A44%,„40,44W , arry y can 9! several technology-related books, includ- ing Information Architecture for the World The Jewish Community Adult Day Care Program can help. ode Web: Designing Large-Scale Web Sites. The book was Amazon.com's lead- ing Internet title in 1998. Maloff Group Older adults with Alzheimer's disease and related disorders benefit from: •A safe, caring environment Therapeutic activities and socializing • Personal care and health monitoring • Kosher meals and snacks Family members will receive respite and support. For information, call Peter Ostrow, (248) 559-5000 Locations: Dorothy and Peter Brown Centers at Jewish Vocational Service, 29699 Southfield Road, Southfield and, opening spring 2000, at Jewish Home and Aging Services, 6701 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield. A program of the Jewish Home and Aging Services and Jewish Vocational Service, in collaboration with the Alzheimer's Association-Detroit Area Chapter. C JES ]vs l ewishenka Intl Commission on Jewish - - Eldercare Services Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit United 3ewish foundation T his is .Peclercrtion of MeSopoilkn Delo" v- it'A 657 z, Our CDs Don't play Music, but could be Music to your Ears % BANK Member ED.I.C. O nc l ca tr,M 2/18 2000 108 ica t c A.P.Y. - 248-338-7700 or 248-352-7700 2600 Thlegraph Rd. • Bloomfield Hills • MI 48302 This is a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insured account (FDIC). A minimum opening deposit and balance of $500.00 is required to obtain the stated Annual Percentage Yield. *Annual percentage yield when compounded quarterly. Rate is accurate as of 02/15/00. Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts may be assessed. Joel Maloff, founder of Maloff Group International, is another local Internet expert. He helps large corporations design strategies and tactics for their Internet use. Maloff works with top manage- ment to help them "make it more than an electronic add-on. I am corn- fortable with the technology and the end-user and relate to both the young people and older staff" He came to Ann Arbor in 1988 as executive director of Advanced Network and Services, a research net- work that fostered cooperative com- puter services among Big 10 universi- ties. His wife is a director of Ann Arbor's Temple Beth Emeth and teaches Hebrew school. Maloff says successful Internet entrepreneurs "need to have vision for possibilities where no one else is able to see them. Sometimes they have to be so exuberant that they don't realize they can't do it. There is a 10 percent chance of success." However, creative ideas alone are not sufficient for ongoing success in Internet commerce. As Hammerman of CSSIN- FO.com says, "We had to focus on the worthwhile challenges." He credits Zorea, now chairman of CSSINFO, with helping the company develop a formal business plan and focus. Zorea was born in Argentina and educated at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. He is the founder of Zorea Consulting, a Northville-based business manage- ment consulting firm. While he pro- vides his "value augmentation process" to a variety of companies, he began working with local software compa- nies in 1984 and Internet businesses 10 years later. According to Zorea, local Internet companies have become a significant industry and will continue their growth. "Today, the field is limited only by the imagination of the entre- preneur. As in any other industry, sat- uration will happen. E-commerce leaders are emerging today and it will not be easy to displace them. "Studies are showing that business to business e-commerce will reach $3 trillion by 2003," he says. "That will be larger than the whole economy of numerous countries." ❑