MEDIA CONTACT: Valerie Quintanilla
PHONE: 303.345.6623 (direct)
720.244.2427 (wireless)
E-MAIL: Valerie@booyahnetworks.com
Inc.
Magazine Reveals Its 25th Annual List of America’s
500 Fastest Growing Private Companies
Colorado-based Booyah Networks Ranks No. 23 on the
2006 Inc. 500
With Three-Year Sales Growth of 2017.3%
Booyah is the only Colorado company to break the top
25.
New York, August 23, 2006 – Inc. magazine
today announced its 25th annual Inc. 500 ranking of the
fastest-growing private companies in the country. Colorado-based Booyah
Networks, ranks No. 23 on the list, with three-year growth of 2017.3 percent. Booyah
Networks is the only Colorado company to make this year’s top 25.
Founded in 2001, Booyah Networks is an online marketing and
technologies company, which started as a paid search network. The network’s success
made it possible to develop and launch two new divisions, The Booyah Agency
and SpotXchange. The Booyah Agency (www.thebooyahagency.com) is a
boutique-style online marketing agency that manages about 20 clients
including NewsGator, Little Tikes, ThoughtEquity and more. Booyah’s
auction-based video ad serving platform, SpotXchange (www.spotxchange.com), is currently in
beta, set to launch in September 2006.
The 2006 Inc. 500, as revealed in the September issue of Inc.,
reported the most robust bunch of companies the magazine has ever compiled,
with aggregate revenue of $19.7 billion, up from $16.5 billion last year and
$12.9 billion in 2000. The two largest companies on this year’s Inc. 500 are
the biggest ever to make the list – No. 170 Western Refining ($3.4 billion in
revenue) and No. 376 Newegg.com ($1.26 billion) – and the third and fourth
companies in Inc. 500 history to crack the billion-dollar mark. In all, 14
companies topped $200 million in annual revenue, compared with 11 last year.
Most important, the 2006 Inc. 500 companies were engines of
job growth, having created more than 90,000 jobs since those companies were
founded.
This year’s list is the first to include businesses that
started up immediately before and after September 11, 2001 – including the No.
1 company and 20 companies in the top 50 – as well as many companies that had
to raise capital after the dot-com bubble burst. In total, 104 companies
listed on this year’s Inc. 500 were started after 2000.
“If you want to find out which companies are going to change
the world, look at the Inc. 500,” said Inc. Editor Jane Berentson. “These
are the most innovative, dynamic, fast-growth companies in the nation, the ones
coming up with solutions to some of our most intractable ills, creating systems
that let us conduct business faster and easier, and manufacturing products we
soon discover we can’t live without. The Inc. 500 list is Inc. magazine’s
tribute to American business ingenuity and ambition.”
Hottest Regions for Fastest-Growing Companies
Federal spending again propels a large number of companies
from Washington, D.C., Virginia, and Maryland onto the Inc. 500.
Washington, D.C., is the top metropolitan area for the
fourth consecutive year, with 43 of the fastest-growing companies, an increase
of one over last year. New York City is a close second and the biggest gainer,
adding 17 companies for a total of 42 companies this year, followed by Los
Angeles with 25 (down seven companies from last year), Boston with 24 (down
three companies), and Atlanta with 20 (no change).
California is the state with the
most Inc. 500 companies – 66 (down from 77 last year). Virginia and New York both are home to 34 of the fastest-growing companies, followed by Texas (32) and Massachusetts (28).
The Immigration Debate
At least 55 of this year’s Inc. 500 CEOs were born outside
the U.S., coming from countries as far-flung as Argentina, the United Kingdom, India, Russia, Pakistan, and the Philippines. The companies they run employ more
than 14,300 workers and contributed more than $1.36 billion to the economy last
year. Other countries may offer cheaper business costs (India, China) or more incentives for entrepreneurs (Ireland, Taiwan), but America still retains its
land-of-opportunity glow for these CEOs.
Hottest Industries for Fastest-Growing Businesses
The largest business category among this year’s Inc. 500 is
IT Services, with 68 companies in this category. Health (36 companies), Retail
(35 companies), Real Estate (30 companies), and Human Resources (29 companies)
round out the top industries ranked on the 2006 Inc. 500.
