From,
Bhavana U Kanthy
To,
Whomsoever Concerned
Dear Sir/Madam,
With reference to your posting on freelancer.com I hereby submit my bid for the job offered by you. I guarantee utmost perfection and prompt and timely submission of the work given by you and confirm that I am qualified and proficient to handle the same.
Academic Writing - $ 2 per article - 3 pages per hour
Article rewriting - $ 1 per article - 5 pages per hour
Articles-$1 per article - 800 words per hour
Ghostwiting - $ 2 per article- 2 pages per hour
Copywriting- $ 2 per article - 3 pages per hour
Kindly note that these rates are subject to minor changes depending on the complexity of the article and all copyright issues are the responsibility of the owner.
I hope you will revert back to me at the earliest .I would once more like to guarantee timely submission of work and total quality.I have provided article that I have written below.
Thank you
Bhavana
MUTUAL FUNDS INDUSTRY
Today investors and analysts in India woke up to the news of the SEBI chairman MR Bhave passing some very critical and pungent remarks on the mutual fund industry in India. Quoting Mr. Bhave, “If mutual funds are producing better than what an average investor investing himself in the stock market gets then why is it that you are not able to convince investors that you are giving them better returns.”
This calls for some deep thought into the issue and related corrective action. The crux of the issue here is the influx of humungous offering in the mutual funds domain whereby if one offering does not give you the returns you want then you have umpteen others giving you what you want satisfying the investor one way or the other. But invariably each and every player here is offering the same end product which results in a lot of monotony for the investor making him think that he might as well invest himself. There are too many players and too many products with zero variety.
Yet another issue here is convincing the investor that the funds manager is proficient enough to handle his investments. There is ambiguity in the average investors mind as to where his money is being invested and as to who takes decisions in this regard resulting in an impression that the investor will himself do better than the so called “mutual funds manager”.
Mutual funds industry is currently in the push products mode wherein they are employing the “scare” strategy forcing investors to invest in one fund making them insecure in the process. Retail penetration will be possible only in Mutual funds migrate from he push product mode into the pull product mode wherein they create a less hostile image in the minds of the common investor.
The call from SEBI is not to cry and shed oodles of teas wallowing in self –pity but to wake up and think fresh. It is high time the industry started thinking of novelty in pushing their products and placing them in the market. There is also scope for unique selling propositions and newer product ideas instead of the same old much spoken about products that give you the same returns be it from player A or player B.”Long term” and “sustainable” should be the operative words in this sector. Products that have lived through generations don’t appeal to the new age anymore so the call is to make them user friendly as is with most product offerings in any other sector. The Mutual funds industry has to ramp up performance to expected levels or just back out of the race