NADA ADVERTISING
Business: Full-service agency offers website, print and social media services, including branding, Web development, search engine optimization, design, advertising and marketing, print and direct mail.
Founded: 2004.
Headquarters: St. Paul.
Website: www.nadaadvertising.com
Employees: three, plus 10 independent contractors.
Executives: Nathan Nerland, co-founder and partner; Daniel Williams-Goldberg, co-founder and partner.
2011 revenue: $510,000; $600,000 projected for 2012.
Strategy: Seek new business while defining the agency's future focus, its founders' roles and the responsibilities of new hires, pursue more project-based work, license Virtual Office online tool and develop other products.
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More From Business
Business
From 'Jumanji' to Tarantino, Sony teases varied slate
Sony Pictures Entertainment Chairman Tom Rothman assured theater owners Monday that his studio is dedicated to appealing to a range of audiences — from global franchises such as "Spider-Man" and "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" series to family films, action pics, comedies and even Quentin Tarantino's Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt film "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood."
National
Mystery grows over pro-Saudi tabloid: Embassy got sneak peek
It landed with a thud on newsstands at Walmart and rural supermarkets last month: Ninety-seven fawning pages saluting Saudi Arabia, whose ambitious crown prince was soon to arrive in the U.S. on a PR blitz to transform his country's image.
National
Aimed at China, Trump's tariffs are hitting closer to home
President Donald Trump's escalating dispute with China over trade and technology is threatening jobs and profits in working-class communities where his "America First" agenda hit home.
National
Asian shares advance as US bond yields push dollar higher
Asian shares were mostly higher Tuesday as a surge in U.S. bond yields pushed the value of the dollar higher against other major currencies.
Variety
Power-sucking Bitcoin 'mines' spark backlash
Bitcoin "miners" who use rows of computers whirring at the same time to produce virtual currencies began taking root along New York's northern border a…
StarTribune.com welcomes and encourages readers to comment and engage in substantive, mutually respectful exchanges over news topics. Commenters must follow our Terms of Use.
Comments will be reviewed before being published.