Meet CFUS
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Joseph (Joe) C. Hibbitt Principal, President Los Angeles, California |

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Manny Mangahas Principal, VP -East Coast Operations Clifton, Virginia (Washington, DC) |

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Burnie Reed Principal, VP - Midwest Operations Dallas, Texas |
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| CFUS Update! |
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| Industry:   Legal |
Service:   IT Infastructure |
Based on partner's requirements, constructed a corporate-wide network to support remote access, centralization of application and security of data files.
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| Industry:   Healthcare |
Service:   Custom Application Development |
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Technology:   MySQL, Java |
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Designed, developed, and implemented a patient referral system for healthcare clinics located throughout Europe.
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The Importance of Brand "Sizzle"
There's an old saying in the restaurant business: "You sell the sizzle--not the steak." Regarding everything from marketability to sex appeal, if a franchise wants to achieve its true growth potential, it must stand out from the crowd and appeal to a particular franchise buyer.
Sizzle can be created by dazzling marketing campaigns, by the look of an operation or by the rapid growth of a particular market segment. Sizzle can come from innovative systems that bring additional profits to a tired industry, a wonderful recipe that drives customers to your door or from the right franchise marketing materials. It can come from "sexy" software, increased buying power, better support or a well-established brand in the marketplace. It can come from a number of places, but if you don't know what your sizzle is, you don't have it.
Fortunately, however, it's never too late to create it.
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Importance of data
Why collect data?
Good quality data underpins clinical care. In general practice clinicians and administrative staff code clinical conditions in a similar manner according to what are called Read Codes.
This means that reports can be run off to see how many patients there are who have coronary heart disease, for example. If you don’t know how many there are you can’t plan either on a one to one basis or on a population basis.
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Yoga vs. Pilates
It seems that these days you can hardly turn on a television without hearing someone mention Pilates or Yoga. Articles on Pilates and Yoga fill numerous magazines and it seems “everyone who is anyone” is doing one or the other. Why all the excitement? What is so special about these techniques? What are the similarities and differences between Pilates and Yoga?
Yoga, as we all know it, is aimed to unite the mind, the body, and the spirit. Yogis view that the mind and the body are one, and that if it is given the right tools and taken to the right environment, it can find harmony and heal itself. Yoga therefore is considered therapeutic. It helps you become more aware of your body's posture, alignment and patterns of movement. It makes the body more flexible and helps you relax even in the midst of a stress stricken environment. This is one of the foremost reasons why people want to start practicing Yoga - to feel more fit, to be more energetic, be happier and peaceful. The Yoga movements are performed, mostly, in a group setting on a special Yoga mat with an aid of a Yoga instructor. The body's own weight is used for resistance and a great deal of focus is accorded to the flow from one posture into the other. There are many different Yoga styles and they differ in their emphasis. No one style is better than the other. The Style you use is a matter of personal preference or a matter of need.
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