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Endurance International Group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Endurance International Group, Inc.
Nasdaq: EIGI (2013-2021)
IndustryInternet hosting services
PredecessorBizLand
Founded1997 (1997)
Founders
  • Hari Ravichandran
  • Ravi Agarwal
Headquarters,
US
Number of locations
Worldwide
Key people
  • Jeff Fox (CEO)
  • Marc Montagner (CFO)
  • David Bryson (CLO)
  • Kim Simone (COO)
ServicesWeb hosting, domain registration, SEO, email marketing
Number of employees
Over 2,500 (2016)
ParentClearlake Capital
Websitenewfold.com

Endurance International Group (EIG), previously named BizLand, was an IT services company specializing in web hosting. The company was founded in 1997 and headquartered in Burlington, Massachusetts, USA.[1] In 2021 Endurance International Group merged with Web.com forming a new company, Newfold Digital. It is one of the Internet's largest webhosting providers, the company was structured differently from other large hosting companies such as Rackspace, GoDaddy, or 1&1 Ionos. The company has grown its hosting and related business through numerous acquisitions.[2][3][4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Building a better website with Endurance International Group
  • Endurance International Interview Questions |Web Solution Specialist Interview Questions |Interview
  • Endurance (EIG Group) and Web.com Group combines Newfold Digital Largest Web Solutions Providers
  • Endurance International Group Recruitment Video for MassTLC 2014 Career Fair
  • How to Pick a Web Hosting Company

