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Convercent, which makes compliance software used by businesses as small as a minor government contractor and as large as Time Warner, is hiring at blistering pace.
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Convercent, which makes compliance software used by businesses as small as a minor government contractor and as large as Time Warner, is hiring at blistering pace.
Setting its sights on San Francisco’s booming housing market, a Denver startup that lets homebuyers virtually tour properties has raised $325,000.
What started as a home-brewing hobby for a feline friend has taken wings, stocking pet store shelves with Catbernet and MalBark.
Five in-state startups will move in to the Techstars office space this week as part of a three-month accelerator program.
Nicole Sullivan easily could have closed the book on her business model years ago. Instead, she’s writing a new chapter with a mobile book-selling truck.
The on-demand delivery glut is looking a little leaner, as an Austin-based startup is pulling out of Denver and 11 other cities.
Startups across the state raised $42 million in December, led by a Foundry Group-backed software company in Boulder and a medical technology business in Littleton.
Ready to roll into three more cities in 2017, a startup that sends a Prius to deliver less-urgent medical care has refueled with a $3.7 million capital raise.
The year-old company is now looking to boost its toehold in the industry by debuting three types of rock wall holds within the first half of 2017.
The patent, a wide-ranging riff on the Revolar device now on the market, describes a product that would fit the script of a spy movie.
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