Top 10 Inc. 500 Companies of 2006:
|
Rank
|
Company
|
Location
|
Industry
|
Year Founded
|
3-Year Revenue Growth
|
2005 Revenue
|
|
No. 1
|
Litle & Co.
|
Lowell, Mass.
|
Financial Services
|
2001
|
5,629.1%
|
$34.8 million
|
|
No. 2
|
Airborne Health
|
Bonita Springs, Fla.
|
Consumer Products
|
1997
|
4,673%
|
$151.6 million
|
|
No. 3
|
Digital Lifestyle Outfitters
|
Charleston, S.C.
|
Consumer Products
|
2001
|
4,385%
|
$83.6 million
|
|
No. 4
|
Edible Arrangements International
|
Hamden, Conn.
|
Food & Beverage
|
1999
|
4,383%
|
$45.6 million
|
|
No. 5
|
SunRx
|
Cherry Hill, N.J.
|
Health
|
2001
|
3,877.3%
|
$27.1 million
|
|
No. 6
|
United Bank Card
|
Hampton, N.J.
|
Financial Services
|
1999
|
3,845%
|
$53.4 million
|
|
No. 7
|
Method Products
|
San Francisco
|
Consumer Products
|
2001
|
3,390.5%
|
$33.5 million
|
|
No. 8
|
StubHub
|
San Francisco
|
Retail
|
2000
|
3,247.8%
|
$199 million
|
|
No. 9
|
Ancillary Care Management
|
Los Angeles
|
Health
|
1995
|
2,942.1%
|
$232.6 million
|
|
No. 10
|
MemberHealth
|
Cleveland
|
Health
|
1998
|
2,858.1%
|
$215.9 million
|
Top 10 Inc. 500 Companies Ranked by Revenue:
|
Rank
|
Company
|
Location
|
Revenue
|
Industry
|
|
No. 170
|
Western Refining
|
El Paso
|
$3.4 billion
|
Energy
|
|
No. 376
|
Newegg.com
|
City of Industry, Calif.
|
$1.26 billion
|
Computers & Electronics
|
|
No. 446
|
Schaller Anderson
|
Phoenix
|
$505.3 million
|
Health
|
|
No. 370
|
MXenergy
|
Stanford, Conn.
|
$308 million
|
Energy
|
|
No. 477
|
Infonxx
|
New York City
|
$308 million
|
Telecommunications
|
|
No. 164
|
Century Gaming
|
Missoula, Mont.
|
$279.9 million
|
Business Services
|
|
No. 79
|
Zappos.com
|
Las Vegas
|
$251.6 million
|
Retail
|
|
No. 9
|
Ancillary Care Management
|
Los Angeles
|
$232.6 million
|
Health
|
|
No. 27
|
C&B Services
|
Port Neches, Texas
|
$225.2 million
|
Environmental Services
|
|
No. 256
|
2Wire
|
San Jose, Calif.
|
$219.6 million
|
Telecommunications
|
Methodology
The 2006 Inc. 500 list measures revenue growth from 2002
through 2005. To qualify, companies had to be U.S.-based, privately held
independent – not subsidiaries or divisions of other companies – as of December
31, 2005, and have, and have at least $600,000 in net sales in the base year.
Visit http://www.inc.com to dig deeper into this year’s Inc.
500 rankings
To celebrate the 25th annual Inc. 500 list,
Inc.com has assembled an exclusive lineup of interactive resources that
includes:
- Interactive maps allowing for quick insight into regional
and industry trends
- A timeline of world events and pop culture trends that
shaped the past 25 years that explains how the Inc. 500 corresponds to and
is reflected by those events
- Slide shows of the top companies and most innovative
products from the Inc. 500 class of 2006
- A quiz that includes interesting facts such as which
former Inc. 500 CEO won a World
Series ring.
Inc., http://www.inc.com, the only major business magazine
dedicated exclusively to owners and managers of growing private companies,
delivers real solutions for today’s innovative company builders. It provides
hands-on tools and market-tested strategies for managing people, finances,
sales, marketing, and technology. Inc., a Mansueto Ventures LLC
publication, inspires and informs, with cutting-edge coverage that reflects our
readers’ energy, brashness, and imagination.
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