Transcription

[MUSIC PLAYING] CURT RAFFI: Hi there, I'm Curt Raffi, and we're here talking about website best practices. I've got some friends of mine from SEO Gears here today. Eli Rohif, and Merrill Lawson. And, Merrill, I think you and Eli together have been in the online marketing world for over 10 years, roughly. And we won't talk about how many I add to that, but I think, together we're probably over 25 years in online marketing for small business. And things have changed, haven't they? Over the past few years, and when you look at how businesses used to get found, things have changed. When you look back where you started, Eli, what are the biggest things that you've seen that have changed for getting the word out for a small business owner? ELI ROHIF: Yeah, I mean it used to be very important to be in the Yellow Pages. Small business owners just did that as a requirement, because that was the one way that they could reach their audience. But with the growth of the internet, and search engines, it's become extremely important to be online to find visitors-- because visitors are looking for you. Your customers are looking for you using Google. CURT RAFFI: Yeah. Merrill, when you think about what a business needs, can they exist today without a website? MERRILL LAWSON: I mean, I find it very hard to believe that, in today's day and age any small business doesn't have a presence online. It's just where your customers are looking for products and services. So, if you're not on Google, then you're pretty much a dinosaur, you're not existing. CURT RAFFI: You don't exist. MERRILL LAWSON: Right. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. And now, Eli, do I need to be a geek to build a website? I mean, I've got all these friends that are great programmers, and they scare me to death, because they're incredibly brilliant, and they all go to coffee shops, and open up their laptops and know what they're doing. I'm not quite that good, but do you need to be a geek today to build a well good website? ELI ROHIF: Not anymore. You used to have to know HTML, and coding, and things like that. But the world's really changed. So there's so many template builders, and content management systems, that really anyone can set up a website. It's very easy to do. You just have to know about your business, and be able to set up a hosting account. CURT RAFFI: Guys, do the looks of a website matter? No? MERRILL LAWSON: Of course they do. CURT RAFFI: Why? MERRILL LAWSON: Because you're representing your brand. And it's just like your storefront. You wouldn't have your storefront cluttered up with cobwebs, or trash blowing through. You'd want a very clean, organized storefront-- just like you'd want a clean, organized website. CURT RAFFI: OK, so your website is your face to the world, so you want it to look right. So looks do matter. Can that, Eli, effect how people interact with your website? Whether it looks good or not, whether it actually has someone buy, or do what you want them to do? Like to call you, or-- ELI ROHIF: Absolutely. I mean, web traffic's really fickle. You only have a few seconds to convince a customer to stay on your page. Everyone knows the Back button, and will hit it if your site doesn't look nice. So it's extremely important to make sure that you have a nice looking site to convert visitors into customers. CURT RAFFI: Today, if I'm not a designer-- and I'm just a small business owner that maybe got an auto repair shop, or maybe-- I don't know, I've got some fine cheeses, or wines, or I'm a hairdresser, or maybe I have a restaurant-- even I could build a website with the tools that are available today? ELI ROHIF: Absolutely. There's templates these days, where the site's already basically prebuilt for you, for every niche, every industry. So you really don't have to know how to design, or how to set up color schemes. You can actually just set up a template, and you'll have almost a ready-built website. You just have to put in your content. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. OK. And when you think about some of the things that people do as mistakes that-- when they don't use a template, or they don't use a drag and drop builder, or something like that-- what ends up happening to the website? ELI ROHIF: When they have a site that just doesn't look good, it doesn't work. Visitors won't actually stay on it. People will click the Back button, go to the next [INAUDIBLE] on the search results, and buy from your competition. CURT RAFFI: Ah, OK. So, you said something important. You said, what works. Because when I think of a website, I sometimes think of it as just merely something that someone looks at-- like a billboard-- but is it more than that? MERRILL LAWSON: Of course. So, when you're thinking about designing a website, what you want to keep in mind is the action that you want the visitor to take. So if you want them to call you, you need to have your phone number clear and present at the top of the website. CURT RAFFI: Got it. MERRILL LAWSON: Like Eli said, you only have about four seconds to capture their attention, so you need a brief overview of the product or service that you're presenting. And then, you can dive deeper into the facets of the services you're offering. CURT RAFFI: OK, but it's really important-- MERRILL LAWSON: Curtail your pages to grab them right away. CURT RAFFI: --whatever you want them to do-- if it's call you, if it's click on a contact form, or email you, whatever it is-- you make that path pretty explicit to them. And you said four seconds? Is that typically how long you have to grab someone's attention when they go to your website? ELI ROHIF: Yeah, generally. It's a very short period of time. It's easy to click the Back button, so people do. CURT RAFFI: I've been to some websites-- maybe you guys have too-- that I kind of read through the website, or I engage with a video, or something, and I go, I don't quite know what they do. Has that ever happened to you guys? MERRILL LAWSON: Yeah. So, it's funny when you read the sites. We provide the best service, we've been in business for 10 years. CURT RAFFI: But what is it that you do for that best service, OK. MERRILL LAWSON: Exactly. So, if you're a plumber in Tempe, you want it to clearly state that you're a plumber in Tempe. Because Google relies heavily on the words on the page to figure out what your site's about. So you want to feed Google, and you want to feed your audience what they need to know about. CURT RAFFI: Ah, perfect. OK, so just like talking to my kids, or