Virtual Assistant Press releases and resources
The UK Association of Virtual Assistants

THE UK ASSOCIATION OF VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS                                                      

I need a virtual assstant

I NEED
 A VIRTUAL ASSISTANT

 

 

I am a virtual assistant

I AM
A VIRTUAL ASSISTANT

 

 

I am a virtual assistant

I WANT TO BE
A VIRTUAL ASSISTANT

 

 

I am a virtual assistant

I WANT TO WORK
AS A VA ASSOCIATE

 

 

I am a virtual assistant

SIGN UP NOW

I am a virtual assistant

WEB SITE DESIGN

I am a virtual assistant

BANNER DESIGN

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DIRECTORY LISTINGS

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CODE OF CONDUCT

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DISCLAIMER

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RESOURCES AND LINKS

 

PRESS RELEASES AND RESOURCES

If you are a member of the press and would like to speak to an expert from the world of virtual assisting please contact us at justine@ukava.co.uk.

Justine Curtis is the director of her own successful virtual assistant business My Virtual Assistant which is now recruiting a team of virtual assistant licensees and founder of The UK Association of Virtual Assistants (UKAVA) which offers free resources and information to its subscribers and an online Directory of members offering VA services. Justine is the author of Setting Yourself Up As A Virtual Assistant and is proud to be able to pass on the benefits of her vast experience of the VA role to aspiring and progressive virtual PAs as a co-founder of the VA Success Group. If you are thinking about starting a virtual assistant business, visit http://vasuccessgroup.co.uk

Please find below a selection of articles in which we have been featured and quoted.

The Guardian - April 2014
http://www.theguardian.com/small-business-network/o2-partner-zone/virtual-assistants-small-business

Federation of Small Business - Business Network Magazine - February/March Edition 2014
http://www.ukava.co.uk/FSBFeb2014.jpg

Federation of Small Business - Business Network Magazine - April/May Edition 2014
http://www.ukava.co.uk/FSBApril2014.jpg

Desk Demon - 3 part article
Link to follow

Better Business Magazine - August 2013
http://content.yudu.com/Library/A2bmio/BetterBusinessAugust/ page 19

Federation of Small Business - Business Network Magazine - February/March Edition 2012
http://www.fsbmagazines.co.uk/BN9/ page 18

PA Life - February 2012
http://www.palife.co.uk/ - The Rise of the Virtual Assistant

CNBC Business Magazine - June 2011
http://www.cnbcmagazine.com/story/next-june-2011/1387/1/

The Times newspaper - 2nd June 2010
http://www.my-va.com/times010610.pdf

BBC Radio 4 Womens Hour  - 12th January 2010
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/womanshour/03/2010_02_tue.shtml (starts at 31 minutes)

Independent on Sunday - 21st November 2009
'Virtual' way to beat jobless blues

London Evening Standard - 26th October 2009
VAs are the new PAs

UKAVA Assists BBC Live and Learn and Gets New Start Up on the Road to Success

Why You Need A Virtual Assistant

UKAVA Assists BBC Live and Learn and Gets New Start Up on the Road to Success

My Virtual Assistant and UKAVA founder Justine Curtis was recently called upon by the BBC to give advice to a virtual business start up taking part in their Live and Learn series. As a successful virtual business owner herself, Justine was asked to pass on the benefit of her experience and expertise to a young mum setting up her own virtual marketing company.

Justine is the owner of My Virtual Assistant (www.my-va.com) a company offering PA and secretarial services to entrepreneurs and small businesses virtually from her home in the UK. She is also the founder of the UK Association of Virtual Assistants, (www.ukava.co.uk) an organisation set up to raise awareness of the role of virtual assistants (VA’s) and provide a one-stop shop for information and advice for both VA’s and their clients.

