Marketing-tech startup draws big names for seed round
Carmel-based DemandJump LLC landed venture capital from local investment firms run by former Aprimo CEO Bill Godfrey and by former ExactTarget executive Tim Kopp.
Carmel-based DemandJump LLC landed venture capital from local investment firms run by former Aprimo CEO Bill Godfrey and by former ExactTarget executive Tim Kopp.
The community would take shape on 9 acres near the southwest corner of Allisonville Road and 146th Street.
Nancy Clifford Irsay built a career in advertising and marketing before turning her attention to philanthropic pursuits and running an equestrian business after marrying Bob Irsay in 1989.
Bankruptcies Kid Glove Service Inc., 2525 N. Shadeland Ave., Suite 12A, 46219, chapter 7 liquidation, liabilities: $322,029; assets: $199,840. Corporate Philanthropy Katz Sapper & Miller LLP volunteers helped prepare Jameson Camp for the winter. Indiana Pacers forward Lavoy Allen will provide turkeys to over 100 needy families as the Pacers begin their annual “Season of […]
Hundreds of acres of undeveloped land surround the 35-acre site the popular Swedish home furnishing company selected—land now ripe for new projects. And in other communities, hotels, restaurants, retailers and even tech companies have followed Ikea stores.
Several out-of-town community banks have launched a full-court press on Indianapolis over the past decade and are seeing solid traction. Experts say they’re coming here because per-capita income and populations in their own back yards are growing more slowly and, in some cases, even declining.
There’s no “manifest destiny” for Indianapolis. We aren’t sharing in the national migration of talent to metropolitan America. We lag most other large regions in population growth, including peers like Nashville, Denver and Columbus.
The restaurant will take space in the first phase of Pulliam Square, north of The Tap, while Crackers Comedy Club will reopen downtown, about a block south.
Vicki Perry, the longtime CEO of Advantage Health Solutions Inc., has been replaced after a financial review found “significant un-reported losses” at the Indianapolis-based health insurer.
I’ve got a four-pack of tickets to the stage version of the Disney classic. Here’s how to win.
Carmel-based Mainstreet has engineered a $302.5 million reverse takeover of a Canadian long-term care company that will once again give Mainstreet a publicly traded investment firm to help finance its development projects.
Advertisements for traditionally low-wage jobs in hospitality and retail decorate major thoroughfares in the northern suburbs, offering management positions and higher pay as incentives.
The former Chumley’s on Broad Ripple Avenue has reopened as Village Tap Room after an extensive renovation by new owners who hope to attract a more professional crowd.
Carmel-based KAR Auction Services Inc.’s earnings fell slightly short of analyst expectations in the third period, but its revenue exceeded predictions.
With only a couple contested races—and none considered competitive—only 8.6 percent of registered voters in the 105 precincts with an election cast a ballot.
Voters will go to the polls Tuesday for municipal elections across Indiana.
The U.S. Small Business Administration blessed the Chamber’s microlending division with a new designation, giving it more cash to deploy and a bigger geographical footprint.
Republicans dominate Hamilton County politics and Democrats barely bother to participate.
The ex-Party Time Rental warehouse has been an eyesore for years, but Carmel officials finally seem ready to OK a plan to transform the 6.5-acre site.
The shiny new apartment buildings rising in the Mile Square belie the reality that suburbanization is continuing to take a heavy toll on Marion County.