Login for full access to ABQJournal.com
 
Remember Me for a Month
Recover lost username/password
Register for username

New users: Subscribe here


Close

 Print  Email this pageEmail   Comments   Share   Tweet   + 1

Time growing short for Flying 40 applications

There are still a few days to apply to join the New Mexico Flying 40, the annual tribute to the state’s fastest-growing technology companies, are inviting applications for this year’s awards.

The application deadline is Friday.

Now in its 16th year, the Flying 40 ranks companies according to revenues and percentage growth in revenues, with a list to be published in a special edition of the Albuquerque Journal’s Business Outlook. Top company executives will be honored at a June awards banquet.

The 2013 listing will be compiled from voluntary responses to a qualification form.

To be eligible, a company must be headquartered in New Mexico with five or more employees, and generally regarded as a “technology” company. It may be engaged in research and development, technology consulting and services or the manufacture of products conceived and developed by the company. The firm may be publicly listed or privately owned, but cannot be a subsidiary of a company headquartered outside of New Mexico.

Qualification forms can be accessed at www. techventures.org.

Eligibility will be determined in three categories: Top revenue growth companies with revenues between $1 million and $10 million based on percentage of revenue growth from 2008-2012; top revenue growth companies with revenues of more than $10 million, also based on percentage of growth from 2008-2012; and top revenue-producing companies irrespective of revenue growth.


Comments

Note: Readers can use their Facebook identity for online comments or can use Hotmail, Yahoo or AOL accounts via the "Comment using" pulldown menu. You may send a news tip or an anonymous comment directly to the reporter, click here.

More in Business, Business Outlook
Tom Ford, owner of Hey Jhonny in Nob Hill, displays some of his eclectic art and gifts from around the world. Ford buys all of his shop’s merchandise using the currency of the products’ countries of origin. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal)
Disadvantages in dollars

Small firms buying internationally can boost profits by using currency of products' national origin

Close