Some up-and-coming angel investors
Dozens of people in the Indianapolis area have the potential and the interest to become angel investors in the next few years.
Dozens of people in the Indianapolis area have the potential and the interest to become angel investors in the next few years.
New U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rules force precautions on paint chips, dust.
The Indianapolis-based consumer review and rating service said it will use the investment to expand its health and wellness consumer review product, as well as its coupon program, “The Big Deal.”
The 15-year-old company now has raised nearly $100 million in debt and equity financing and backing from individuals.
Previous honorees are not eligible for nomination. 2021: Bill Oesterle 2020: Teresa Lubbers 2019: Mark Miles 2018: Frank Basile 2017: Jeff Smulyan 2016: William “Bill” Taft 2015: Robert L. Bowen 2014: Rollin Dick 2013: Marianne Glick 2012: Katie Betley 2011: John Thompson 2010: Ted Boehm 2009: Jim Dodson 2008: P.E. MacAllister 2007: Brian Payne 2006: […]
The investment is from a San Francisco-based firm and follows a $22.5 million investment the company received in October from multiple investors.
There's a new landmark at the Angie's List campus just east of downtown: A restored 1937 diner.
Angie’s List Inc., a web service that provides consumer reviews to 1.5 million members, may decide to opt for an initial public offering as early as this year, CEO Bill Oesterle said.
Some Indiana firms are adding management and board firepower—moves likely to help them win over investors should they move ahead with public offerings.
Consumer ratings service Angie’s List is scoping locations for hundreds of new employees the fast-growing firm plans to hire. And unlike past expansions, it’s looking beyond its East Washington Street headquarters—and Indianapolis.
The idea of Angie’s List someday pulling up stakes just east of downtown and moving its 650 employees to Fishers, for example, is discouraging for anyone who recognizes the importance of a healthy city core, but the possibility should come as no surprise.
Angie’s List Inc., a website that provides consumer reviews of plumbers, electricians and other services, is preparing to file in August for an initial public offering, said two people with direct knowledge of the plans.
Money for real estate acquisition is a major component of the $7.1 million in incentives the city of Indianapolis offered Angie's List Inc. for expanding its headquarters campus to accommodate 500 more employees.
Consumer review provider Angie's List on Thursday filed the papers for an initial public offering of stock. The filing pegged the value of the offering at $75 million, though the Indianapolis-based company said that amount could change.
In a Monday SEC filing, the company said it lost $43.2 million through the first nine months of 2011, pushing total losses since 2006 to $160.6 million. Angie’s List filed in August to go public.
The initial public offering price was $13, the high end of the range projected in regulatory filings. That price was more than quadruple the average price of $2.76 paid by prior investors.
When Scott Brenton, 39, became chief operating officer of Angie’s List 12 years ago, he was a sort of jack-of-all trades.
The Indianapolis-based company posted a loss of $5.9 million in the fourth quarter on revenue of $27.9 million.
Indianapolis-based Angie's List beat analysts’ revenue expectations in its first quarter as a public company, seeing results from a marketing campaign that drove up expenses.
Scott Brenton, the departing chief operating officer of Indianapolis-based Angie’s List Inc., is joining One Click Ventures LLC in Greenwood.