When businesses are looking for ways to reduce travel costs, they turn to Tango, a video calling application developer. The company recently raised $42,000,000 in a second round of funding.
Maker of Video Calling Application Growing with New Funding
When businesses are looking for ways to reduce travel costs, they turn to Tango, a video calling application developer. The company recently raised $42,000,000 in a second round of funding.
With a focus on helping small businesses, Pixelfish provides customized video production for advertising and promotion purposes. The company recently announced that it had procured $2,100,000 of new capital from both existing and new investors. This follows the acquisition of $1,400,000 in October 2010.
Even those with the best of intentions have found themselves with a PR problem on their hands when trying to acknowledge events that strike an emotional nerve in the hearts and minds of Americans. One small business is learning this first hand.
Anderson Schoenrock realized in 2007 that the investment banking industry was undergoing systemic changes. This process has accelerated in the past few years. A sound career path is no longer assured by working for a large investment firm, which could fold at any time. Entrepreneurial opportunities are certainly lacking.
The United States patent laws are supposed to keep the intellectual property developed by individuals or businesses from being used without compensation to the developer. Instead, these laws are being used to make money for patent owners who have no plans of actually developing the product.
Corporations involved in the online and mobile payments industry continue attracting capital. Braintree has recently raised $34 million of institutional capital. The company, which started in 2007, was bootstrapped during four years without any outside funding.
The founders of iPhone application development company Abvio – Steve Kusmer and Kevin Wallace – are not inexperienced entrepreneurs. They’re baby boomers who first met in 1983. Kusmer brought Wallace onboard his first new company startup in 1998. That company was sold in 2005. Not long thereafter, the pair went looking for a new business […]
You’re undoubtedly excited about forming a LLC and getting your business started. New opportunities, new adventures, and new challenges all await you once those doors, virtual or real, open for business. Although exciting, many businesses will fail but that can be avoided with two key actions: planning and patience.