The BBC’s Live and Learn program focussed on Claire, a young mum setting up her own virtual Internet marketing company. At the time she was introduced to Justine by the BBC, Claire was in the initial stages of setting up her company and was keen to learn the next steps, how to build her client base and how to let the world know her business existed. In a filmed meeting that took place on a chilly day in February 2006 in Basingstoke, UK, Claire was given the opportunity to ask all her burning questions. Justine freely gave advice about how to approach previous and existing contacts, how to network for new contacts and various organisations that could help her. She also gave advice on the importance of marketing your web site when your business is ‘virtual’ and how best to go about it. At the end of the meeting Claire took on board the advice about networking and began by taking Justine’s business card in case she thought of any more questions she’d like to ask in the future.

The whole interview can be seen on the BBCs Live and Learn series, presented by Melinda Messenger, and can be viewed on BBC Interactive by ‘pressing the red button’.

Resources: Justine Curtis is the founder of UK Association of Virtual Assistants http://www.ukava.co.uk and My Virtual Assistant, a virtual office service operating across the UK, providing virtual office support, personal assistance, secretarial services, administration and telephone answering services remotely from its UK based office. For more information about Virtual Assistants visit www.my-va.com.

 


Why You Need A Virtual Assistant

Are you overwhelmed running your business? Are there not enough hours in the day? The more your business grows, the more administrative tasks you have; the more time you spend on administrative tasks, the less time you have to generate new business.

How much is your time really worth? Is it worth £50 an hour or £100 an hour? YOUR time is most valuable because it is your responsibility to generate new revenue for your business. Doing small and often trivial admin chores yourself does not really add value to your business and the sensible solution is to delegate those less profitable tasks by hiring someone more than capable of carrying them out, but who’s hourly rate is somewhat less than your real financial worth. So what’s stopping you?

You may have a multitude of reasons that prevent you from hiring a full time personal assistant. You may not need a full time, or even part time employee but just require someone for occasional or limited hours. Then there are the employers responsibilities, employees are entitled to sick pay, maternity leave and paid holiday and often seek generous benefits packages. It is estimated that the true cost of an employee is over double and often up to triple the cost of their annual salary in terms of benefits and liabilities.

Significant for some potential employers is also the loss of privacy and space - are you working from home or have limited office space? You may not want an employee working from your home or simply not have the room for an additional employee in your office or all the equipment they may need.

Wouldn't it be perfect if you had an assistant that was always ready to work for you, but only when you need them? Working from their own home or office, using their own equipment? Meet the Virtual Assistant (VA), an invaluable new work force that provides a practical solution for small businesses owners. A VA frees up your valuable time so you can concentrate on the important things that only you can do in your business.

There is no need to share office space or even for your VA to live in the same town or city. Work assignments are communicated through email; telephone, fax or post and Web-based tools such as instant messengers and online calendars and planners are also often used as a means of keeping in touch.

Because your VA is self-employed, and invoices you only for the actual hours worked or by tasks completed, and is dependent on referrals and steady work flow from existing clients, s/he can be the perfect solution for a busy small business or entrepreneur. When you hire a VA you get all the benefits of outsourcing - no employer liabilities, tax and benefits issues, coupled with the loyalty and steadiness of a company employee.

With a VA, you have someone to whom you can delegate. Your VA can return telephone calls, answer e-mails, and draft letters for you. They can take your telephone calls, filter your email, deal with your post, book your doctors appointment and even remind you of your wife’s or mothers birthday and source the perfect gift if necessary! VA’s are already computer trained, and can assist with your specific needs from traditional office support services to highly specialised areas including Web page design. You can also equip your VA to go beyond administrative support to client development and marketing support.

You can easily justify a virtual assistant in terms of your greater productivity and your greater efficiency. You need to be the leader in your business and your VA will insure that you focus on what is important, rather than urgent. Your VA can also lend "size" to your company, which will impress potential clients.

As more and more businesses move their marketing and communications to the Internet, VA’s are becoming the obvious solution to staffing issues. For an hourly fee often less than the cost of temps or the real cost of employees, businesses can take advantage of professional assistance and a variety of skills at the click of a mouse.

Resources: Justine Curtis is the founder of UK Association of Virtual Assistants http://www.ukava.co.uk and My Virtual Assistant, a virtual office service operating across the UK, providing virtual office support, personal assistance, secretarial services, administration and telephone answering services remotely from its UK based office. For more information about Virtual Assistants visit www.my-va.com.

 

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