An article that was placed in the company newsletter reviewing the efforts to develop and grow the electronics and semiconductor business at Air Products.
An article that was placed in the company newsletter reviewing the efforts to develop and grow the electronics and semiconductor business at Air Products.
The National Scrip Center handled over $400 million a year in gift cards and gift certificates. After carrying out a re-engineering and process improvement project (removing over 100 steps and reducing the handling of the inventory; plus going to a just in time inventory model with 2 week turn of inventory vs. 9 months to 3 years) the next effort was to automate the actual plastic and paper handling - issuing cards on site, on demand and deactivated at time of shipping (encoded on site vs. live media) The system was scoped and detailed to build out.
In an effort to find a way to build the best fundraising product possible the idea of a Universal Gift Cert was explored for development. The core idea was based on tapping into the well established Federal Reserve check processing system that has been in place for over 1000 years and is in a declining use in the past 15 years. This low cost processing model, along with the ability to get more funds to charities, schools, non profits and churches was explored.
This is a presentation given by our Director of Creative Services, that outlines that advantages variable data printing can bring to your marketing campaigns.
A review of the reward card market and players in 1997, covering the thinking, benefits, features of all the cards offered at the time. The report was created by David Carrithers.
This presentation was created for the retirement leature of Thomas Place by Sylvia Van Peteghem. We were asked to present the library of 2050 and projected the 4 key points of our library mission (sustainability, literacy, user driven and web strategy) to the distant future.
We have sad new for you. Friday morning at 02:45 MARC died. During this presentation we will ask 1 minute of silence...
"music"
"Yesterday" - The Beatles
The National Scrip Center handled over $400 million a year in gift cards and gift certificates. After carrying out a re-engineering and process improvement project (removing over 100 steps and reducing the handling of the inventory; plus going to a just in time inventory model with 2 week turn of inventory vs. 9 months to 3 years) the next effort was to automate the actual plastic and paper handling - issuing cards on site, on demand and deactivated at time of shipping (encoded on site vs. live media) The system was scoped and detailed to build out.
In an effort to find a way to build the best fundraising product possible the idea of a Universal Gift Cert was explored for development. The core idea was based on tapping into the well established Federal Reserve check processing system that has been in place for over 1000 years and is in a declining use in the past 15 years. This low cost processing model, along with the ability to get more funds to charities, schools, non profits and churches was explored.
This is a presentation given by our Director of Creative Services, that outlines that advantages variable data printing can bring to your marketing campaigns.
A review of the reward card market and players in 1997, covering the thinking, benefits, features of all the cards offered at the time. The report was created by David Carrithers.
This presentation was created for the retirement leature of Thomas Place by Sylvia Van Peteghem. We were asked to present the library of 2050 and projected the 4 key points of our library mission (sustainability, literacy, user driven and web strategy) to the distant future.
We have sad new for you. Friday morning at 02:45 MARC died. During this presentation we will ask 1 minute of silence...
"music"
"Yesterday" - The Beatles
Primer on 20 years of library science. Lessons learned from open access publishing, new question that popped up, solutions that were proposed: content syndication, context-sensitive reference linking, appropriate copy problem, and adding time-dimensions to the web.
6. SharedCanvas
Robert Sanderson, Benjamin Albritton,
Rafael Schwemmer, Herbert Van de Sompel
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Stanford University
e-codices
http://www.shared-canvas.org