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Client of the Month - April, 2008

Lawline.com

InvitingHome.comStarted in 1999, Lawline.com is one of the leading providers of Online Continuing Legal Education in the country. Having expanded from LAWLINE, a well regarded legal television program in the New York Metropolitan area, Lawline.com was one of the first websites to offer online CLE in New York State. Since then, we have expanded to 35 states and currently offer hundreds of hours of CLE programming in all practice areas.

Fresh Tilled Soil continues to manage Lawline's Content Management Systems allowing Lawyers to purchase courses online, Law Firms to manage bundled courses and multiple users, and affiliates to offer their courses through Lawline's interface.

We believe that learning is a never ending process. Learning inspires, empowers, and leads to self-fulfillment and a richer lifestyle. It can create the freedom to do anything you desire. So we want to give people the opportunity to continue to learn throughout their lives.

About David

David Schnurman's love for entrepreneurship started at a young age. He has always enjoyed reading biographies of history's top entrepreneurs in the hopes of learning from their successes. He becomes inspired when meeting new people and learning about their backgrounds and careers.

What our clients are saying...

"I just wanted to take a minute and acknowledge the great work your team has been doing on the Patient Online product. Our users/customers were ecstatic at the new designs that you created for us. You really knocked it out of the ballpark!"

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Featured Article

Value of Social, Business Networks Not Found in Size Alone

Most of us were raised with the notion that it's not what you know but who you know that matters. There are enough exceptions to this rule to reconsider its guidance, but there is some truth in the moral. The meteoric rise of social and business networking tools is testimony to the "who versus what" argument. These web tools thrive on the premise that knowing more people is in some way better than knowing fewer people. If the size of your network does actually matter, are there ways to measure that? Does bigger mean more rewarding relationships, or is it just the price of admission into the status-driven social circles of online networking?

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