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| ASSIGNMENT 3 - Business Plan | |||||||||||
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The
purpose of this website is to educate the readers about Chinese culture by
focusing on the central unit from which culture develops: family. It will explore the Chinese family through a
historical perspective and also its present-day existence in the US. The reason the Chinese family is a topic of
increasing interest is because Chinese people make up at least 19% of the
world’s population [www.chinese-culture.net and
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/index.html] and
China is now playing an increasingly bigger role on the world stage. Readers will begin to interact with Chinese
people more and more in all careers, whether it is manufacturing, finance, or
technology. By understanding the Chinese
family and thus more about the Chinese culture, they will know how to better
communicate with and deal with Chinese people.
Also, as there are more and more Chinese immigrants in the US, more and
more generations of American-born Chinese lose sight of their heritage. This site can help Chinese readers understand
their background, heritage, and culture so that they can retain that part of
their identity. Personally, I am
interested in developing this site because I have a vested interest in learning
more about heritage and in better understanding my culture and my parents. This
website is worthwhile to make because there are few sites on the Chinese
family—there are many more about Chinese culture in general which have the
Chinese family as a subsection. This
site can delve much further into the Chinese family and give readers much more
information about that particular aspect of the Chinese culture. The few sites that I found that are on the
Chinese family, however, are not very good sites; they have too much
information on a single page, are not aesthetically pleasing, and are not easy
to navigate. My site provides easy
organization and navigation, and is also pleasing to the eye, inviting readers
to stay longer and explore the site. Concerning
how I would get readers, I would first do verbal advertising by personally tell
my friends, family, and teachers (especially East Asian Studies teachers) about
this site. I would also do guerilla
marketing by putting up fliers in libraries near the Asian Studies sections and
also in the East Asian Studies building at college. I also hope that users will consider this a
good enough resource that they will pass it on to others who may find it
interesting or useful; I especially hope that East Asian Studies scholars can
pass this on to other colleagues in the field in other universities, who can
then popularize it within departments at those universities. The market size will
most likely be limited at the beginning, since this website would appeal mostly
to scholars and Chinese people, but there is potential for the market to be
huge, as more and more people will become interested in better understanding
China and Chinese people. In particular,
Chinese people interested in this site would be American-born Chinese hoping to
better understand their heritage, parents, identities, and non-American-born
Chinese people who want to better understand their background and/or compare
their current existence with those of Chinese-Americans. Non-Chinese people who may possibly be
interested in this site would be those who are friends of Chinese people,
significant others of a Chinese person, teachers/tutors of a Chinese person,
and adoptive/foster parents of a Chinese person. The website will not
need much maintenance at the beginning, since it is just an information site
and the history portion especially will not change. The history section may be updated later on
if other sources are found, but it will be infrequently updated due to the
unchangeable nature of history itself.
The information for the modern section will be periodically updated as
more studies come out with information on trends. In the future, if this site becomes
especially popular and the resources are available, the site can be greatly
expanded as more information sources are gathered and the history, immigration,
and present areas can all be expanded.
Also, if grant money is received, workers can be hired and they can
efficiently maintain and remodel the site.
A small office can also be set up and as well as a Q&A section on the
site for readers to send in any specific questions they have; a worker or
workers at the center can do research to answer the questions. Checkpoints along the
way for the success of this site are gathering material, which was completed in
April 2008, organizing and reading the material, which is currently what I am
in the process of doing, synthesizing information and writing it, and then
updating and expanding the site later on as more resources are available to
make the site’s scope more broad. I have many resources
to make the website successfully informative.
Much information can be found in newspaper and magazine articles, books,
on websites, and in studies that have been done. I can also obtain monetary resources by
applying for grants from non-profit Asian-interest organizations and
museums. Specifically, my project fits
the criteria for the AAS China and Inner Asia Council Small Grants, so I would
be able to start there. I can also add
in a Paypal donation system on the website and solicit personal donations from
readers who feel particularly generous. At
the moment, I am the only person working on this site, but I can have a bigger
work force in the future with grant money. Current
issues with this site include the fact that I am inefficient with coding; my
website-making skills are rusty, especially with tables, and I have not learned
the new XHTML code and new ways to organize websites with CSS. Also, because of this setback in making the
website, that causes inefficiency in my research because I’m trying to do this
all at once by myself. Later on, this
could be solved with hiring more people—those who are experts at making and
maintaining websites and then those who could help me research. Future
issues include inefficiency by having too many workers—since this is a fairly
small website right now, if there are too many people, there would not be
enough for each person to do. Also,
another issue is that it may be extremely hard to generalize about Chinese-Americans
in the future as there are still many immigrating to America. With so many different families from
different places (some families from Taiwan, some from China, etc) immigrating
at different times and to different places, each family’s adaptation to America
will be different. Only time will tell
if studies can show trends with all these varying Chinese immigrants that are
coming to America. |
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Map About the Site |
Sophia
Tsai |
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