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DediCube is looking for Mandarin Speaking Staff
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DediCube is looking for Mandarin Speaking Staff

DediCube, LLC. is looking to add onto its staff team. We would like to begin hiring staff in China to help handle our Asian-Pacific sales, advertising, and marketing. While this is technically a remote position, we are ideally looking for representatives in China right now due to our very strong Chinese client base, however all Asian-Pacific candidates will be considered.

Our Requirements

• Must be 18 years old, 21 years of age preferred.
• Must have completed high school (or equivalent). University degree preferred.
• Must type Mandarin and English fluently or near-fluently.
• Must have at least 1 year of experience in the hosting industry.

Please e-mail all resumes to this e-mail address. Include your desired base compensation and for more information.

Comments

  • Aww, I can only write apples and pears

    Thanked by 1W3Host
  • This is somewhat off-topic, but Mandarin is not a language-- it's a Chinese dialect, albeit incredibly widespread and the official spoken dialect in mainland China. Subsequently there is no such thing as "typing Mandarin"; if anything it might be wiser to specify whether you'd like candidates to be able to type in Simplified or Traditional Chinese.

  • SpencerSpencer Member
    edited August 2014

    I can't get the e-mail recaptcha to work, is the e-mail [email protected] ?

  • @hellogoodbye said:
    This is somewhat off-topic, but Mandarin is not a language-- it's a Chinese dialect, albeit incredibly widespread and the official spoken dialect in mainland China. Subsequently there is no such thing as "typing Mandarin"; if anything it might be wiser to specify whether you'd like candidates to be able to type in Simplified or Traditional Chinese.

    Blushes Thanks for the information. Which would be the more common form of Chinese?

  • If you're targeting mainland China, hands down Simplified Chinese. Traditional Chinese is predominantly used in Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, though that is also decreasing in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover, at least from personal experience. However, it's not difficult for readers/writers of one form to understand the other and it's also very easy to "translate" from one form to the other because the base language remains the same, the only thing that changes is how certain characters look.

    Hope that helps!

  • @hellogoodbye said:
    If you're targeting mainland China, hands down Simplified Chinese. Traditional Chinese is predominantly used in Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, though that is also decreasing in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover, at least from personal experience. However, it's not difficult for readers/writers of one form to understand the other and it's also very easy to "translate" from one form to the other because the base language remains the same, the only thing that changes is how certain characters look.

    Hope that helps!

    Thank you so much, it really does. I appreciate it!

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