Nelli Petrosyan
I'm Nelli Petrosyan from Armenia with over 5 years of experience in journalism. I studied journalism at Yerevan State University. In my early university years I was engaged in writing: I have worked with a number of local news websites such as Hetq, Mediamax, Aravot, etc. In my stories I mostly focus on social problems and local business/innovation issues. I love human stories and I think it's what is laid in the base of real content creation. Apart from producing journalistic pieces I also work as a content writer in a marketing team. I also correspond with OC-Media. Except for content writing I'm also interested in graphic design, language learning, digital marketing and reading.
Author's stories
Martin Sargsyan, 29, had big plans for 2020.
This was going to be the year his family opened their guesthouse on their farm in Mets Sariyar, a village in Armenia’s north-west Shirak region.
The entire family took part in the process: Sargsyan’s father focused on the family’s long-standing beekeeping business, so his mother and his wife could dedicate their time to decorating the guesthouse and planning the menu. At the beginning of the year, the two-story, three-bedroom guesthouse was ready for tourists.
From guesthouse to factory: Armenian entrepreneur adjusts to life during Covid-19
When Karabakh refugees arrived in Osakhan, Armenia, three friends decided to start a small factory so women refugees could earn some money and focus on work.
Recovering from war, one stitch at a time
People are spending more and more time online. While the internet has been a blessing in some cases—charity drives have assisted the vulnerable and online classes have helped children and students continue their education—it has also fed a growing storm of disinformation, fake news and hate speech about the virus.
For Armenians stuck indoors, the internet provides comfort, festers hate
To survive the blockade, Karabakh businesses have to be creative.