Can't Say "It's The Economy, Stupid" Anymore, Because ExpertInsight.com Provides Access to the Most Brilliant Economic Minds
MIAMI, May 31, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Want to pick the brain of a Nobel Prize Winner or speak one-on-one with a best-selling author? The new site ExpertInsight.com (http://www.expertinsight.com) makes it possible through an advanced video web chat technology that allows you to book time with some of the most brilliant minds in the world including economy celebrities like:
-- Steven Levitt, the co-author of Freakonomics which sold over 4 million
copies in 35 languages. Levitt released its sequel Superfreakonomics in
2009 and it quickly became a best seller. Levitt was chosen as one of
Time Magazine's "100 People Who Shape Our World" in 2006.
-- Gary Becker, legendary American economist who was awarded the Nobel
Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1992 and received the United
States Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007.
-- Jeffrey Miron, Harvard economist and Director of Undergraduate Studies
in the Department of Economics at Harvard, who has appeared on CNN,
CNBC, Bloomberg, FOX and BBC radio and in dozens of other television,
radio, and print media around the world.
ExpertInsight.com was created by Brandon Adams, a 32 year old Harvard teaching fellow and one of the country's top poker players and stars. "In the poker world people pay the stars lots of money for their expertise, so I thought let's take this to the next level and create a site for all types of experts," said Brandon.
The focus of the site is to make connecting with experts a simple and intuitive process. Experts have their available time slots posted on their profile. The customer can select an available appointment and then able to communicate with the expert with chat and video technology.
In an interview with a major news organization the co-author of Freakonomics Steven Levitt said: "Ultimately, the Internet is about reducing what economists call 'search' costs and 'transaction' costs. There may be only a handful of customers scattered around the world willing to pay the fees that top experts or celebrities might demand. Before now, there was no easy way to find each other. The search and transaction costs were prohibitive. Now there's a market."