“You need things that are completely unique and different, that you can’t replicate online,” he said.
It’s a strategy that seems to be working. Taylor, 38, opened his first Trust Hardware in 2012 along Pendleton Pike in Lawrence. His second store, at East 71st Street and Binford Boulevard, opened in October. His newest store opened this month at 911 Massachusetts Ave., right across from the new Bottleworks District development.
In 2019, Trust Hardware brought in $350,000 in revenue. Last year, that figure ballooned to nearly $1 million. Part of the growth came from the pandemic-fueled home improvement boom, Taylor said. Part came from the opening of the 71st Street store. And part came from a dramatic rise in sales at the Pendleton Pike store, which moved down the street in the fall of 2019.
New online tools empower non-techies to build digital apps
ANTHONY SCHOETTLE, Indianapolis Business Journal
April 9, 2021
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FISHERS, Ind. (AP) When something is called a movement, you know it’s big.
That’s exactly the case with the no-code/low-code movement, which allows non-technical entrepreneurs and marketers more access to and control over the digital realm in which their companies increasingly exist.
With no-code/low-code tools, people with little to no programming experience create websites and digital apps, sometimes in just hours or days.
While the movement has been growing for at least five years, the pandemic has accelerated its spread, especially among customer-facing workers who suddenly became separated from their information technology departments just when they needed to change their business strategies quickly.
New online tools empower non-techies to build digital apps dailyherald.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyherald.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
INDIANAPOLIS – There’s a reason that President Truman had a sign on his desk reading “The Buck Stops Here.” There’s a reason that a statue of Gov. Oliver P. Morton