
Alan Rimm-Kaufman founded the Rimm-Kaufman Group in 2003. In 2008, RKG was named to Inc. Magazine’s list of the Top 500 Fastest Growing Private Companies in America. Alan held a doctorate degree in operations research from MIT’s Sloan School of Management, and a BS degree with honors in applied mathematics from Yale University. Alan held appointments as Visiting Professor in the Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at the University of Virginia and was a Fellow at the Center for the Management of Information Technology (CMIT) at the University of Virginia’s McIntire School of Commerce. In 2002, he founded the web advertising roundtable. Alan died from leukemia in July of 2009. He was a 14 year survivor of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Between bone marrow transplants, he built a strong, profitable, Inc 500 company that continues to thrive.
Posts by Alan Rimm-Kaufman
- ASCII Art Adwords Worm
- Monitor Your Brand Online Via RSS
- GreaseMonkey: Google Reader Gold Stars Automatically Post To Delicious
- GreaseMonkey: Hacking Web Apps So They Work The Way YOU Want
- Google Microformats Will Have Large Impact On Online Retail — Not All Good
- Transparency and Accountability
- Don’t Want Catalog, Perhaps You’d Like Email?
- Walmart And Target Geographic Growth, Animated
- Marketing Campaigns Must Show Incremental Lift, Not Just Sales
- FeedBurner, Google, And The 502 / 503 Error
- Feedburner To Google Account Transfer Considered Harmful: We Advise Waiting
- Best First Link For Beginner SEO
- Did Your RSS Counts Drop After Migrating to Google Accounts?
- Online, We’re Judged By Everything We Write
- Google Shuts Down Google Catalog Search
- 2008 vs. 2007 Q4 Paid Search Results
- The Work Email Inbox Overfloweth?
- AP: Retailers Brace for Major Change
- What Twitter’s Simplicity Can Teach Online Retail
- Chrome “Destination Search” Foiled For Some Retailers?
- AMZN: Ops Excellence
- Quirky Sunday Links
- What Eight Hundred Billion Dollars Looks Like
- Click Volume Versus Click Profitability In Pay-Per-Click Bidding
- Fraudulent Marketing
