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March 16, 2018, 11:47:00 PM |
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I am new to Bitcointalk (read-only for years); interested in trying to offer my services here for the first time.
English, Russian - bilingual, native both, bespoke copywriting and content-writing skills; serial blogger (currently building my third project), romantic entrepreneur, crisis project manager, educational background - business psychology.
Translations - better than BBC; however arguably, am a much more valuable asset in other departments.
Investment employment background - Alternatives (Real Estate); daily verbal and written communication and relationship-building with heads/chairmen/ceos of funds, multinational banks, as well as government officials up to ministry-level. Maintained important network of contacts since then. Taken interviews, given interviews, turned rubbish interviews into gold through editing (and broken diamond interviews into carbon molecules, if facing a rival).
Cryptocurrency enthusiast with a sixth sense for "something isn't right", a "kill them with fire" approach to any form of bad writing and poor content. Oh, yeah, also a very, very sharp tongue. Polemics, dialectics, can turn a community manager's life into hell (what for, though?)
A weird sense of justice; although those buying into ICOs of "how is this even a whitepaper?" deserve their fate, on the other hand, those ripping off people who invest their savings deserve worse.
Besides, creating a compelling presentation and selling your brand to an average consumer is child's play; venture fund investment managers are a challenging audience. I love challenging audiences.
Had about 10 startup ideas within the Crypto market, however, lacking the technical skills, I do what I do best, - process a ton of information a day (market research and orientation are the first step to product placement), writing random posts, selling random articles. Still searching for myself in the crypto world, I guess.
On a few occasions, when reading the "FAQ" or "About Us" section was just making my eyes bleed, helped a few exchanges and an exchange or two actually try to sell themselves (we are all selling something). Did wonders to their traffic. Promised to myself never to do it for free again.
The whole industry is poorly written. When you read what some developers wrote about their product, you think that natural disasters' marketing teams would have higher clickthrough rate than that.
Not entirely sure how and where my services can be of use, though.
P. S. Incorporating "London" into a brandname is a century-old trick, but it still works.
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