Southern Arizona’s talent pipeline is deepening in exactly the areas where the economy is growing. The region’s employers increasingly seek graduates who can translate data into decisions, build secure information systems, and navigate the economics of growth. Eller’s MIS program has been a steady national leader—one of only a few to maintain top-five status since U.S. News began ranking MIS in 1989—while analytics provides a complementary on-ramp for students whose strengths are statistics, coding, and applied problem-solving.

The timing also aligns with the needs of Southern Arizona’s economy. From advanced manufacturing and aerospace/defense to healthcare and logistics, employers are modernizing operations and digitizing workflows. MIS graduates arrive with a grounding in systems analysis, data management, cybersecurity, and product implementation—skills that shorten the time from onboarding to impact. Analytics majors bring modeling, visualization, and experimentation capabilities to bear on everything from revenue forecasting to supply-chain planning. Pair those strengths with Eller’s recognized programs in entrepreneurship, accounting, and economics, and local companies gain a spectrum of business competencies under one roof.

For students, the cross-over is equally essential: an MIS capstone may partner with a local utility on data governance; an analytics practicum might help a regional hospital system optimize patient flow; an entrepreneurship team could pilot a go-to-market plan for a Tucson startup. The result is a two-way pipeline—businesses secure applied solutions and a preview of the next cohort of hires, while students graduate with experience that reads like a first job, not just a class project.

If you’re an employer, now is the time to plug in. In practical terms, that can mean posting internships and entry-level roles early, sponsoring projects that let students work on real datasets, or guest-lecturing to shape curricula around emerging tools and standards. The college’s career team can help scope engagements that fit a company’s capacity, whether you’re a five-person startup or a Fortune 500 division.

The bottom line: Eller’s latest rankings confirm what many Southern Arizona employers already see on the shop floor and in the back office—a steady stream of job-ready graduates who can move seamlessly between technology and business. With MIS at No. 2 overall / No. 1 public, analytics newly ranked in the top 30, and strong showings in entrepreneurship, accounting, and economics, Eller is positioning Tucson as a destination not only for students, but for companies that want to hire, grow, and stay here.

The region’s growth makes this workforce imperative. As Southern Arizona adds people and jobs, the pressure mounts to deliver infrastructure that is reliable, affordable, and future-ready. That won’t happen with engineering alone; it requires the connective tissue of information systems and analytics to plan, prioritize, fund, and operate assets over decades. Eller’s rankings signal that this talent is not just available, it’s being cultivated at scale right here at home. That’s what rankings look like when they turn into results.

Sources: Eller College announcements and rankings pages summarizing U.S. News & World Report 2026 undergraduate rankings.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Southern Arizona Chamber




Raytheon deepens Avio USA partnership on Mk 104 rocket motor; Tucson unit racks up new missile wins

Raytheon

TUCSON, AZ (Sept. 30, 2025) — Raytheon, an RTX (NYSE: RTX) business with major missile operations in Tucson, has expanded its collaboration with Avio USA to accelerate production of the Mk 104 dual-thrust rocket motor used across the Standard Missile franchise. A new purchase order of up to $26 million funds continued engineering through Critical Design Review, buys long-lead qualification materials, and builds second-source capacity for key solid-rocket components—all aimed at hardening the supply chain and increasing throughput.

“This purchase order represents an important step in expanding our supply chain to ensure the resilience and availability of the Mk 104 rocket motor,” said Barbara Borgonovi, president of Naval Power at Raytheon. Avio USA—the U.S. subsidiary of Italy’s Avio S.p.A., led by VADM (Ret.) James Syring—previously completed System Requirements and Preliminary Design Reviews with Raytheon. Avio CEO Giulio Ranzo said the company will continue supporting SRM engineering, materials characterization, lab and fire testing, sourcing, and motor integration as the program advances toward qualification and production.

RTX propulsion portfolio: air-breathing and solid rockets

RTX made two propulsion announcements on Sept. 24, 2025, underscoring parallel progress across its businesses. Pratt & Whitney reported completion of critical tests on its small turbofan engine family (air-breathing propulsion), while Raytheon detailed steps to accelerate Mk 104 dual-thrust rocket motor production (solid-rocket propulsion). Together, the updates highlight RTX’s push on both sides of the propulsion spectrum—jet engines and rocket motors—supporting a broad range of air and missile systems.

