Business Mindset and Tactics for New Authors

Business Mindset and Tactics for New Authors

Are you prepared to transition from writer to author? It’s time to put on your author hat and create your business. And, like any business, you will market your products. In this case, your books.

Whether you are traditionally published or self-published your books will benefit from every step you take to establish and promote your author business.


https://prowritingaid.com/art/782/put-on-your-author-hat%3a-first-steps-for-writers-becoming-a-business.aspx

Comments

  1. Coucou bonsoir comment bien j espère que je ne vous dérange pas ... je me nomme Herve Charpente je vie a Montpellier je suis nouveaux sur le site et je désire faits ample connaissance avec vous si cela ne vous dérange pas merci

    ReplyDelete
  2. New Report: “Transplant Abuse Continues in China Despite Claims of Reform”
    July 10, 2018 | By a Minghui correspondent and Annie Wu of The Epoch Times

    ) The China Organ Harvest Research Center (COHRC) presented its most up-to-date research results at the 27th International Congress of The Transplantation Society in Madrid, Spain, which took place from June 30 to July 5. The researchers documented their findings in a new 341-page report titled “Transplant Abuse in China Continues Despite Claims of Reform.”

    A number of national news outlets in Spain and international media have covered the organ harvesting issue upon the report’s release. The new report can be found on the COHRC website at ChinaOrganHarvest.org.


    David Li, a co-author of the new report, presents his team's findings at the International Congress of The Transplantation Society on July 2.

    The Chinese government asserted in 2015 that it had ceased extracting organs from executed death-row prisoners and transitioned completely to ethical organ sourcing. However, international observers have raised doubt that a process that took decades in other countries could be accomplished overnight.

    The authors of the report collected data on new developments in the Chinese organ donation system after 2015, analyzed hundreds of transplant hospitals, government and industry statements, official policies and legislation, actual donation figures from various regions, the abuse of brain death criteria, and the broader operation of China’s donation and transplant system. The new report concludes:

    Transplants outpace donations: The number of voluntary donations in China remains extremely low relative to the size of the transplant industry. At the end of 2017, the official count of registered donors was 373,536. If one applies the ratio of registered and actual donors in the United States to this total, such a donor base would have yielded fewer than 29 organ donors for transplants in China. The sum of reported donation numbers (mainly from non-registered donors in intensive care units) in each region was also far fewer than the official figure of 15,000 transplants performed. Yet tens of thousands of transplants are performed at Chinese hospitals each year.

    On-demand transplants to foreigners continue: Official Chinese statements that no transplants are performed for foreigners have been discredited by recent investigations. In October 2017, journalists from a major Korean television station found that foreign patients from other parts of Asia and the Middle East are still flocking to one of the largest transplant centers in China. Patients were quoted wait times of just days or weeks, with additional monetary “donations” to the hospital resulting in expedited surgeries.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular Posts