Fees

Fees


Organizations join i.NSAS.org to drive the direction of wearable technology and exchange ideas with industry and research leaders. 

 Fee Table For United States 2017

Organization Type in United States (HIC category) Annual Fee for Memberships Starting 2017-10-01

For-profit organization that has annual gross revenue, as measured by the most recent audited statement, of greater than or equal to 1,000,000,000 USD.                                                                                                           77,000 USD

For-profit organization that has annual gross revenue, as measured by the most recent audited statement, of greater than or equal to 50,000,000 USD and less than 1,000,000,000 USD.                                               68,500 USD

Introductory Industry Membership, available for two years to a for-profit organization that has annual gross revenue, as measured by the most recent audited statement, of greater than or equal to 50,000,000 USD. Participation limited to one Interest Group                                                                                                              34,250 USD

All other organizations, including non-profit organizations and government agencies.                            7,900 USD

Enterprises and non-profits with 10 or fewer employees, who are not also membership organizations, revenues less than 3,000,000 USD and have never been a INSAS Member. This fee only valid for the first two years of INSAS Membership.                                                                                                                                                                            2,250 USD



Wearable Technology, Language and communication Protocols

By John Miller 23 May, 2016
Anyone can make one:
For better or worse, anyone can write a blog post about anything they want. Everyone has a voice and the best voices will rise to the top.

The writer can show their personality:
In blog posts, the writer has more leeway to add in their voice and personality than other types of writing.

Blogs are a great form of mass communication:
You can help people, learn new things, entertain your audience—the possibilities are endless and amazing. Blogging opens up all of these to a very wide audience.

You can make money:

Get the right blog going and you can make a lot of money through advertising and sponsored posts.

It allows people to craft better thoughts:
Instead of reading haphazard, uneducated Facebook statuses, it’s much better to see people’s thought process in a well-written blog post.

You can establish a community:
Blogging allows you to connect with other individuals who share the same interests. Sharing ideas and opinions within your community helps establish yourself as a thought leader.

Good for SEO:
Keeping content on your site fresh and relevant, you can use your blog to boost the search engine ranking (SEO) of your site and your business.

It brings people back to your site:

If your blog is strong enough and updated regularly, people will come back looking for more and bring traffic back to your site as well.

It’s free:
It costs you a grand total of zero dollars to post to the blog, so if you have something to say, there’s nothing to stop you.

You can establish yourself as a thought leader:

A blog is a great place for your original thoughts, and it can be a wonderful way to show off your individuality. If people like your ideas, you can become a thought leader in your industry!

What else do you love about blogs? Let me know!
Share by: