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Kevin Bott has 10 years of experience in the ink and toner industry and is using his excellent customer service ethics to build relationships between companies who do not currently do business together. Through Omega Closeouts International, he is creating a network of resellers, dealers, brokers, wholesalers, importers, exporters, and liquidators who specialize in buying and selling closeouts, surplus, overstock and liquidations of ink and toner, as well as many other retail items. His goal is to expand your current client and vendor opportunities to maximize your profits.
Omega Closeouts International specializes in new, OEM, sealed supplies for copiers, printers and fax machines, especially large lots, discontinued items, and overstock. We broker toners, inks, developers, drums, printers, expired inks, foil wrapped inks, ugly boxes, and after market items. With Kevin's vast knowledge of the market place, we can even broker newer, current modelinventory, as well as older, hard to find surplus...More
HP Exec Alan Kessler Leaves for CEO Role at Vormetric
Vormetric, a player in the business of enterprise-grade encryption and key management, said today that it had named Alan Kessler, a former VP at tech giant Hewlett-Packard and a veteran of several tech companies including Palm and 3Com, as its new CEO.
Kessler’s most recent title at HP was VP of worldwide sales and service for enterprise security products, where he was responsible for running its security portfolio, includingArcSight, TippingPoint and Fortify.
Kessler’s resume includes a stint as the president and COO of Palm back in the late 1990s when it was still a subsidiary of 3Com. (Both Palm and 3Com eventually ended up being acquired, though separately, by HP.) While at Palm, he took primary responsibility for the software business and oversaw the growth of its community of software developers, which went from 25,000 to north of 100,000. He first joined 3Com in 1985....More
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Staples Inc. SPLS +3.07% swung to a fiscal third-quarter loss as it swallowed the falling value of its struggling European operations, but it managed to hold core earnings steady, despite lower sales.
The company's shares were up 2.6% at $11.45 in 4 p.m. trading Wednesday, as the largest office-supply chain in the U.S., unlike rivals, showed improvement in same-store sales from the previous quarter and unexpectedly held its outlook steady.
Earlier this month, however, smaller competitors Office Depot Inc. ODP +3.66% and OfficeMax Inc. OMX -0.36% reported unexpectedly strong third-quarter earnings growth as they benefited from progress in turnaround strategies, something Staples has only recently begun in earnest...More
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