talking to anybody, it's very important to make sure what you're stating is clear, and the other person is understanding that. So, good presentation, it's easy to do today, and make sure the call to action, and the description of the business are simple and direct. Perfect. Content is that stuff that you put on your website. So everything from text, to videos, to selling propositions, to call to actions, to phone numbers, to anything you can get on that website that unpacks your world to the visitor. So now let's turn it to the expert panel here, and say, Eli, if I had to ask you, what's the one most important bit of content you would put on your website today-- or our website-- what would that be? ELI ROHIF: Video. I think video is extremely important, because it really allows you to engage your audience. We've said previously, you only have a few seconds to capture their attention, and video is a great way to really pull them into your website, and get them interested in your businesses. CURT RAFFI: Does this have to be a long video? I mean, Hollywood production, or are we talking something simple? ELI ROHIF: Simple. I mean, it can be 10 seconds. It could be you introducing your business and services, it could be talking about what you provide, it really can be easy. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. OK. So maybe even with some of the nice phones today, HD recording, I could shoot something pretty quickly, and save that to YouTube, and then put that on my website from YouTube? That's possible? ELI ROHIF: Yeah, absolutely. And then you actually are going to be able to attract traffic from YouTube, which is the number two search engine. CURT RAFFI: Ah. So, I could get someone seeing the video on YouTube, and then coming over to my website? ELI ROHIF: Yeah. People don't just look on Google. They are looking on YouTube for your business. So they may search for the best plumber in your area, and if they see your video, they're likely to engage with you as a business. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. It's all coming together now. You get a two-form, if you will. ELI ROHIF: Absolutely. CURT RAFFI: All right. OK. Merrill, you're on the hot seat now. So if I had to say, what's the number one bit of content you want to put on a website, what would that be? MERRILL LAWSON: I would say the unique selling proposition. CURT RAFFI: Unique selling proposition. MERRILL LAWSON: Right. CURT RAFFI: That sounds like a big sales word. So you've got to bring it down for me, down here. MERRILL LAWSON: So what that is, is just clearly defining why you're better than the millions of other websites online, doing the same thing. So you can simply provide a bulleted list of, I've been in business 15 years, I have all these different accolades. And that way, you're setting yourself apart, and your distinguishing yourself amongst the crowd. CURT RAFFI: OK, so it's a little bit of certainly publishing what you're good at, and your accolades. But also differentiation a little bit. I specialize in golden retrievers, and koi. I'm a strange veterinarian there, but you can work with me on that one. OK, are things like-- Eli, I'll ask you this one-- like a coupon, is that important to put on a website as well? ELI ROHIF: Coupons are a great way to engage your audience, again. It's also a great way, as a business owner, for you to keep track of how profitable your website is. If you have a web-only coupon, you're allowing people to get a discount, but you know when people are utilizing that coupon, they came from your website. MERRILL LAWSON: If you have your phone number clearly present on your website, you're going to have a much higher likelihood that someone's going to call you. So if that's what you want to solicit, if you want phone calls, you need to make it available at the top, and at the bottom of your website. If you want people to email you, a contact form would also be helpful. CURT RAFFI: Ah, you've just hit on something there. Is an important to have a contact form? I've seen, and I know with the company that I work with, we actually have forms that collect the email addresses. So if someone is submitting contact, or schedule a reservation, or something like that, it's stored. So that someone can have all of those emails, then to perhaps-- if someone's signing up for a kind of a newsletter, or a kind of deal-of-the-week type of email from me, I can use that to re-market to them later. Would you advise someone, if they've got a small business, to do something like that as well? ELI ROHIF: Yeah, it's good to give them multiple channels. Some people are going to want to call, some people will want to email. Some people will like to Like you on Facebook. It's something that, really allowing multiple channels is going to allow you to convert the most amount of your visitors, into potential customers. CURT RAFFI: Ah, you said something really important now. Kind of social channels, too, because the web has kind of gone in a lot of different directions. We've got YouTube, we've got our website, but we also have things like Google+, and social. Why are those important to someone building a website? Isn't that where I just tell my friends about what I had for dinner last night? ELI ROHIF: And vacations. CURT RAFFI: And vacations. ELI ROHIF: Yes. CURT RAFFI: OK. All right. MERRILL LAWSON: Cute baby pictures. But, no, in all seriousness, Google+ is a great way to have your business reviewed. So if your customers are engaged, and they like your service, and they're reading-- CURT RAFFI: They're talking about you. MERRILL LAWSON: --a review, on Google+, it lets the community know that you have some value. And it favors you as far as rankings as well. CURT RAFFI: And I could also-- once those people are in connection with me, or communication with me-- I can then message out to them too. MERRILL LAWSON: Exactly right. CURT RAFFI: So, if I'm a restaurant, and I've got a quiet time coming up over the next couple of weeks, I can say, hey, there's a special. It's not necessarily a coupon, like you said, Eli. But it's a way for me to get a message out to my loyal clientele. Or the folks that have connected with me, and developed a little bit of a relationship. ELI ROHIF: It's a quick way to get back to them. And it's kind of like the email list of yesteryear-- I guess it would maybe be two years ago-- but now you can actually just engage them through social channels. And that's where people are really turning to for more information. CURT RAFFI: Search engine, I'm going