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Each softcover handbook is a detailed almanac, providing quick reference, on high-interest industries. The following information is provided in a chapter format: -- Industry overview -- Industry statistics and performance indicators -- Financial norms and ratios -- Key companies in the industry -- Ranked list of key companies -- Mergers and acquisitions -- Associations relevant to the industry -- Consultants -- Directory of important trade information sources -- Trade shows and conferences
This handbook brings together data on the chemicals industry in a detailed almanac to provide a quick reference source to the industry.
Each part contains these chapters: Industry overview -- Industry statistics & performance indicators -- Financial norms and ratios -- Company directory -- Rankings and companies -- Mergers & acquisitions -- Associations -- Consultants -- Trade information sources -- Trade shows.
1970- issued in 2 vols.: v. 1, General reference, social sciences, history, economics, business; v. 2, Fine arts, humanities, science and engineering.
These volumes are compilations of data from select, commonly found titles, published by Gale in partnership with Dun & Bradstreet, on a small but important group of industries. For each industry, there is an overview; a compilation of business statistics from the federal government; performance indicators; financial norms and ratios; a directory of companies; rankings, recent mergers, and acquisitions; associations; consultants; trade information sources and trade show data; and a short bibliography of articles from trade magazines. Each volume has the usual fine set of Gale indexes. There are SIC (Standard Industry Classification) to NAICS (North American Industry Classification) and NAICS to SIC conversion guides, a geographic index, and a master index. The convenient organization by industry is certain to be appreciated by undergraduates, yet libraries should be aware that most of this material is repackaged from other sources, which include Million-Dollar Directory, Dun & Bradstreet's Industry Norms and Key Business Ratios, and Gale's excellent Encyclopedia of Associations, Consultants and Consulting Organizations Directory, Encyclopedia of Business Information Sources, and Trade Shows Worldwide. The new volumes are well documented, clearly citing the source for the original data and for the government statistics presented in Chapter 2. The merger and acquisition information is easy to read but not as complete as in Moody's manuals, and the industry overview is not quite as detailed as the Standard & Poor's Industry Surveys, but the introductory matter is more clearly written than in most business references. Libraries that own all or most of the titles listed here will find thatthis set duplicates and does not supersede the originals. Yet an undergraduate library with a small business collection will find these titles a good buy, and two-year colleges, high schools, and small or medium-sized public libraries can use them to build up their business collections relatively inexpensively. -Library Journal.
A union list of serials commencing publication after Dec. 31, 1949.
As the telecommunication and information field expands and becomes more varied, so do publications about these technologies and industries. This book is a first attempt to provide a general guide to that wealth of English-language publications -- both books and periodicals -- on all aspects of telecommunication. It is a comprehensive, evaluative sourcebook for telecommunications research in the United States that brings together a topically-arranged, cross-referenced, and indexed volume in one place. The information provided is only available by consulting a succession of different directories, guides, bibliographies, yearbooks, and other resources. On the one hand, it is a directory that describes in detail the major entities that comprise the American telecommunication research infrastructure including federal and state government offices and agencies, and private, public, and corporate research institutions. On the other hand, it is a bibliography that identifies and assesses the most important and useful reference and critical resources about U.S. telecommunication history, technology, industry and economics, social applications and impacts, plus policy, law and regulations, and role in the global telecommunication marketplace. No existing guide covers all of these aspects in the depth and detail of this volume.