How Financial Advisors Can Earn Exposure on the ME-P

Using Our Free -or- Fee Based Methods

Ann Miller RN MHA

[Executive-Director]

Join Our Mailing List

Dear Financial or Investment Advisor, Consultant or Financial Planner

Are you looking for added marketing exposure for yourself, your website, or your financial advisory business or financial planning firm? Do you have some area of expertise in the financial planning niche for doctors and medical professionals?

If so – the Medical Executive Post is here to help make your brand, website presence and your original articles and comments available to the more than 175,000 visitors that read us every month.

How for Free?

The first step is to join us:

  1. Then submit an original essay, or comment on an existing ME-P [no store bought or ghost written material]. Include an author bio with photo.
  2. Get feedback and back-links to your email address or website with the added marketing exposure to our community.
  3. Serve your clients well.

How for Fee?

The first step is to join us.

  1. Submit videos, with audio, to give yourself or firm, additional time and exposure for a small fee.
  2. Help us create an Expert Page – a dedicated page on our website that provides additional information exclusively on you, your services and products. Use this page to network and communicate with doctors, nurses and other medical professionals in need of your services, products or advice.
  3. Serve your clients well.

Assessment

We look forward to helping you gain exposure to ME-P readers and subscribers – a win-win proposition for all concerned.

Thank you.

ME-P Editorial Department

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Health Dictionary Series: http://www.springerpub.com/Search/marcinko

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/product/9780826105752

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest ME-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Sponsors Welcomed: And, credible sponsors and like-minded advertisers are always welcomed.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2007/11/11/advertise

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details       

Product Details  Product Details

   Product Details

2 Responses

  1. And … another thing!

    When you publish a video or written piece with us, our team can help you with some additional exposure through our various other social media and PR channels.

    Good luck!

    Hope Rachel Hetico RN MHA CMP™
    http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com
    [Managing Editor]

    Like

  2. Jannie Wu wanted a better life

    I met Jannie on a recent trip to China. After earning an undergraduate degree in English, she took a teaching job paying 1000 Renminbi, or RMB, ($150) per month. In China, obtaining a student loan is not an option. Her parents funded her education, which cost 40,000 RMB ($6,500), and one of her goals was to pay them back.

    Jannie’s lifestyle didn’t include eating out much, going to movies, or buying the latest clothes. “My rent was 300 RMB, my food was 300 RMB, I spent 100 RMB on other necessities and a few pleasures, so I was able to save the rest.” That was 300 RMB a month or $45. Still, repaying her parents would take about seven years. Jannie found a better way, moving 100 miles from her small village to Beijing and becoming a tourist guide. While it was hard leaving her family and the move ended her relationship with the man she was dating, it was worth it to her.

    Jannie works 30 days a month. She makes15,000 RMB ($2,500) per month and is now saving 5,000 RMB. She recently purchased a one year CD earning 3.5%. Her goal is to save the 20% to 30% down payment she will need to purchase an apartment in Beijing.

    As admirable as saving one-third of her salary might seem, for Jannie it is a matter of life and death. “People in America don’t need to save,” she told me. “China doesn’t have the social safety nets you have. If an American is in an accident they get medical care. If they don’t have food the government gives them food. If they have no place to sleep you have programs that supply housing. It is not like than in China.”

    This lack of social services means low tax rates. Jannie is in the 8% tax bracket. Yet she didn’t hesitate to tell me she thought her tax rate was so high she chooses not to report the majority of her income. That’s why she insists her guests pay cash.

    Not only does Jannie choose to evade income taxes, she also chooses not to pay 24% of her earnings for the government health insurance. “If I get sick or need an operation I must pay cash first, otherwise I will not get services.”

    While Jannie told me she doesn’t mind paying some taxes, she believes people need to be able to control what they do with their money. I told her she talked like a capitalist. She responded, “I am a capitalist.’ She told me the top tax bracket in China is 40%. I explained that many people in the US felt a 40% tax bracket was too low for the rich and wanted them to pay more. Her eyes widened. “Why, 40% is enough!”

    I suspect Jannie’s claim to be a capitalist is framed mostly by whether her standard of living is increasing. As long as it is, she cares very little about what political system the government adopts. She sees little connection between a country’s economy and whether it is communist, socialist, or a democracy.

    Over the past 30 years China has moved from a communistic society to a one that is more socialist. Jannie thinks the move has resulted in a great improvement in the average lifestyle. Yet about 75% of the largest Chinese companies are owned by the government, and it’s no coincidence that 95% of Chinese billionaires are children of government officials. This underscores an often forgotten result of socialism: it is the members of the ruling class who become extraordinarily rich.

    Rick Kahler CFP® MS ChFC CCIM

    Like

Leave a comment