Design | Development | SEO | Strategy | Mobile | Business | Law
Bold Plan LLC was founded in 2008 by Michael M. Wechsler in response to requests from former colleagues to build superior social networking, user generated content, and professional business web sites. In conjunction with other experienced online professionals possessing decades of experience in online design and development, Bold Plan has become an industry leader assisting clients hone their visions, refine their business strategies and build eye-catching web sites that suit their goals and exceed expectations. Bold Plan provides a complete soup-to-nuts solution to empower you to reach your online goals – quality programming, search engine optimization, marketing/PPC management, and expert business/legal consulting services.
Michael M. Wechsler is an Internet veteran and successful entrepreneur of over sixteen years. In addition to being an accomplished Internet attorney admitted to practice in New York and New Jersey, he also possesses an MBA in Computer Information Systems. In 1992, he founded one of the largest Macintosh-based bulletin boards, EastNet Inc., which was featured in August 1994’s MacWorld magazine by renowned technology author, David Pogue. Later he founded TheLaw.com in 1995, which was purchased by a private venture capital firm featuring spokesperson, the Honorable Edward I. Koch, former Mayor of New York City. Michael subsequently served as Director of Legal and Business Affairs at iVillage.com, which was purchased in 2006 for $600 million by NBC Universal. Prior to founding Bold Plan, LLC, Michael served as Senior Vice President of the IDT Internet Mobile Group (NYSE: IDT) where he was responsible for identifying, purchasing and growing the Zedge.net Internet and mobile web site – which expanded from 90 million monthly page views to over 4 billion annually in one year. In addition to being the founder of Bold Plan, LLC, he is also founder and CEO of TheLaw.com (The Law Network, LLC), one of the Internet’s leading legal web sites.







