Archive for March 17th, 2007
AIIM Wednesday Webinar
Produced By: Association for Information and Image Management - The Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Association
TIME: 2:00-3:00 P.M. (EASTERN), 1:00-2:00 P.M. (CENTRAL), 12:00-1:00 P.M. (MOUNTAIN), 11:00 A.M.-12:00 P.M. (PACIFIC), 7:00-8:00 P.M. (GT)
Speaker: Christine Pierpoint, Welchman Consulting
Your company’s image is often defined by how customers perceive the quality of the communications they receive. But today that means more than just batch statements and policies. Customers are becoming more sophisticated, with increasing demands for real-time information. How can you create, maintain, and deliver this content and make it available in email, fax, print, Web, or SMS – for all of your brands – from a single template?
Attend this Webcast to learn how to:
- Launch new products faster & capture more business by providing personalized quotes, applications, agreements and other critical documents in real time
- Improve efficiency by empowering business users rather than IT to manage document generation
- Reduce operational risk by standardizing communication templates and automating exception management
- Save on total cost of ownership by taking advantage of service-oriented architecture (SOA) and XML to drive your business communications
For further information contact:
Kelly Markiewicz
Phone: 301-587-8202
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Tags: Professional Development
STC has announced the appointment of the 2007 Fellows and Associate Fellows. These individuals, listed in this month’s Tieline and available on the STC web site, will be honored at the Technical Communication Summit in May.
STC recognizes and honors deserving senior members by conferring upon them the rank of associate fellow. Those selected as associate fellows are exceptional individuals who have consistently demonstrated meaningful contributions to the Society and to the profession over a period of years.
The highest rank that the Society for Technical Communication can confer upon a member is that of fellow. The select few who become fellows are associate fellows who have attained eminence in the arts and sciences of technical communication through service that has distinguished both the Society and the profession.