Diána Kalocsai

Financial Accountant at Flexion

Diána Kalocsai has extensive work experience in accounting and finance roles. Diána began their career at Celanese in 2009, where they held various positions including Treasury Back office Accountant, Cost and Fixed Asset Accountant, Intercompany Accountant, and Inventory and General Accountant. Diána then joined Greif, Inc. in 2014 and worked as a General Ledger Specialist, Senior General Ledger Specialist, and General Ledger Supervisor. In 2017, Diána joined GE as an R2R Lead Accountant. Diána later moved on to Flowserve Corporation in 2019, where they worked as a Senior Financial Accountant and then as a Lead Accountant. In 2022, Diána worked at Trivium Packaging as a General Ledger Supervisor and is currently employed at Flexion as a Financial Accountant.

Diána Kalocsai pursued their education at Pannon University from 2005 to 2010, where they obtained an MSc in Economics with a focus in Economics. Additionally, they had a brief study abroad experience in 2009 at Rovaniemi University of Applied Sciences in Finland, with a focus on Tourism.

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Flexion

Flexion was founded to provide a unique monetisation and distribution platform for developers and publishers.Flexion enables developers to be able to fully focus on application development and it helps them with monetisation through the use of the automated Flexion wrapping solution. By allowing their applications to be wrapped Flexion can helpdevelopers implementing in-app billing, new charging models, DRM and up-selling without any additional work required by the developer. The market for mobile apps and games has become a billion dollar market since Apple launched the iPhone in 2007. There are now hundreds of thousands of developers who are looking to distribute their mobile applications to content hungry consumers. The market is growing quickly but there are still a few limiting factors that are holding back app developers and limiting their potential to make money. For instance, distribution is still fairly limited and comes mainly from OEMs, operators and a few independent stores such as Amazon and Getjar. This means that stores in general are overcrowded and developers struggle to get visibility and make money. Most App stores also lack good charging methods and pricing models which means that conversion rates suffer. As a result many developers have opted for free apps funded by advertising as a last option, but very few generate any substantial revenues from this.


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51-200

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