Architects of the Internet.MATTHEW D'ANDRIA AND ADAM Adam, the first man, in the Bible Adam (ăd`əm), [Heb.,=man], in the Bible, the first man. In the Book of Genesis, God creates humankind in his image as a species of male and female, giving them dominion over other life. PISONI LEFT COLLEGE TO START A WEB PAGE DESIGN FIRM - AND HAVEN'T LOOKED BACK As his Web page design business was getting off the ground last year, Matthew D'Andria went hunting for office space. Just 20 years old at the time, D'Andria didn't command much respect. One office leasing broker told him to come back - with his father. "People didn't take us serious then," said D'Andria, now 21. "But they take us serious now." Indeed, CyberNation cy·ber·nate tr.v. cy·ber·nat·ed, cy·ber·nat·ing, cy·ber·nates To control (an industrial process) by computer. [cybern(etics) + -ate1. LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol. LLC - Logical Link Control - the firm founded by D'Andria and 21-year-old colleague Adam Pisoni - boasts a enviable roster of clients, including Nissan Motor Co. Ltd., KIA Motors “Kia” redirects here. For other uses, see KIA. Kia Motors is South Korea's 2nd largest automobile manufacturer with headquarters in Yangjae-dong, Seocho-gu, Seoul, South Korea. Its CEO is Chung Eui-sun. The American arm is Kia Motors America. , Professional Discount Securities and video game maker Activision Inc. The company designs "pages" on the Internet's World Wide Web - interactive screen images that showcase company products or services - at a competitive price. Robert Johnson Robert Johnson may refer to:
"We chose them because they impressed us a great deal," Johnson said. "This is a young industry and their design and programming is definitely cutting edge." Incorporated in April of 1996, CyberNation had revenues of about $100,000 last year and is looking at $1.2 million this year, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. D'Andria. He said the company has no debt, and is now "living off profits," though much of that money will be plowed into additional equipment and other reinvestments. CyberNation was spawned in the fall of 1994 in the computer lab of the Scottsdale Community College External link
Friends since pre-school, the pair did all their college research on the Internet instead of the library - a feat that prompted one of their friends, a custom T-shirt maker, to ask them to design a Web site. "The site for our friend's business got great response, and we then thought we could make a business out of this," Pisoni said. They didn't go back to school the next year and instead moved to California in late 1995 "because California is where it's at "Where It's At" is the first single from Beck's 1996 album, Odelay. Many[Who?] have commented that the strength of both "Where It's At" and Odelay confirmed that Beck was not a novelty act or one-hit wonder. for computers and design," D'Andria said. With their own funds and money from family members and friends, D'Andria and Pisoni assembled $150,000, rented the Santa Monica Santa Monica (săn`tə mŏn`ĭkə), city (1990 pop. 86,905), Los Angeles co., S Calif., on Santa Monica Bay; inc. 1886. Tourism and retailing are important, and the city has motion-picture, biotechnology, and software industries. office space (without help from anyone's father) and assembled a staff that included Pisoni's brother, who ran the computer systems at Biola College in La Mirada La Mirada (lä mĭrä`də), city (1990 pop. 40,452), Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1960. La Mirada derives from the Spanish for "the view," referring to the panoramic view of the surrounding valleys from atop the city's hills. . David Simon David Simon can refer to:
With D'Andria as the creative head and Pisoni as the chief of the technical side, the four began targeting the kinds of clients they saw as the most desirable for Web business. CyberNation's first break came through a writer from Wired magazine, a popular journal for computer buffs, who became intrigued with the company's story - and recommended to a friend at Capcom to look at CyberNation's work. Capcom became its first client. CyberNation parlayed that deal into one with Santa Monica ad agency Rubin Postaer & Associates to develop Websites for its clients. These included American Honda Motor Co. Inc. and Sony Pictures Entertainment. "We like it that they're not stifled by backgrounds in other technology which they then try to apply to the Internet," said David Vonderkarr, the online marketing manager for Activision, which launches Web sites for almost each new game it releases. "The Internet has its own set of rules, and CyberNation has developed a strategy for how to advertise there," said Lucas Donat, a partner in the Donat/Wald Co., a Santa Monica ad agency that hired CyberNation to develop advertising strategies for Web pages. This "strategy" means doing more than displaying a company's name and product, D'Andria said. In an ad for Professional Discount Securities, for instance, when a person clicks on an Internet advertisement that says, "trade stocks for $10," the person will not be sent to the company's home page, but to a page that gives specific information about how they can trade cheaply. As for its client base, CyberNation is getting choosy choos·y also choos·ey adj. choos·i·er, choos·i·est Very careful in choosing; highly selective. choos i·ness n. . When it was founded, it mostly created sites with 50 or less pages of information; today it won't accept an assignment with less than 200 pages. And "in a few years," the owners intend to sell off part of the company or go public, D'Andria said. CyberNation LLC Year founded: 1996 Core business: Internet Web page design and programming Top executive: David R. Simon Revenues in 1996: $100,000 Revenues in 1997: $1.2 million (projected) Employees in 1996: 4 Employees in 1997: 17 Goal: To devise ways for clients to capitalize on Cap´i`tal`ize on` v. t. 1. To turn (an opportunity) to one's advantage; to take advantage of (a situation); to profit from; as, to capitalize on an opponent's mistakes s>. the commercial potential of the Internet. Driving force: Demand among businesses to use the Internet as a means of advertising and sales. |
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