2017 WOMAN OF INFLUENCE: Erin L. Albert
Erin Albert is a leading podcaster on pharmaceutical subjects, a prolific writer of books and a full-time consultant.
Erin Albert is a leading podcaster on pharmaceutical subjects, a prolific writer of books and a full-time consultant.
Smith returned to his hometown of Indianapolis in 1969, when he became an executive vice president of American Fletcher National Bank.
Even as women make or influence the majority of auto purchases in the United States, retailers have failed to attract and retain female employees, according to CDK Global, which advises dealerships on sales strategies.
Ahead of an inaugural tech-diversity conference next week, Angela Smith Jones, Indianapolis’ deputy mayor of economic development, spoke with IBJ about tech jobs and inclusion.
The intimate new drama closes out the Phoenix season with one of the year’s most wholly satisfying theatrical productions.
Many events are part of the Indiana Black Expo Summer Celebration’s Business Conference.
The second half of 2017 is packed with great opportunities for learning and networking.
In statehouses across the country and in Congress, drugmaker Alkermes is pushing its own addiction treatment while contributing to misconceptions and stigma about other medications used to treat opioid addiction.
Hoosier millennials take one glance at the latest from the Statehouse and think: Why bother? The Indiana General Assembly’s work product is a result of policy priorities that wouldn’t be out of place on the set of “Happy Days.”
Mobi Wireless Management, a fast-growing, 300-person operation, secured the top honors at TechPoint’s Mira awards Saturday night.
Senior Vice President of Product Shelly Towns said she wanted to get out of her “comfort zone” and is looking for new opportunities.
As NCAA committees meet next week to discuss which cities will host championships through 2022, the organization finds itself in the middle of a national discussion on civil rights that will test its ability to influence public policy and its commitment to its own stated values.
Our focus should be on electing women, who are woefully underrepresented in office, as well as nurturing women who already are on a professional career track but who might be looking to give back in other ways—perhaps a year or two in public service or fundraising for a candidate or taking on a leadership role in the community.
Daniel Clark has been working to improve population health in Indianapolis since 1994, with a focus on promoting wellness in low-income communities.
We can make excuses and say Democrats lost in 2016 because it was a wave. It was undetectable anger, a populist outcry that didn’t show up in the polls. Or we could recognize it as an opportunity.
Owned by just two families in its 82 years, the restaurant is a downtown institution.
Angie Wethington was recently inducted into the Midwest Real Estate News Hall of Fame, thanks in part to more than 33.6 million square feet of property deals with an estimated $1.5 billion value.
The top woman in a commercial role in the 9,000-employee agricultural chemical giant, Wasson sits on the president/CEO’s Global Leadership Team and has served as treasurer and chairwoman of the finance committee of the Indiana Humanities board of directors.
Able to evolve with an evolving company, Shelly Towns has helped shape Angie’s List while extending her influence into the tech community on the TechPoint board.
The designer of the Indianapolis Cultural Trail’s poetic bus shelters, Donna Sink now is shaping the way people experience the IMA.