Alamo AFCEA March 28, 2012 Luncheon
Alamo Chapter of the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association (AFCEA) Announces Distinguished Guest Speaker For March Luncheon SAN ANTONIO, March 9, 2012 -- The Alamo Chapter of AFCEA is honored to welcome guest speaker Lee Ellis, Col. USAF (Ret), Wednesday, March 28, 2012, 11:00 a.m. at the Hilton San Antonio Airport (611 NW Loop 410, San Antonio, TX 78216). Lee Ellis is an author and the Founder and President of Leadership Fr...
2012 DTIC Conference
The 2012 DTIC Conference; "Connecting Lab Research to the Warfighter", will bring together information professionals from the science, technology, research and development and acquisitions communities, who create, disseminate and use DoD scientific, research and engineering information. Over the span of two days, you will learn: how to maximize research productivity while preventing unnecessary or redundant research, how DTIC collects and shar...
PRECISION STRIKE ANNUAL REVIEW
WHY ATTEND PRECISION STRIKE ANNUAL REVIEW 2012 As our Nation transitions, the Defense Department continues to pursue Better Buying Power by making affordability a requirement for weapons systems and by seeking to eliminate redundant defense programs. We must keep our focus on the current challenges and the importance of delivering value for the warfighter, concentrating on weapons reform, adapting acquisition processes, and making further impr...
"The Power of A Capability Statement" w...
A well written Capability Statement may be your door opener to success. A poorly done Capability Statement may slam the door on incredible opportunities before you even get to square one. Attend this webinar/teleconference to learn how to create a powerful Capability Statement, the strongest tool in your business development toolbox! During this webinar/teleconference you will learn The Five Key Mistakes Contractors Make in Their Capability St...
March 15, 2012
Organizer:
TargetGov Location:
Webcast
Deciphering Deemed Exports Webinar
It is a routine event -- one which happens thousands of times a day across the United States. A foreign national begins work at a US company as an engineer, researcher or scientist. The location could be a technology firm in Santa Clara, a defense contractor in St. Louis or an aerospace company in Tampa, but the question is the same -- is an export control violation imminent? And let's not limit ourselves to employees. The same question may be...
You must be logged in to view details.
Membership is Free!
Please enter your email and password:
Please sign in with your email and password:
LinkedIn is experiencing technical difficulties. Please log in via email and password. If you do not remember your password, please click "Forgot Password" to reset.