"Medical Industry Executive Search Firm Directory" Mail Merge Version For Job Hunters.COSTA MESA Costa Mesa (kŏs`tə mā`sə), city (1990 pop. 96,357), Orange co., S Calif., on the Pacific south of Santa Ana; inc. 1953. It is a transportation, residential, and light industrial center. , Calif.--(HealthWire)--Sept. 24, 1995--Job hunters can now obtain a great new mail merge/database version of the popular "Directory of Medical Industry Executive Search Firms & Recruiters," announced David Anast, Publisher/Editor. It's the largest compilation of these specialized search firms in the world. The IBM/PC/DOS disk version contains 10 mail merge Printing customized form letters. A common feature of a word processor, it uses a letter and a name and address list. In the letter, Dear A: Thank you for ordering B from our C store..., A, B and C are merge points into which data are inserted from the list. and 3 database versions: MS-DOS MS-DOS in full Microsoft Disk Operating System Operating system for personal computers. MS-DOS was based on DOS, developed in 1980 by Seattle Computer Products. Microsoft Corp. bought the rights to DOS in 1981, and released MS-DOS with IBM's PC that year. text; Microsoft Word A full-featured word processing program for Windows and the Macintosh from Microsoft. Included in the Microsoft application suite, it is a sophisticated program with rudimentary desktop publishing capabilities that has become the most widely used word processing application on the market. 4.0, 5.0, 5.1, 6.0; Word 2x for Windows; Word Perfect 5.0, 5.2; Word Perfect 5.1 MS-DOS; Word Perfect 5x for Windows; and database versions in comma, quote and tab delimited A text format that uses tab characters as separators between fields. Unlike comma delimited files, alphanumeric data are not surrounded by quotes. files. The Macintosh disk contains Mac versions of MS Word and Word Perfect, plus a My Mail List database version. The newly updated directory, with 650 profiles, is the only such stand-alone medical industry recruiter directory available anywhere, at any price. Hundreds of updates and totally new listings are included. New features are a valuable list of Internet job bulletin boards, and innovative job hunting techniques/advice by medical industry authority David Anast. "You can't find all of these recruiters on your own," he says. "They aren't included in other general search directories that list everything from food to automotive search firms." He began compiling the directory six years ago, based originally on his own Roladex. This has since been greatly expanded and updated. Profiles include contact name, title, firm name, address, phone/fax, year founded, employee count, additional offices, status as contingency vs. retained search and a brief description of specialties. Search firms are organized by state, then by zip code zip code System of postal-zone codes (zip stands for “zone improvement plan”) introduced in the U.S. in 1963 to improve mail delivery and exploit electronic reading and sorting capabilities. , so job hunters can focus on particular cities/regions. Bound or mail label versions: $45 ea.; $95 for disk (+$5 s/h & 7.75% tax for Calif. residents). Only available from Biomedical bi·o·med·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to biomedicine. 2. Of, relating to, or involving biological, medical, and physical sciences. Market Newsletter Inc., 3237 Idaho Pl, Costa Mesa CA 92626; 800/875-8181; 714/434-9500; 714/434-9755 fax. Charges by phone: Shipped tonight 1st Class. Pre-payment: Required; Invoicing: +$25; Purchase Orders: Not accepted. CONTACT: Biomedical Market Newsletter David G. Anast, 714/434-9500 |
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