Angie’s List hires former Travelocity tech chief
Robert Wiseman has experience in “high-volume, consumer-centric e-commerce” after working for Orbitz Inc., Travelocity and Sabre Travel Network.
Robert Wiseman has experience in “high-volume, consumer-centric e-commerce” after working for Orbitz Inc., Travelocity and Sabre Travel Network.
The Indy-based consumer reviews firm has set aside $4 million to settle a lawsuit alleging Angie’s List automatically renewed membership fees at a higher rate than members were led to believe.
Shares in the Indianapolis-based consumer-reviews service fell 14 percent in after-hours trading Wednesday evening, despite a rare profit in the firm’s fourth quarter.
At least two investor lawsuits note that the company now generates the vast majority of its revenue from the service providers it's paying members to review.
The company plans to offer an app by San Francisco-based vWorkApp that will allow members to interact more conveniently with service providers.
A look at some of the runner-up top Indianapolis business stories from 2013.
The complaint charges the company and executives with misrepresenting the strength of the Indy-based firm’s business model, financial performance and future prospects.
Never mind that Angie’s List posts a loss every year. Wall Street isn’t worried about that, right now. But let its double-digit revenue growth slow just a bit and, before you know it, the stock has fallen 33 percent—as it did in October.
Angie’s List Inc. on Wednesday said it suffered a smaller loss in the third quarter, but the online business-rating service’s results and outlook fell short of Wall Street expectations.
Shares of the consumer review service have dropped more than 12 percent since the company announced Monday that Chief Technology Officer Manu Thapar had departed. The firm recently hired a new chief financial officer.
As Angie’s List approaches its second anniversary as a public company, investors remain as split as ever on whether the consumer-review company is wildly overvalued or a revolutionary Internet business still in its infancy.
Angie's List Inc. will have a full-time chief financial officer for the first time since March, the Indianapolis-based company announced Wednesday.
BrightNest, founded in 2011, provides free online tips for home maintenance to about 100,000 users. The company’s eight employees will remain based in Denver.
Indianapolis-based Angie’s List's stock continued to tumble Thursday morning after an analyst downgraded the stock following a report that Internet giant eBay will test its own consumer-reviews site in the United Kingdom.
Indianapolis-based Angie's List Inc. reported record revenue for the second quarter on Wednesday afternoon, but its shares fell in after-hours trading on word that Internet giant eBay will be testing its own consumer-reviews site in the United Kingdom.
Angie’s List turned a profit for the first time in nearly two decades.
Angie’s List Inc. CEO Bill Oesterle has collected millions of dollars over the years by renting to the company property for its campus along East Washington Street. Now, the landlord and chief executive is pocketing millions more by selling Angie’s the property, at well above its assessed value.
Consumer rating service gets stock-price boost from better-than-expected revenue in first quarter.
In the heart of a mediocre earnings season for public companies, Indianapolis-based firms Angie’s List and ITT Educational Services on Thursday shot to the top of the stock ticker.
The latest results beat Wall Street estimates, driving the Indianapolis-based company's shares upward by nearly 7 percent in after-market trading on Wednesday.