Angie’s List unveils new business model with free subscriptions
Angie’s List Inc. announced plans Thursday morning to overhaul its membership model by offering a tiered subscription plan that includes free access to its ratings and reviews.
Angie’s List Inc. announced plans Thursday morning to overhaul its membership model by offering a tiered subscription plan that includes free access to its ratings and reviews.
The fiscal body of the county was the last approval needed for the $124 million project. Fishers and INDOT are also providing funding.
United Technologies hasn’t changed plans to close two plants with 2,100 workers, but it intends to pay back money it received in incentive agreements and keep about 400 research-and-development and executive jobs in the state.
Now down to a handful of traditional pizzerias, the Indianapolis-based pizza franchisor said it is searching for a location where pedestrian traffic would be heavier.
Dr. Linda Han, director of breast surgical oncology at the IU Health Simon Cancer Center, learned early in her career that many female patients with breast cancer wanted to have a woman perform their surgeries.
Dr. Margaret “Meg” Frazer is the midwest medical director for Pfizer but continues to see patients as a neurologist at Josephson Wallack Munshower Neurology PC.
The program uses an individual’s genetic code to create a personalized therapy that attacks cancer while minimizing harm to the patient.
The not-for-profit, founded in Indianapolis, uses a boxing training regimen to fight Parkinson’s disease.
Lance Trexler, the executive director of Resource Facilitation at Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana, created a personalized, specialized plan of attack to help patients with brain injuries return to more normal lives.
Adult & Child Center, a not-for-profit community mental health center founded in Indianapolis more than 60 years ago, seeks to integrate the work of behavioral health and primary care providers.
With prices tumbling for scrap metal, used paper and old plastic bottles, recycling firms around Indiana are watching revenue drop. Most are working harder to find buyers that will pay a decent price for their truckloads of materials. Some are idling operations.
The only memories of thousands of long-gone manufacturing jobs are the giant, vacant factories left behind when companies bolt—after consolidation, restructuring or in search of cheaper labor.
inflation is a sustained and persistent increase in the general level of prices. In the United States, we don’t have much inflation right now, but, historically, governments have conjured up inflation as a way to raise revenue and repudiate debts.
Indiana Economic Development Corp. President Jim Schellinger said state officials realized early on that the Dow-DuPont merger could have wiped out some of the best jobs in Indianapolis.
Although the city will host a “global business center,” it will be months before details are known about how the combined agriculture operations will shake out. For now, the two firms are still competitors.
Saying it was “gravely disappointed,” the company proposing a $500 million medical complex warned Friday morning that it would “explore other options” while airport officials spend more time examining the deal.
Dow and DuPont said they will base their combined agricultural business in Wilmington, Delaware, but that Indianapolis will play a pivotal role.
Staff members will start hauling some of the TVs, desks, chairs and other equipment out of the existing location on Friday.
Indiana wisely encourages Hoosiers to finish their college degrees.
Obama’s 2017 budget has one provision that makes us want to send him a belated Valentine! He asks Congress to eliminate a federal tax exemption for interest payments on local bonds issued to build professional sports venues.