[Jobs] careers

Leslie Fitzpatrick lesfitz at cox.net
Tue Oct 3 12:31:56 CDT 2006


it's an excellent school. I'm a graduate from there.I highly recommend that
if you are going to make a career of tuning and repairing pianos that you go
there.

Les Fitzpatrick
Piano Technician

ham call sign KE5CXZ


-----Original Message-----
From: jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:jobs-bounces at nfbnet.org]On Behalf
Of pianotune05
Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2006 12:21 PM
To: jobs at nfbnet.org
Subject: [Jobs] careers


HI Pam,
I noticed that you're a career specialist, so I thought I'd write with a
question.  What ideas do you have that a sight impaired person could use
inorder to market their business on a zero or next to zero budget.  I'm
trying e-mail and telemarketing and flyers both for me and my wife who has a
seperate business.

I'm a piano tuner/technician and she cleans houses.  She is fully sighted
and I'm not.  So marketing is tough .

As for the medical transcription, I agree with you that it's a better way to
go than an executive secretary.  Piano tuning is a good field if you know
someone whom you could learn from Nicki, but I'm bias however.  There is a
school in Washington state that specializes in teaching the blind and
partially sighted to tune pianos called The Emil Freys school of piano
technology, or it either was called this and is now The Piano Hospital, or
the other way around.  They're located in Vancouver WA.

Thanks for your ideas Pam in advance, and Nicki, I hope my ideas help too.
Take care everyone.
Marshall Gisondi
Piano Tuner/Technician
Villa Park, IL
630-833-3978
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