NEW YORK, August 17, 2016 – Inc. magazine today ranked iuvo Technologies NO. 2880 on its 35th annual Inc. 5000, the most prestigious ranking of the nation's fastest-growing private companies. The list represents a unique look at the most successful companies within the American economy’s most dynamic segment — its independent small businesses. Companies such as Microsoft, Dell, Domino’s Pizza, Pandora, Timberland, LinkedIn, Yelp, Zillow, and many other well-known names gained their first national exposure as honorees of the Inc. 5000.
"Our growth and success is an indicator of the enduring value that we bring to our customers", says Bryon Beilman, CEO and co-founder of iuvo Technologies. "This is the second time that we have made the list and it is no small achievement. We improved our rank by demonstrating substantial growth over last year's showing. This is a validation that our customers love our services, want more of them and are referring us to everyone they know. Everyone at iuvo Technologies takes pride in making the Inc 5000 list because our success is the result of the entire team's hard work."
The 2016 Inc. 5000, unveiled online at Inc.com and with the top 500 companies featured in the September issue of Inc. (available on newsstands August 23) is the most competitive crop in the list’s history. The Inc. 5000’s aggregate revenue is $200 billion, and the companies on the list collectively generated 640,000 jobs over the past three years, or about 8% of all jobs created in the entire economy during that period. C
The iuvo Technologies profile on the Inc. 5000 is available at http://www.inc.com/profile/iuvo-technologies
The full Inc 5000 list is available at http://www.inc.com/inc5000/list/2016
"The Inc. 5000 list stands out where it really counts,” says Inc. President and Editor-In-Chief Eric Schurenberg. “It honors real achievement by a founder or a team of them. No one makes the Inc. 5000 without building something great — usually from scratch. That’s one of the hardest things to do in business, as every company founder knows. But without it, free enterprise fails.”