William Hindman
wdhindman at bellsouth.net
Sat Aug 16 15:47:23 CDT 2003
Mary ...thanks for posting ...this is "exactly" the kind of job postings we'd love to see more of ...everyone can find the big companies job openings and those that the recruiters have ...but most Access jobs tend to be with companies like yours that really have no idea how to find someone who really is sufficiently competent in both Access and business analyses to solve your problems :) ...btw, ime most any pure "Access" problem can be handled quite well by a remote developer ...but most small businesses tend to be dependent upon a computer guru rather than just an Access guru ...they need someone they can build a relationship with on site that can set down with them and look at their problems through their eyes ...and if that means solving some network or other application problems along with handling your database ones, well that's what small business software consultants do best :) ...be sure and let us know if you find someone to help :) William Hindman So, then, to every man his chance -- to every man, regardless of his birth, his shining golden opportunity -- to every man his right to live, to work, to be himself, to become whatever his manhood and his vision can combine to make him -- this, seeker, is the promise of America. -- Thomas Wolfe ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mary Davis" <vze28ztx at verizon.net> To: <accessd at databaseadvisors.com> Sent: Saturday, August 16, 2003 12:25 PM Subject: [AccessD] Job posting > > Well, then, I'll jump in here. > Someone kindly wrote: > > " 'Absolutely right William. Anyone who knows of job opportunities > should feel free to post them. > " 'So don't be shy." > __________________ > A few weeks ago, another reader told me job postings are acceptable, but > shyness did get in my way. (That was Keith Williamson. If you're there > Keith, Hi and thanks!) > > Desperation vs. shyness. Ok: desperation wins. > > We're located in Wilmington DE. (hehehe...if you don't know where that > is exactly, then you're just not local enough! If Delaware figured in a > Jeopardy answer, it'd be "the sales tax free state." Our one legitimate > claim to fame.) > There's a long story that I won't burden you all with. We would very > much like to find someone local. (We know that most/many developers > work through cyberspace and don't need the "face to face" - we're just > not convinced that all our problems could be solved via email.) > > We've been abusing Access for about 5 years. I've not been able to > learn enough for our company to become "in house sufficient." We have a > consultant who's (1) not local - about 30 miles away so his visits have > been a bit limited and (2) sometimes not available immeditely enough. > Thus, we've been at this for 5 years and I think there's much to be done. > > If you'd like to see something of our company, we are > http://www.isminc.com > > thanks for any help that comes by!! > > with best regards, > Mary > > home: m.i.davis at verizon.net > work: mary at isminc.com > > (whew. I feel better already!) > > -- > Mary Davis > Wilmington, DE > > > _______________________________________________ > AccessD mailing list > AccessD at databaseadvisors.com > http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd > Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com