to say, is like Google's big computer. And it's going out looking all over the web, at different websites, and reading it, and looking at it. And it's looking for certain things that will help it better understand what Curt's Used Cars does, versus Eli's restaurant, and Merrill's Home Repair Services. So those search engines need to understand that. And we can optimize, or tune-- I think is a word that I understand better than optimize-- our websites to get more traffic. And to get Google to, in essence, view us as more of an authority about what we do. Page titles are important, because they are those things that people see in those links that they would click on in the search results. And I could make my site-- the pages of my site-- very distinct by talking, or titling each of those page links in a very correct way. What are the things that are important to do, Merrill, when you're unpacking those, or telling those descriptions for the page titles? MERRILL LAWSON: So for the page titles, you want to think about the phrases that you would like to rank for, and include those keyword phrases in the page titles. And as far as the meta description goes, this is likely the first thing that someone's ever going to read about your business. So it needs to be informative, and compelling so that they want to click on your listing in the results. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. OK, so this is all kind of coming together for me. So we have search engine optimization, which is really kind of tuning how someone like Google can find your site. Those descriptions about your site are important, but really important are the keywords that you choose throughout all of your content, because that's telling Google search engine something about what you do. And it's also important to include the keywords that you want in the page titles, and the title descriptions. MERRILL LAWSON: Right. So not only the title, not only the description, but as well as the URL of the page-- the actual page name. So you don't want to just have a services page, you actually want it to be descriptive of the service that is on the page, so-- CURT RAFFI: OK, so let me give you a "for instance," and you tell me if this works for you. If I've got an auto repair shop, and I have Curt's Auto Repair, and I'm listing my services. I shouldn't just have a services page, I should have Curt's Auto Repair BMW, Lexus, and Mercedes to give some feeling for what I actually do. MERRILL LAWSON: Exactly, or "foreign car repair in the city," perhaps, would be a good way to do it. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. OK, so bring in the locations into the content as well, as to maybe the areas that I service. MERRILL LAWSON: Exactly. CURT RAFFI: OK. I see how that all plays together. So let's wrap this up now, and package it for the folks watching. So it's important to have good, descriptive approaches to what's on your website. The keywords that you choose to describe your business need to be able to have Google understand exactly what you do. But also gives some granular data about your business. So if it's located in a certain city, if it's a type of car repair, if it's a type of restaurant, you need to spell that out, and think about how that's presented on your website. Because that will affect how you are seeing, or referenced, or optimized within the search engines. ELI ROHIF: Yeah. People are going to look for the same business in many different ways. So, if you're searching for a car repair, you might search "auto repair," or you might search "Volkswagen transmission repair," or you might look for "broke down car tips." CURT RAFFI: I had a lot of those over the years. OK. ELI ROHIF: There's a huge variety, and the more content that you have, the more likely that you're going to match how people are searching for you. And the more likely you're going to appear higher in the search result for those terms. CURT RAFFI: OK. So there isn't necessarily only one term, or one keyword, or one description that I should be using. It should be really thinking about how customers maybe have describe the way they found me. And maybe I should even ask them, right? ELI ROHIF: Absolutely. It's a great way to do keyword research. How would you search for my business? Ask your friends, and those are probably terms that people might use, and you should include in your content. CURT RAFFI: So how important is the frequency of content updates on your website, or the freshness of content? Eli, when we look at updating of a website, do the search engines care about that, how frequently your website changes? ELI ROHIF: They do. I mean, if you're having new content, and updated content frequently, they're going to be coming back to your site to see what's new and different. MERRILL LAWSON: Yep. ELI ROHIF: So it's important to do. But it also allows you to add content to your website. So as you add more articles and stories, you're naturally going to have more phrases that are going to match that potential search traffic. CURT RAFFI: OK. What would be some of the easiest way you would suggest someone to create a website where they could put a lot of content on? What would they add to a website, Merrill? MERRILL LAWSON: So, Wordpress is an easy way to add a blog to website. CURT RAFFI: OK. MERRILL LAWSON: So using that content management system allows you to easily make posts. And all you need to do really, is to write a brief, 100, 200 word post, maybe once a week, or even once a month. And that way you're showing growth, you're showing the search engines that you're adding to the wealth of information that's out there. And they really like that. CURT RAFFI: OK, so a blog in itself is a great way to add fresh content to your website, and let the search engines know, hmm, OK, this guy is adding some new stuff, it's time to check out what's new on his website again. Are there some services that could help me if I'm a small business owner? I think the biggest fear I would have, as a small business owner, is to say, I can't think of anything else to write about. My restaurant, my hair salon, my car repair, my veterinary clinic today. So, when people say those things to you guys, what do you say? ELI ROHIF: We hear this a lot. I mean, a lot of our customers say, well I've written enough about my business, I don't know what else to add. But there's a lot of copyrighting services, there's a lot of people that you can engage to provide that content for you. You can just give them a few ideas. One of the easiest ways to