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About us

Hi, I’m Misheel Chuluun.  Thank you for your time and attention.
Here’s what you will find on this website:
•    Tools and Information on Online Marketing, Designing Your Website with the Future in Mind–An educated client is the best client.
•    We focus on organic, real growth.  So you will find real world advice on how NOT to do it, and how to do it right.
To Schedule Your Consultation, Click HERE.
About Misheel Chuluun

Misheel

Misheel was born in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.  She grew up both in Mongolia and in Northern Colorado.
After receiving her International Baccalaureate Diploma from Poudre High School in Fort Collins, CO, and a Bachelor’s in Political Science from Colorado State University, she worked as a business and marketing consultant in fields as diverse as law firm, real estate company, insurance company, mortgage brokerage firm, and restaurants.
Her many interests include dancing salsa, playing pool, writing poems, drawing, photography, exploring fine art and culture, hiking, biking, running, and writing. You can find her daily updates on her Scrapbook, her news and views on Misheel.net, and connect with her on Twitter @MisheelChuluun.

A Note From Misheel Chuluun
By the way, if you hire us, you will be automatically contributing to a cause of tremendous importance that will far outlast our lives.  Don’t make it the reason to hire us (our experience, the value we provide, and results should recommend us), but here’s what I’m doing.
My life’s passion is to be of service to my community and the world at large. I’m donating 50% of all my personal income towards a very hands-on initiative to cut air pollution in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.  This is not only to combat global warming. Air pollution there is directly correlated to the #1 cause of death among children. I am doing a drive to replace energy inefficient stoves in Mongolia, to build biking paths in Ulaanbaatar (UB). This would help move towards sustainable development and help improve the air pollution in UB, which is caused mainly by the emissions from the ger districts surrounding the city from the migrant population.
However, the heart of the problem is this. The young from the countryside are migrating to the city to form these ger districts.  They live in poverty, with no electricity and access to public utilities such as sewage, and contribute to the air pollution by burning in inefficient stoves, coal for heating. They are repeating industrial patterns of 19th century United States and Europe, which is unnecessary in today’s Information Age.
Given more choices, the Mongolians in the countryside, who are living the way they had for thousands of years, would not have to rely on a gray economy or continue to live in a pre-economy condition that drives the younger generation to the city outskirts. To give them the opportunities, Mongolia needs better infrastructure to help convert the livestock they own into currency, to sell their meat in UB, for example, and their own sustainable enterprises. (A perspective on how ridiculous it is: UB imports meat from China, although Mongolia has the most livestock per capita in the world.)
We are working on a plan to install a locally-managed economic infrastructure through a cooperative system for the nomadic people. We’re also working on rebuilding the healthcare system in the countryside throughout Mongolia while also supporting the holistic healing, herbalism, and traditional medicine. We have plans in the works to help local communities in Mongolia to build profitable businesses that are socially and environmentally responsible as well.  We are partnering with Northern Colorado’s community, Denver-Ulaanbaatar Sister City alliance and initiatives, and Boulder’s creative drive to bolster and foster sustainable development opportunities.
Ultimately, this is not just for Mongolia and her people. It’s for the world. I consider myself a global citizen. But Mongolia is where I can contribute the most in the world right now. It is a critical period in Mongolia’s history with its transition from a Socialist state to a Capitalist one, with the mining industry fueling all aspects of the growth of this small economy, and the giant interests threatening to overwhelm the fragile ecosystems and communal ways of living that lasted for many centuries.

One Comment

  1. antonio says:

    IM LOOKING FOR UR COMPANY TO MAKE ME A PHOTOGRAPHY WEBSITE.. IS THIS SOMETHING U CAN DO?

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