Netconducter:
Hi again! I'm in at $11. I'm not going to bet against Flip Flipowski.
Taken from their website:
Deloitte & Touche Recognizes Sequoia Software as One of the Fastest Growing Technology Companies in US
Sequoia Software Named to Technology Fast 500 List for the Third Consecutive Year
COLUMBIA, MD - November 17, 1999 - Sequoia Software Corporation, the leading provider of Interactive Enterprise Portals powered by XML, today announced that it was named to the Deloitte & Touche Technology Fast 500 listing of the fastest growing technology companies in the nation. Inclusion in the Fast 500 List is based on five-year percentage revenue from 1994-1998. This is the third consecutive year Sequoia Software has been ranked among the Fast 500.
"Today, there are more than 22,000 high technology companies in the United States, many of whom are competing for the same markets, here in the states and worldwide. The Fast 500 winners have proven that they can compete successfully by consistently delivering technological wonders," said Mark Evans, managing director, Deloitte & Touche High Technology Group. "We at Deloitte & Touche commend Sequoia Software for having the vision and determination to become one of the fastest growing technology companies in the U.S."
The Deloitte & Touche Technology Fast 500 is one of the standards used to weigh the success of today's technology companies. To qualify for the Fast 500, companies must have had revenues of at least $50,000 in 1994; must be headquartered in the United States; and be "technology companies." Deloitte and Touche defines this as firms that produce technology, manufacture a technology product, are technologically intensive, use technology in problem solving, or devote a high percentage of effort to research and development of technology.
About Sequoia Software Sequoia Software Corporation, headquartered in Columbia, Maryland, is the leading provider of Interactive Enterprise Portal solutions. Sequoia XML Portal Server integrates structured and unstructured data from disparate sources, creating a single point of access to relevant information, as well as a single point of interaction with that information. Users no longer have to spend valuable time learning and navigating multiple systems to access and act on the exact information they need to make quick, effective decisions |