![](http://image.absoluteastronomy.com/images//topicimages/noimage.gif)
BCM
Encyclopedia
BCM may refer to:
- Band Corporal Major, a warrant officer appointment in the bands of the British Household Cavalry
- Banque Centrale de Madagascar, a financial institution in Madagascar
- Banque Centrale de Mauritanie, a financial institution in Mauritania
- Banque Commerciale du MarocBanque Commerciale du MarocBanque Commerciale du Maroc or B.C.M. was a bank founded in 1911 in Morocco. Deutsche Bank and le Crédit Industriel et Commercial were among the shareholders of B.C.M.- Overview :In 1999, the capital of B.C.M...
, a financial institution in Morocco that is now the Attijariwafa Bank - Baptist Collegiate Ministries, an entity of the Baptist Student Union at some American and Canadian colleges
- Baylor College of MedicineBaylor College of MedicineBaylor College of Medicine, located in the Texas Medical Center in Houston, Texas, USA, is a highly regarded medical school and leading center for biomedical research and clinical care...
, a private medical school in Houston, Texas, USA - Billion Cubic Metres (1 E+9 m³), a unit of measure equivalent to 1 cubic kilometre (1 km³)
- Bank Cubic Metre (mining term), a cubic metre of rock or material in situ before it is extracted
- Beijing Capital Museum, an art museum in Beijing, China
- Binary chemical munition, a weapon requiring two separate media to combine for activation
- Black Consciousness MovementBlack Consciousness MovementThe Black Consciousness Movement was a grassroots anti-Apartheid activist movement that emerged in South Africa in the mid-1960s out of the political vacuum created by the jailing and banning of the African National Congress and Pan Africanist Congress leadership after the Sharpeville Massacre in...
, a political movement in apartheid South Africa - Blue cone monochromacy, a rare form of color-blindness
- British Chess MagazineBritish Chess MagazineBritish Chess Magazine is the world's oldest chess magazine in continuous publication. First published in January 1881, it has appeared at monthly intervals ever since. It is frequently known in the chess world as BCM....
, a magazine published in the United Kingdom - Business Change Manager, the role responsible for benefits management in the OGCOffice of Government CommerceThe Office of Government Commerce is part of the Efficiency and Reform Group of the Cabinet Office, a department of the Government of the United Kingdom...
approach to Programme Management, Managing Successful Programmes (MSP) - Business Contact Manager, a MicrosoftMicrosoftMicrosoft Corporation is an American public multinational corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington, USA that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services predominantly related to computing through its various product divisions...
add-in product for Microsoft Office OutlookMicrosoft OutlookMicrosoft Outlook is a personal information manager from Microsoft, available both as a separate application as well as a part of the Microsoft Office suite...
that adds CRMCustomer relationship managementCustomer relationship management is a widely implemented strategy for managing a company’s interactions with customers, clients and sales prospects. It involves using technology to organize, automate, and synchronize business processes—principally sales activities, but also those for marketing,...
features - Business continuity management, an interdisciplinary peer mentoring methodology used to create a plan for recovery of a business after disaster or disruption
- Business Communications Manager, Nortel's line of advanced telephony systems
- Business Council of Mongolia
- BromochloromethaneBromochloromethaneBromochloromethane or methylene bromochloride and Halon 1011 is a mixed halomethane. It is a heavy low-viscosity liquid with refractive index 1.4808....
, a mixed halomethane - BCM theoryBCM theoryBCM theory, BCM synaptic modification, or the BCM rule, named for Elie Bienenstock, Leon Cooper, and Paul Munro, is a physical theory of learning in the visual cortex developed in 1981...
, a model of synaptic plasticitySynaptic plasticityIn neuroscience, synaptic plasticity is the ability of the connection, or synapse, between two neurons to change in strength in response to either use or disuse of transmission over synaptic pathways. Plastic change also results from the alteration of the number of receptors located on a synapse...