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StaffSoft Newsletter | |||||||
| Volume 2, Issue 1 | April 2002 | |||||||
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A few words from our CEO |
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On the 21st of March 2002, StaffSoft entered its 8th year of business. Through the intervening years we have constantly tried to upgrade and update our product by listening to you, our clients, and trying to let you have the best recruiting software at an affordable price. We have added many more clients in the past year, despite the recession and the effects of September 11th. We have also successfully upgraded most of our clients to version 4.0 which has many more enhancements, together with a new look and feel and they are already reaping the benefits of being able to e-mail potential candidates from within the job order screen as well as send |
out candidates’ résumés to clients. The SSWeb family continues to grow with increasing rapidity and the use of SSWeb, which is included in the annual subscription, almost completely removes the grind work of manually entering applicant data. More and more clients are sending their personnel to Houston for training in our offices. I cannot put sufficient emphasis on training as so many of our Tech Support calls relate more to how to do something in StaffSoft as opposed to real technical difficulties. |
Finally, StaffSoft version 4.1 is about to be launched. The main changes in 4.1 include an interface with Peachtree Accounting, which is a seamless integration with information being shared by both programs. We wish you, our clients, a safe, healthy and prosperous 2002. Please feel free to call me directly if you experience any difficulty with our product or service. Only by letting us know your problems can we serve you better. Thank you. W. Martin Thom CEO
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** Welcome new clients to the StaffSoft Family ** |
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| GEEK
CORNER by Marcus Morales
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The Importance of a Good Backup Everyone needs a reliable way to backup their data. It doesn't matter if you’re a multinational recruiting conglomerate, or a mom-and-pop headhunting firm. The kind of backup system you need may depend greatly on the size of the data you want to safeguard. Here are some of your choices: Zip Drive (100MB & 250MB) $150 - $200 Iomega's Zip drive is widely available and inexpensive. 250MB Zip disks cost ~$15 ea., 100MB disks cost ~$10 ea. Pros > Easy to install and use Cons > Expensive per disk cost > The drives are incredibly fragile > Other users must have a ZIP drive to read backups
CD-RW Drive (650MB & 700MB) $100-$200 A large number of manufacturers make CD-RW drives and media, both widely available and inexpensive. Pros >Write once media (CD-R) is inexpensive, sometimes as cheap as 39 cents per disk |
Marcus dealing with a Technical Support problem. >Rewritable media (CD-RW) while more expensive, can be used over and over again >Good storage capacity >Anyone with a newer CD-ROM drive can read a data backup on a CD-R disk Cons >Not enough storage capacity to back up an entire computer to one disk >Write once media (CD-R) cannot be overwritten once filled.
Tape Drive (10GB - 100GB) $200-$1000 Seagate and Exabyte dominate the tape drive market, although competing drives can also be found from Sony, HP, and Compaq. Media for these drives can also be very expensive ($50-100 ea.) depending on format and size. Pros > Very high storage capacity allows entire computer to possibly fit on one tape |
Cons > Installation and setup can be complicated > High cost of tapes and drives > Tapes and drives wear out over time.
DVD RAM / DVD-R Drive (4GB-9GB/side) $300-$400 DVD-RAM and DVD-R drives are expensive and can be hard to find. Prices and availability are sure to become more acceptable as one format becomes standard. Pros > High storage capacity Cons > DVD-R and DVD-RAM drvies are expensive > There are two competing, incompatible DVD storage formats being produced > DVD RAM disk may not read on a regular DVD drive.
As a rule, users should backup only their data (StaffSoft data, user's email and 'My Documents' folders, etc.), as well as anything on computer, which cannot be replaced. The operating system and software on a PC can always be reinstalled, assuming the user has their original software disks. The user should also verify the backup's contents to be sure that the data can be read if need be.
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| Do
you know?
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… the F2
key, pressed from the Main Menu will display all of your Applicants,
Clients, and Sourcing records all on one screen? …
StaffSoft 4.0+ will import a cell phone number from a resume as long as
it’s on the same line as the phone number and separated by a comma? Call 501-771-2600 to get more information about training for you and your company. <return to top> |
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Is
your computer acting sick?
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| Signs
of computer software problems: *Your computer system slows when you launch
or work in a particular application – and sometimes even after you close
it *Application features stop working. Example: Menu choices turn gray to
indicate they are unavailable *An application runs poorly or crashes when
running with other applications * The system freezes *Some operation in
the application causes the screen to turn blue, warning you that the
system has become unstable. Self-defense: Go through your
maintenance routines. Run programs from the System Tools group under
Windows – including ScanDisk – to make sure your hard drive is
functioning properly. If you still have problems: Reinstall the
troublesome application from the CD. Dana Blankenhorn, Internet consultant, a-clue.com, Atlanta <return to top> |
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The Recruitment Business is Personal By Bob Marshall, Recruitment Educator for Top Echelon, Inc. |
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| The one overlying basic principal that we tried to ignore through our captivation with the Internet is that our business, at its foundation, is personal. It is built, over time, on the relationships we develop with our “client people” within our client companies. And it is nurtured by our ability to follow those people from one company to the next. Because it’s personal, our business, if worked correctly, is recession-resistant and will never be replaced by job boards on the Internet. Even the job seekers understand. “Users say the boards often have out-of-date listings and the inquiries go unacknowledged by potential employers. In fact, many users are finding the job hunts conducted solely online rarely produce jobs.” (Wall Street Journal, January 2, 2002). |
The WSJ article cites the percentages of hires made through the four biggest job boards:
Monster.com 1.40% Hotjobs.com 0.39% CareerBuilder 0.29% HeadHunter 0.27% Total 2.35% Now do we get it? It’s not working. Oh, the Internet is fine for gathering information (its biggest benefit) and for visiting corporate Web sites. But our love affair with the Internet as the “end all, be all,” has come to an end. Like most affairs it was fun for awhile, maybe even exciting, but in the long term, it was going nowhere and it was ruining our lives. Bob Marshall Espro International 770-895-5550 Espro@bellsouth.net |
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