| |
Ellie Mae's Scott Cooley
Delivers a Message of Industry Integration
Discover ways the mortgage industry can tie together
back office systems for lenders, vendors and third party originators
(TPOs)
| Who: |
Scott Cooley, Ellie Mae, Inc.'s
chief strategy officer and founder of Contour Software |
|
|
| When: |
Wednesday, March 13, 2002 from
10:45 AM to 12:00 PM |
|
|
| Where: |
MBA Mortgage Technology Conference
Marriott Marquis, Atlanta, GA
Imperial Salon B, Convention Level |
|
|
| What: |
"Tying The Industry Together" |
In this discussion, Cooley will review efficiencies that the industry
can gain along with specific advice on how to use the Internet to
communicate effectively with industry participants. The discussion
will include the new advances in real time data movement integrated
within the workflow of mission critical applications used in the
industry. Cooley will also address how TPOs can reduce the costs
of processing a loan through the adoption of a transaction platform.
Additional participation from a vendor, mortgage broker and lender
will offer perspectives on how to reduce the industry's cost to process
and close a loan.
About Ellie Mae, Inc.
Ellie Mae, Inc., headquartered in Pleasanton, Calif., is the leading
Internet enabler for the mortgage brokerage industry and the largest
Loan Origination Software (LOS) provider in the U.S. Offering brokers
the ePASS (electronic Processing And Submission System) Business
Center, a B2B e-commerce platform, as well as customized Web sites,
hosting services, and LOS packages, Ellie Mae enables mortgage originators
to harness the power of the Internet, giving them a competitive advantage
in the fast changing residential mortgage arena. For additional information
visit www.elliemae.com or
call 877-355-4362.
Some of the information in this news release may be forward-looking
information under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995. Forward-looking information, which includes forecasts, projections
and predictions of future events or performance, is subject to and
involves risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results
to differ materially from the forward-looking information. As a result,
investors should not rely unreasonably on the accuracy of forward-looking
information.
|
|