Emma® begins 2005 by adding
its 1,000th customer... [read
on]
Emma announces the 25 (okay,
26) honorees in its Emma Twenty-Five initiative...
[read
on]
Emma announces the Emma
Twenty-Five program, awarding 25 accounts to
groups doing good things in their communities...
[read
on]
Emma architect Marcus
Whitney was a featured speaker at this fall's
PHP Works conference in Toronto... [read
on]
Emma was featured on page 57 of Entrepreneur
Magazine, which if you read the magazine backwards
would have placed us very near the front...
[read
on]
Emma was named
one of Nashville's 25 Emerging Companies by
Nashville Post magazine... [read
on]
And before that, Emma opened
a New York office, which is less like an office
and more like a converted brownstone in Brooklyn...
[read
on]
|
|
|
the
history : the
people : recent news
: contact us
January 11, 2005 (Nashville) -- Emma®,
the stylish service that helps organizations streamline
their email marketing and communications, has added
its 1,000th customer account.
Emma® works with small businesses,
non-profits and larger organizations, as well as marketing
agencies and design firms who re-brand the service for
use with their clients. Emma's Web-based offering makes
it easy for any size organization to manage their customer
and member email lists, create great-looking email campaigns,
and track the response in real time. The company, which
launched its service in 2002, added roughly 750 new
accounts in 2004 and currently has a staff of nine.
The lucky 1,000th customer is Sparkplug,
a full-service design firm in Portland, Oregon. Sparkplug's
Andrew Berkowitz says he went looking for an email marketing
partner and liked Emma's style. "We were incredibly
impressed with the clean, simple interface," says
Andrew. "And when we began talking with Emma, we
found that it was a company run by great, helpful, AVAILABLE
people, not a giant, faceless corporate entity. Emma
matched our company philosophy of power wrapped in simplicity
and thoughtful design, backed by outstanding customer
service."
That was a really nice thing to say.
Thanks, Andrew.
* *
* * *
*
|