Ex-grocery exec Danny O’Malia providing service advice to sports franchises
Danny O’Malia, longtime leader of his family’s Indianapolis-based grocery store business, now offers his customer-service-driven advice through his own consulting firm.
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Danny O’Malia, longtime leader of his family’s Indianapolis-based grocery store business, now offers his customer-service-driven advice through his own consulting firm.
The developer and contractors who built the FBI’s new $39 million Indianapolis field office, just north of Castleton Square Mall, are squabbling in court a year after wrapping up work on the project.
Indianapolis-based Strand Diagnostics LLC will receive up to $30 million in investment capital over the next three years from Los Angeles-based NantWorks LLC, a seed-stage investment firm, the companies announced this week.
Carmel Mayor Jim Brainard might relinquish his political trump card in an effort to refinance some of the $240 million in debt that’s weighing on the city’s tax-increment finance districts.
The idea is to send middle and high school students the message that there are plenty of jobs in engineering.
The Piccadilly, at 16th and Pennsylvania streets, will undergo a historically sensitive renovation of its 58 units.
Greensburg-based MainSource Financial Group is the holding company for MainSource Bank, which has 80 offices in Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky and Ohio.
It is impossible to make an intelligent assessment of the investment merit of an asset without accounting for its price.
First in a month-long series of reviews of eateries in and around City Market. This week: Fermenti Artisan.
If treated as a financial investment, Social Security is a really effective way to destroy wealth.
"Fallen Angels” concerns a pair of London gal pals who have in common marriages in need of spark and a past hot-and-heavy relationship with the same man.
Thoughts on this, that and the other.
The spectacular flameouts of some startup firms underscores the risk of relying on infusions of federal money to keep a business viable.
Two startup firms, Cause.It LLC and Trensy LLC, have created tools that link charitable behavior and consumption. Like the hit app Foursquare, the newcomers encourage users to “check in” when they show up at events or complete activities so they can earn rewards offered by local businesses.
Goodreads compiles the ratings and reviews from users everywhere and has a powerful “recommendation engine.”
Houses in communities that are easy to navigate on foot command a higher price-per-square-foot.
I find myself taking issue with Peter Rusthoven’s [March 19] after-the-fact column about “Irsay’s colossal wager.”
It is amazing how statistics can read exactly how you need them to read to prove your point [Williams Viewpoint, March 26].