Adeptive announced a litany of personnel changes and a new office space as part of its continued growth and expansion. In the last few months, the company increased its space from 1,000 sq. ft. to more than 4,000 sq. ft. The increased space includes office space and a professional development area for both corporate and education of clients.
The latest staff additions include the following:
Jack Alterman, technical support engineer. Before joining Adeptive, Alterman worked at Colorado Public Radio, Crawford Broadcasting and Altco. He earned his bachelor’s degree in music engineering from the University of Colorado at Denver.
Shaleen Mauser, customer support representative. Mauser spent more than 13 years in closing and closing manager roles facilitating REO closings at Lender Processing Services Inc. Her practical experience and education has provided an excellent knowledge in real estate title and escrow services, real estate management, and specifically REO and default title. Her expertise lies in client management, employee relations and team development.
Mike O'Sullivan, software engineer. O’Sullivan has five years of diverse experience in software development. Most recently, he was a key member of the development team for a small Geographic Information Systems provider. He has a bachelor’s degree in computer science from the University of Vermont.
“As the fastest growing company in the title and escrow software market, the added space and additional associates will ensure we meet the needs of our current and future customers,” said Bryan Buus, president of Adeptive.
Based in Boulder, Colo., Adeptive is a technology company that develops products that deliver efficiency, flexibility, and scalability for the real estate title industry. Adeptive is known primarily in the title industry for its product ResWare, which is a process flow software package that can be scaled and customized for any size operation. Used by many of the industry's leading companies, ResWare ensures that transactions are accurate and efficient, and that employees are executing the same way every time, reducing missing information, lost productivity and costly errors.