Requestor |
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Click on the title to see examples of my publication design work |
Frontier
Community
Services |
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Summer Newsletter 2010 This quarterly newsletter was received based on my help-desk attitude. If you office is overloaded but everything is needed, use me as an outsource. If you live local, I love taking the drive to your office and take the instructions from there but start and continue provided drafts via email, until we are ready to send it to the printers. |
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Publications need to be viewed with Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click on their logo for the free download. |
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Stewart Smith
Keller Williams Realty |
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Commercial Real Estate Update 2010 Another help desk item for the folks that are too busy to get it done, but this time, they are a 3 hour drive away but I can still get it completed from start to finish via the phone and email. The plan is to have a quarterly newsletter ready for the printer and provide and email template (.oft) for the person in charge of their email distribution list. |
Serve Alaska
State Service Commission |
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2009 Serve Alaska Annual Report This was a great experience for me, with specific instructions to follow, the editor and I learned to communicate. They provide an important service, so I helped them get the word out! |
Alaska Regional
Development Organizations |
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FY09 ARDORS Annual Report Its size alone is an example of what I can do to help you get the word out. All the content and numbers were provided to me through Microsoft Word and Excel Spreadsheets, along with the photos and graphics they wanted to use. The drafts were kept track of via the email system. |
Office of Economic Development |
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Alaska Economic Performance Report 2008 AEPR is an example of when I can take over a project when the report already has a standard look and feel for its page layout but then I get to make the cover look current and updated. |
Office of Economic Development |
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Report of the 2010 Alaska Minerals Commission As an Alaskan, I love these folks, in particular, and I am always pleased to help them get the word out. I live in Kenai, they live in Fairbanks and we could still work together on a project. We communicated via the phone, email, and a one-time in person meeting centralized in Anchorage for a few hours for this particular project. |