Showing posts with label certified translation company.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label certified translation company.. Show all posts

Sunday 12 March 2017

Certified | Human Translation Services


Certified Translation Services
We Translate, Inc. can meet all your document translation needs. Our team of professional translators can quickly and accurately translate your document into English. We allow only the best translators and linguists to join our team, so you are assured a high quality translation. Most of our translators have years of professional experience, and bring experience from a wide range of industries to their work.
To get your translation, just upload your document. The best translator for the job begins carefully working on your order. Then the translated document is delivered to your inbox.
Business Translation
Our flat rate pricing is just 10 cents per word. And our typical turnaround time is just 24 hours. And of course our work is 100% guaranteed.
Languages we translate include Arabic, Bulgarian, Cantonese, Chinese (traditional & simplified), Czech, Danish, Dutch, Farsi, French, Georgian, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Italian, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish (European, Latin America, American Hispanic), Swedish, Tagalog, Thai. Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese.
We translate website copy, immigration documents and forms, legal materials, market research, press releases, software and games, and human resources (HR) documents.
Certified Translation
We Translate, Inc. provides certified translations that can be used to satisfy requirements of the United States Immigration (USCIS), high school and college applications, passport applications, and other state and federal government documentation requirements.
We perform certified translations of official documents such as a birth certificate, marriage license, depositions, academic transcript, diplomas, medical records, legal materials, contracts, and other business documents.
Each page is priced at a flat rate of $33.00 per page (for a maximum of 250 words).
Documents may be submitted in a variety of formats including Adobe PDF, JPG (JPEG), GIF, TXT, or Microsoft Word.




Friday 24 February 2017

All Work and No Play Makes Jack a Dull Boy - Part 1

All Work and No Play Makes Jack a Dull Boy - Part 1

When people work non-stop, without allowing downtime for family and friends and personal solitude, the natural rhythm of life is violated.

When people work non-stop, without allowing downtime for family and friends and personal solitude, the natural rhythm of life is violated. If you’re a person who’s competitive, a perfectionist, mission-driven, then you’ll know that these traits make it very difficult to define healthy and realistic boundaries between your translation work and your private life. Unfortunately, these traits can affect not only your life but the lives of your family and also the people you work with.
Many people have been raised knowing that the key to productivity is hard work, and yes, hard work is essential to success. Now add in laptops and smartphones, and these tendencies are compounded in driven people, so they simply work non-stop and expect everyone else to follow suit. Logically, these people know there are limits to how much work is useful, and most are aware that research suggests that working longer and harder doesn’t necessarily mean getting more work done.
What Have We Learned about Downtime?
A study published in the Harvard Business Review demonstrated that downtime can have a more positive and larger effect on both organizational and individual productivity than more hours on the job. During designated periods of this study, employees were required to take one day off during the middle of their work week (including other time-off experiments): initially, they were anxious and resisted the changes, but the results of the study were extremely positive – including improved communication, greater job satisfaction, increased learning and self-development, greater respect and trust for colleagues, and a better work-life balance. Another study showed that 94% of professional people work a minimum of 50 hours per week, with half of these working more than 65 hours per week. And all of these translation professionals monitored their smart phones at home!
Give Your Body Time to Rest
You must resist the impulse to work constantly. It won’t be easy at first, and you may even feel like you’re neglecting your responsibilities. However, over time, you’ll end up achieving more than you did previously.
We need to understand that we all have a limited reserve of energy; and willpower, focus, and the ability to deal with stressful projects all draw from this limited reserve. When these reserves are depleted through either working on too many projects or through sleep deprivation, we lose the pleasure of working on something important, we lose our creativity, and we lose the quality of our work. We can’t afford to skip rest, and the way to restore our quality of work is to take time off.
Take a Short Nap
One great way of tackling an energy deficit is to take a nap. Many experiments have shown the value of sleep, and this includes brief naps, as a way of improving memory, learning, and creative thinking. Some forward-thinking companies actually encourage their employees to take a short nap during their work day because they understand the added value to job satisfaction, productivity, and the good health of their employees.
Take Time off on a Regular Basis
The most feasible approach to achieving the greatest benefits of downtime is to take time off on a regular basis.