Parallel progress: StormBreaker, Stinger, and more

In the same week, Raytheon highlighted rapid progress on a ground-launched variant of StormBreaker—a network-enabled smart weapon designed for adverse-weather targeting at sea or on land. Leveraging components from the air-launched version (fielded on F-15E and F/A-18E/F, with integration underway on F-35A/B/C), Raytheon says it went from concept to test flight in under 50 days, reaching ~20,000 feet during a spring test in the Mojave Desert. The company plans to accelerate development and continue testing through 2025.

Raytheon also booked a string of contract awards centered on Arizona production, led by a $576.6 million U.S. Army award for Stinger missiles, equipment, and support services. Additional actions across Navy and Air Force programs underscore sustained demand for Tucson-built air- and missile-defense systems:

  • $160.9M (Navy, Sept. 26) — Engineering to develop/qualify a second-source SRM assembly and WDU-17/B warhead supporting AIM-9X; includes partial production/options. Work largely in Tucson; completion Sept. 2029.

  • $14.6M (Navy, Sept. 26) — Design-agent/engineering for Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM); completion Mar. 2028 (German funding predominant).

  • $11.6M (Navy, Sept. 26) — Spares for RAM Seeker Head Assemblies and GMRP requirements; Tucson/Tempe; completion Jun. 2027.

  • $85.2M (USAF, Sept. 26)MALD/MALD-J sustainment services; Tucson; completion Sept. 25, 2030.

  • $75.3M (Navy, Sept. 25) — Options/funding for Standard Missile program; work in Tucson/other sites; completion Mar. 2030.

  • $20.2M (Navy, Sept. 25) — Capacity enhancements for Tomahawk All-Up Round production; Tucson-weighted; completion Mar. 2028.

  • $271.4M (Army, Sept. 22) — Production of TOW (including TOW Obsolescence & Safety 2B variant); Tucson; completion Feb. 29, 2028.

  • $216.4M (Navy, Sept. 18) — Special tooling/test equipment to expand SM-6 All-Up Round capacity; Tucson/Gilbert; completion Sept. 2029.

  • $43.2M (Navy, Sept. 17)SM-6 steering control section redesign; Tucson; completion Nov. 2027.

  • $7.7M (Navy, Sept. 11) — RAM design-agent/engineering support; Tucson; completion Mar. 2028 (FMS: Japan, Canada).

  • $760M (USAF, Sept. 9)AMRAAM support with extensive FMS (Canada, Taiwan, Sweden, Czech Republic, Korea, Kuwait, Japan, Finland, U.K., Portugal, Italy, Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Norway, Belgium, Australia, Turkey, Spain, Lithuania); Tucson; completion Sept. 7, 2030.

  • $205.1M (Navy, Sept. 5)Phalanx CIWS (Mk 15) upgrades/overhauls; portions in Tucson/Tempe; completion Jan. 2029.

  • $95.7M (Navy, Sept. 4)Tomahawk nav/comm antenna kits (recert & production) for U.S. services and FMS; significant Tucson work; completion Apr. 2029.

  • $380M (USMC, Sept. 2)Medium Range Intercept Capability (MRIC); Tucson; completion Aug. 28, 2028.

  • $57.5M (Navy, Aug. 29) — Non-recurring engineering to redesign Tomahawk DSMAC; Tucson; completion Dec. 2028.

  • $13.5M (Navy, Aug. 29) — Components for future Tomahawk production amid obsolescence; Tucson; completion Apr. 2028.

Why it matters for Arizona

The Mk 104 second-source push with Avio USA and the fresh wave of missile awards extend a multi-year surge in Raytheon’s Arizona footprint—from propulsion and seeker subsystems to full-up missile integration. With supply-chain resilience now a top priority, Tucson’s role as a production and engineering hub continues to grow across Standard Missile, Tomahawk, AMRAAM, AIM-9X, RAM, Stinger, TOW, MRIC, and StormBreaker programs.

PHOTO: Concept rendering of low-observable ‘loyal wingman’ drones operating in a networked formation.




Tucson Lease Report – September 22–26, 2025

Tucson Lease Report

TUCSON, AZ (September 29, 2025) — The Tucson Lease Report this week is led by Sonoran Rovers’ 8,352-square-foot industrial lease on Tucson’s south side, supported by a mix of office and retail activity across the metro.

