Startup - Enliven Software - expands
Melissa Domsic
mdomsic@lsj.com
November 03, 2009 21:02 PM
EAST LANSING - A software startup is the first company to set out on its own after a one-year stay at the Technology Innovation Center. The center, or TIC, is a business incubator that opened in October 2008 at 325 E. Grand River Ave. The TIC takes up 7,000 square feet of the 25,000-square-foot third floor. Barnes & Noble Inc. has a bookstore that occupies the basement and first floor. Enliven Software plans to move out of its 400-square-foot space at the center by the end of the month to a 1,200-square-foot office within the same building. "We've outgrown the space," said CEO Bunmi Akinyemiju, a 2000 graduate of Michigan State University. Akinyemiju launched his company in 2007. He now has 10 people on staff. Enliven, which is privately owned and does not release sales, profit or other financial data, provides software to help clients' accounting departments go paperless. Customers include East Lansing-based Biggby Coffee and the city of Aspen, Colo.
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(Image: ROD SANFORD/Lansing State Journal)
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