ENGLISH TO CHINESE TRANSLATION SERVICES




Native Chinese speaker Be a translator since 1995


Master Degree (my certificates) Certified accountant


Website localization DTP (Desktop publishing)


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Experience


1995~present English-Chinese translator


2010~2014 Webmaster of usatouronline.com


1995~2002 Harbin university. Engage in the fields of accountancy, economics, business administration, marketing, etc.




Education


  • Master degree (2003), business administration, Harbin Institute of Technology (among the Top 10 universities in China ).

  • Bachelor degree (1995), accountancy, Harbin University.


Accomplishments


  • 1000+ projects completed since 1995

  • Recent projects:
a. AirAsia (200,000+ words) http://www.airasia.com/cn/zh/

b. KLM (100,000+ words) http://www.klm.com/travel/cn_cn/index.htm

c.Symantec(5000+ words) http://www.symantec.com/zh/cn/


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Editing 0.03 USD~0.04 USD per source word (English or Chinese)


DTP 10~12 USD per A4 page



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Mar 5, 2007

Cash in on Newsletter Writing and Publishing: How to Land Corporate Newsletter Clients

(Edited by freelance Chinese translator li – English to Chinese or Chinese to English translation services)

Do you ever wonder who writes and publishes those small newsletters you see around town? They 're the 4- or 8-page briefs that are distributed at the grocery store, the gym, your child's school, and many other businesses in town. If you belong to any online communities, you're probably familiar with the numerous electronic newsletters available, too. Basically, if you leave your house at all or surf the Web for a minute or two, you've glanced at your fair share of these brief, newsy pamphlets. What you may not know is that many businesses would love to have their own newsletters for use as marketing or to distribute information, yet they don't know who to hire to write and publish theirs. Freelance writers are the perfect people for the job! And, convincing a business to spend a nominal fee for this service is easy, because it's often cheaper than buying newspaper, magazine and television advertisements.

Whether you're a technical writer, a freelance news reporter, a fiction writer, or a poet, you've got the skills to make money as a newsletter writer and editor. Add a little desktop publishing experience to the mix and you may even decide to make newsletter production a your full-time, freelance gig. If you're organized, diligent, and creative, it's time to consider adding this type of writing to your resume.

The first step, of course, would be researching your market. You probably already have some of these newsletters coming to your mailbox each month. You will also find them sitting on counters of businesses throughout town. You can see how other companies are pitching their wares via newsletters, which will give you content ideas for your future clients.

Speaking of clients, you already have several potential clients in your address book. From your family doctor to your accountant to your local beauty parlor, almost every business can benefit from sending out a warm and informative greeting to their existing clients and potential new clients. These PR nudges, when blended with quality editorial that helps their customers, can bring in more repeat and new customers than an ad in the local newspaper.

Your next endeavor would be to create some template newsletters and to arrange meetings with your community contacts. You can then build on those relationship and get referrals for even more clients.

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