February 5, 2011
IBJ StaffWelcome to the 19th annual Forty Under 40, one of Indianapolis Business Journal's most popular and talked-about
features.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJRegarded among the state’s top young trial lawyers, 35-year-old Jason Barclay specializes in representing criminal defendants
accused of complex, white-collar crimes.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJTracy Barnes started his IT consulting business because he felt he could deliver better service for clients by dealing with
them directly. Now the 37-year-old runs Entap Inc., a multimillion-dollar technology consulting company.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAs one of the top commercial real estate brokers in Indianapolis, 37-year-old Jenna Barnett has a strong instinct for matching
the right businesses with the right properties.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAttorney David Barrett, 39, had a daunting task in 2008—to integrate Baker & Daniels’ business attorneys and
staff into a unified team.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJWhen Bank of America bought LaSalle Bank in 2007, John Beardslee stayed and became responsible for the Indiana and Ohio markets.
The 39-year-old attributes his success to consistency.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSince launching the Planning and Urban Design Group at RW Armstrong in 2007, 38-year-old Cynthia Bowen and her team have gone
from projects designing local subdivisions to planning an entire city in Libya.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJIn 2010, Wendy Brewer took a calculated risk. The 39-year-old left Indianapolis law firm Barnes & Thornburg, where she’d
been a partner for five years, to join the new firm of Benesch/Dann Pecar.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAs founder and co-owner of The Village Experience, a fair-trade retail store and socially responsible tourism company in Broad
Ripple, 32-year-old Kelly Campbell is often out of her time zone and her comfort zone.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJIn an election year in which Democrats nationwide suffered heavy losses, 36-year-old Andre Carson prevailed in his re-election
bid to Congress.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJSince opening Goose the Market three years ago, 33-year-old Christopher Eley has carefully nurtured its growth and reputation
among foodies as a go-to place for locally grown and prepared meats, cheeses and produce.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAs a wise old lawyer once told Richard Ellery, the only law you won’t practice at AUL is maritime law. Thirteen years
down the road, the 39-year-old Ellery would agree.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAmong 39-year-old Joy Fischer’s favorite projects as director of marketing and communications for law firm Ice Miller
LLP is spearheading an annual survey of Indiana CEOs.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJTory Flynn feels like she’s in the right place. After growing up in southern California, where Republicans were scarce,
the 27-year-old is in Indiana, working for the House Republicans.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJFrom the time he was young and he’d spend his summers pushing a broom or driving a truck, 39-year-old Adam Gilliatte
wanted to join his father’s contracting business. But dad insisted that son get an education.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJTouring with a little-known Christian rock band teaches you a few lessons about humility, poverty and, most of all, the need
for marketing. So when he was on the road, playing drums with the Indianapolis group Liptocoal, 30-yaer-old Daniel Herndon
took notes.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJMichael Huber doesn’t get a lot of praise in his job. As Indianapolis’ deputy mayor for economic development,
the 35-year-old's phone calls and e-mails mostly come from people who want something.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAaron Johnson’s handiwork is all over one of the biggest local deals of 2010—Citizen Energy Group’s nearly
$2 billion acquisition of Indianapolis’ water and wastewater systems. The 39-year-old served as lead negotiator and
architect of the purchase.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJOf Coca-Cola Enterprises’ 200 sales territories in the Midwest, three are managed by women. Melanie Jones, 37, is one
of those managers.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJBy college, Jesse Kharbanda knew environmental preservation was his future. Now 33, he is the executive director of Hoosier
Environmental Council.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJIf Joseph Lansdell were 34 instead of 39, you might be reading about Dr. Lansdell rather than sheet metal company president
Lansdell.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJJohn Merriweather went from the Army at 18—he earned a Commendation Medal in Desert Storm—to a small company in
Carmel where he learned all facets of the business, from warehousing to quality control to sales. Now 38, he runs his own
firm.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJMarco Moreno’s law career began years before he became a lawyer. As a college undergraduate, he worked as a clerk for
a superior court judge in LaGrange County, where he learned his way around the court system. Now 37, he is a partner at Lewis
& Kappes PC.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJDave Nevogt, 31, runs McCordsville-based Innovative Solutions Inc., which makes online tutorials and DVDs that teach people
how to improve their golf game.
More
February 5, 2011
Marc and Martha Allan / Special to IBJAs executive director of the technology consulting firm eImagine Technology Group, 39-year-old Shannon Morris puts together
teams to work with clients.
More
Laura-the festivals and tastings are free. What does is strengthen the sense of community with activities. What are those empty lots doing for the Village? it's sad you can't see the good that this progress can do for the area. No one is requiring anyone to shop there. I guess you'd rather see a Dollar store move in or no, we'd rather see the property stand empty b/c change is out of the question.
Read down to the part about Brizzi. Someone needs to subpoena his "purchases" of Red RockPictures and Cellstar and his corresponding bank records, I mean c'mon, I'd like to see his alcohol usage records, too. http://diana-vice.blogspot.com/2011_01_01_archive.html
Wonder if my neighborhood can advertise our "retention" pond and act like it is a beach too?
a new record at the '11 salebration until they realized that it was a futile effort to get their crapwagon moter and crapwagon car up speed. And then they just quietly slunk off into the night and never spoke of it again. Nothing to see here folks.
millions for putting a company's bumper sticker on one of its Lolas. But you gotta take what you can get.