add content is to think of the frequently asked questions that you get as a business owner. CURT RAFFI: OK. ELI ROHIF: What your customers are constantly asking you, put that in a post, and it's very helpful information. CURT RAFFI: Interesting. OK. Are there some things that people shouldn't do when they're writing blog posts that would be no-nos for a search engine? MERRILL LAWSON: Yeah. So the probably last thing you want to do, is try to borrow information that you found from another website. CURT RAFFI: Ah, plagiarism they called it in high school, I think. MERRILL LAWSON: That's right. That's right. So you want fresh, unique content added regularly. And if it's, at the end of the day, there's only so many words in the English language. So it needs to be unique enough. I mean-- CURT RAFFI: And from my perspective, my heart-- whatever it is-- just needs to represent me. But it doesn't sound like it needs to be a ton of words. But the danger is, make sure it's yours, and not someone else's down the street. MERRILL LAWSON: Exactly. CURT RAFFI: Or maybe we'll only be helping their business, as opposed to ours. ELI ROHIF: Google is looking at your content, and they're going to assume an article about plumbing will include words like pipes, and leaks. It's just this related content. MERRILL LAWSON: Yep. ELI ROHIF: This is important, because as you write your content, you don't really need to target just one key words. You can write naturally, and the words that naturally follow are what really Google's looking for these days. CURT RAFFI: Ah, OK. So to sum up what I'm hearing, is it's good to have fresh content, the search engines like that. You can do it with a blog. You don't have to be famous writer to do a blog. You can write very short, little blog posts. And Merrill, you've said some stuff in the past, where you've talked about a funnel. A website is really a funnel through which you want to drive customers, right? MERRILL LAWSON: That's right. So, your funnel should be-- or your website should be a tool to capture a lead, or to convert that visitor into a customer. CURT RAFFI: OK, so use it as lead [INAUDIBLE] is what you're saying? MERRILL LAWSON: Exactly. CURT RAFFI: OK. ELI ROHIF: Exactly. So if you want the customer to call you, if you want them to book online, or schedule an appointment, you have to give them the necessary information for them to do that. CURT RAFFI: Got it. OK. So, this is a little more human touch, versus just straight search engine optimization. Agreed? ELI ROHIF: Yeah. And I think that's a common mistake that a lot of people make. They'll spend so much time, really focused on what Google wants, they forget about their customers. Instead of really defining a purpose of a webpage, they'll think about, I need it to rank on search engines to get traffic. But not, what should that visitor do when they get to the page? Every page, really, should have a goal. You should say, I want a phone call, I want to form fill. And you should tell the customer what you'd like them to do, so that they take that action, and you turn an online visit into an offline customer. CURT RAFFI: OK. So, take-aways for the folks in the audience are, try to humanize what you're doing. Don't necessarily geek out so much that you're over optimizing for search engines. And also think about the person on the other end of the screen, or the phone, or whatever it is. So let's talk about marketing your website beyond just search engine optimization. And once again, I'll go back to the old days-- where people would have paid ads in magazines, and newspapers, and yellowpages-- and they could spend $500, $1,000, or more on that. With search engine optimization, we've talked about tuning, maybe some of the more geeky factors, and the keywords, and the content on the website. But are there other ways that people can pay to get their website marketed? ELI ROHIF: Yeah, absolutely. The most prominent is Google AdWords, which is their pay-per-click program. So everyone's familiar with Google AdWords, it's the ads that you see at the top, and the right-hand side of the search results. CURT RAFFI: Ah, OK. ELI ROHIF: So it's a method of advertising, where you tell Google you're willing to pay for each click. So essentially, you're paying for traffic to your website. CURT RAFFI: I think one thing that is interesting, that I'm seeing with paid search, is it allows you to drive some very quick traffic to your website. And really be able to measure the results of that. Organic traffic, and optimizing for search engines is great, but that can take a little while to actually get a head of steam, and to build up. And I might not have a good representation, from a marketing perspective, of what's possible or not with my website. So by investing a little bit in traffic, then I could begin to do some funky things. Say, like what? ELI ROHIF: By getting visitors to your website, you're able to really do market research. We've talked about ugly websites, and sites that may not convert, but you don't really know if it's an effective page until you send visitors. So if you send 100 visits to a website, and no one has called you, it's probably indicative of a design flaw. Or something that you should change on the website. CURT RAFFI: OK. So I could tune it once I get the results of that test. So, it sounds like there are some legs to this paid search that can really help a business owner to take their business to the next level. ELI ROHIF: Absolutely. It's really one of the steps that, once you launch a website, the next action should be driving traffic to that website to see if it's going to be effective. CURT RAFFI: OK. Well-- so, we've come a long way. We built the website-- we built a good looking website, because we've used you guys. And we've tuned it for SEO optimization. And we've worked on those keywords in the content of the site. We've used things like YouTube videos, and blogs, and things like that, and we got some traffic, but we wanted to get more. So we started to experiment with things like Google AdWords, and paid search, and really kind of found how we could drive some very quick traffic as well to our website-- and take our marketing to the next level. So, we hope it's been helpful to you. We've had a fun time here talking about websites. We've been doing it a long time, and we really enjoy it. And it's incredibly fun to work with small business owners, like you folks out there. So, good websites to you all, and we look forward to connecting in the future. Thanks so much. [MUSIC PLAYING]

