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Vic and Maria Melfa love building businesses. The father and daughter team are the CEO and President (respectively) of The Training Associates, a successful training firm in Westborough with a unique business model.
It all began with Mr. Smith’s horse. In the late 1940s, E. L. Harvey and Sons was a dairy farm. Jim Harvey, CEO of the firm today, was working for his dad E.L. at the time; he tells the story of Mr. Smith from memory.
As the old saying goes, no one’s epitaph will ever read, “I wish I spent more time at the office.”
Just because you have a home office doesn’t mean you have to settle for substandard space. A carefully laidout home office can give you the confidence you need to build your business — and perhaps one day move out on your own.
As the recession begins to ebb and workers feel a bit more secure in their jobs, more people are likely to take vacations this summer.
Michael V. Gionfriddo, president and COO of Quabaug Corp.
A group of more than a dozen Beacon Hill lawmakers are calling for more stringent measures to keep tabs on tax credits that are given out to businesses.
Small business owners are cautiously optimistic about the current state of the economy – or at least they don’t think it’s an unmitigated disaster. That’s the conclusion of two new surveys of U.S. small business owners.
It’s obvious that health care costs are an enormous burden, and a serious threat to the viability of small businesses throughout Central Massachusetts.
In its early days, the record industry was about community, and music fans could hear the uniqueness of each community in the records they produced.
It's easy for just about anyone in businessâincluding companies, salespeople and marketersâto fall into a âpatternâ when dealing with customers.
Enterprise Cleaning Corp. of Worcester has promoted Val Toigo to vice president of operations.Toigo has worked for Enterprise since 2005, most recently as operations manager.
In recent months, it has appeared as if those who predicted that Massachusetts would not suffer a recession as dire as the rest of the nation and would emerge from it sooner, were right.
As about 25,000 runners made the grueling trek on Marathon Monday from Hopkinton to Boston, Kevin Meany, vice president of technical services for Marlborough-based Versatile Communications, was doing plenty of running around himself.