Total Square Feet Leased (excluding renewals): 30,858 square feet
By Property Type:

  • Industrial — 19,754 SF
  • Retail — 8,062 SF
  • Office — 3,042 SF

Renewals totaled: 5,094 SF

The following leases were reported to the Real Estate Daily News for the week of September 22–26, 2025.

New Leases

INDUSTRIAL – 230 E. 27th St., Suite 101 & 102, Tucson, 85713, South Submarket
Sonoran Rovers, LLC, leased 8,352 square feet from Tin Cup Properties, LLC. Alex Demeroutis, Jesse Blum, SIOR, and Paul Hooker, SIOR of Cushman & Wakefield | PICOR represented the landlord.

INDUSTRIAL – 4101 S. Longfellow Ave., Suite 103, 105 & 107, Tucson, 85714, South Submarket
Michael J. Brungrabber expanded the lease with Longfellow Commercial LLC for a total of 6,300 square feet. Andrew Keim of Cushman & Wakefield | PICOR represented the landlord.

RETAIL – 1820 E. River Rd., Suite 110, Tucson, 85718, Northeast Foothills Submarket
Atmosphere Commercial Interiors LLC leased 3,382 square feet. CBRE’s Buzz Isaacson, Blake Hastings, Tad Jellison, and John Lorence represented the tenant. Kyle Kilgore of NAI Horizon represented the landlord, West Coast Capital Partners LLC.

INDUSTRIAL – 3240 S. Dodge Blvd., Suite 1, Tucson, 85713, South Submarket
Ambassador Automobile LLC leased 2,807 square feet at South Dodge Business Center from Pegasus Tucson Owner LLC. Paul Hooker, SIOR, and Andrew Keim of Cushman & Wakefield | PICOR represented the landlord.

RETAIL – 3225 N. Swan Rd., Suite 111A & 113A, Tucson, 85712, Northeast Submarket
Yum Yum Po-Cha LLC leased 2,180 square feet at Camp Lowell Shopping Center to open 23 Spices Korean Barbeque. CBRE’s Nancy McClure represented the tenant, and Dave Dutson of NAI Horizon represented the landlord, Camp Lowell 1 LLC.

OFFICE – 3131 N. Country Club Rd., Suite 201/202, Tucson, 85716, Central Submarket
AZ Nurtured Heart Counseling Center leased 1,782 square feet from Spirits, LP. Molly Mary Gilbert, CCIM of Cushman & Wakefield | PICOR represented the tenant.

RETAIL – 9140 N. Silverbell Rd., Suite 210, Tucson, 85743, Northwest Submarket
Twin Peaks Eyecare, LLC, leased 1,300 square feet from Shoppes at Continental Ranch, LLC. Cameron Casey of Oxford Realty Advisors represented the tenant.

OFFICE – 603 N. Wilmot Rd., Kolb Executive Park, Tucson, 85711, East Submarket
Desert Hair by Megan leased 1,260 square feet from Kolb Executive Park LLC. CBRE’s Bruce Suppes represented the landlord. The tenant was self-represented.

RETAIL – 5470 E. Speedway Blvd., Suite 106A, Tucson, 85712, Central Submarket
Selam Eritrean Market, LLC leased 1,200 square feet from Speedway Craycroft Plaza, LLC. Cameron Casey of Oxford Realty Advisors represented the tenant, and Isaac Figueroa of Larsen Baker represented the landlord.

INDUSTRIAL – 1630 S. Research Lp., Suite 160, Tucson, 85710, East Submarket
20 Digit Design leased 1,295 square feet from Eastside Center, LLC. Alex Demeroutis, Jesse Blum, SIOR, and Paul Hooker, SIOR of Cushman & Wakefield | PICOR represented the landlord.

INDUSTRIAL – 140 S. Camino Seco, Suite 419, Tucson, 85710, East Submarket
Tucson Doggie Doors leased 1,000 square feet at Camino Seco Business Park from Larsen Baker. Michelle Ward and Isaac Figueroa, CCIM, SIOR of Larsen Baker represented the landlord.

Renewals

OFFICE – 5151 E. Broadway Blvd., Suite 100, Tucson, 85711, East Submarket
Rightsure Insurance Group renewed its lease for 5,094 square feet with KCI Broadway, LLC; Scott Seldin-Broadway, LLC; Belmont Broadway, LLC; and Tucson 5151 Investments, LLC. Mark Isenberger of Cushman & Wakefield | PICOR represented the landlord. 

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