History

In 2011, Endurance was bought from Accel-KKR by Warburg Pincus and GS Capital Partners, for around $975 million.[5] In September 2013, the company announced plans to raise $400 million in an IPO.[6] The company announced it would list on the NASDAQ under the ticker symbol EIGI.[7] It went public in October 2013 raising $252 million selling shares to the public at $12 each. This was below the company's target goal of $400 million.[8][9]

This path to increased size is similar to the path networking company Verio followed in the 1990s, using free cash flow and access to capital markets[10] in acquiring assets to add to their corporate portfolio.[2] The concept was to roll up small ISPs into one large ISP and achieve economies of scale. Endurance acquired hosting companies domestically and internationally.[4]

In 2014, Endurance bought four Directi owned companies – BigRock, LogicBoxes, ResellerClub, and Webhosting.info – for $160 million.[11][12]

In March 2015, the company announced an investment in Netherlands-based technology startup AppMachine, acquiring 40% of the company.[13][14] In August 2015, EIG announced the acquisition of Site5 and Verio Web Hosting from NTT. It is estimated that EIG gained 86,000+ new subscribers through these acquisitions.[15][16] In November 2015,[17] the company acquired Constant Contact, and days later laid off 15% of their workforce.[18] Also in November 2015, EIG acquired the assets of Ecommerce, LLC for $28 million.[19]

In August 2018, the firm's CEO and CFO were fined US$8 million for fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for misrepresenting company subscriber numbers.[20]

Endurance acquired Ecomdash in October 2019 for $9.6 million in cash, and placed it under the Constant Contact group.[21][22][23]

In November 2020, Clearlake Capital Group announced that it would acquire Endurance International Group for around $3 billion.[24] At the closing of the deal in February 2021, Clearlake Capital announced a few wrinkles. Clearlake spun off the Endurance Web Presence division, including subsidiaries Domain.com, Bluehost, and HostGator.

Endurance Web Presence merged with Web.com to form a new company, Newfold Digital, in 2021. Newfold Digital is a joint venture between Clearlake Capital and Siris Capital Group, owner of Web.com since 2018.[25]

Clearlake also spun off the Constant Contact division of Endurance into a separate joint venture between Clearlake and Siris.[26]

In November 2022, Newfold Digital "signed a definitive agreement to purchase MarkMonitor™, an industry-leading enterprise-level provider of domain management solutions"[27] from Clarivate. MarkMonitor provides brand protection, anti-piracy, and domain-name registration services for a variety of Big Tech industry giants and other companies.[28] [29]

Subsidiary brands

The company has owned and operated numerous hosting businesses, with shared support information and support agents. Subsidiaries and brands include:[30][31]

References

  1. ^ "The Endurance International Group, Inc". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on July 24, 2010. Retrieved April 12, 2011.
  2. ^ a b "Endurance, GoDaddy, Wix, And Web.com: Choosing Growth Or Leverage". seekingalpha.com. 27 March 2015.
  3. ^ "Endurance International Group (EIG) – The World's Largest Web Hosting Company You've Probably Never Heard Of". hostingkingdom.com. 24 November 2014.
  4. ^ a b Miller, Rich (May 9, 2007). "IPOWER, Endurance International Announce Merger". NetCraft.com.
  5. ^ Demos, Telis (15 March 2013). "Web Hoster Endurance International Preps for IPO". Wall Street Journal. WSJ. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  6. ^ "Form S-1". www.sec.gov.
  7. ^ "Endurance International Group Holdings, Inc. Common Stock (EIGI)". NASDAQ.com.
  8. ^ "ENDURANCE INTERNATIONAL GROUP HOLDINGS, INC. (EIGI) IPO". NASDAQ.com.
  9. ^ Bray, Hiawatha (October 26, 2013). "Endurance Web hoster Endurance raises $252 million in IPO". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
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External links

  • Official website for Newfold Technologies
    • Historical business data for Endurance International Group, Inc.:
    • SEC filings
This page was last edited on 21 March 2024, at 15:56
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