 This is the VOA Special English Technology Report. A new online service offers a simple way to let other people know how to say your name correctly. It lets others hear you say it yourself in your email. Today, more people from different cultures work, live and study together. Some worry that having a difficult name could limit them. Just ask Sheetal Dubey. She and her husband came to the United States from India seven years ago. She says, Sheetal is a very common Indian name and in India people would just know how to pronounce it. But I've been working here in the US for some time and I realize people find it hard to pronounce. They haven't heard it before. Ms. Dubey was a user experience consultant for technology companies. She now owns a new company called Audioname. She came up with the idea after doing a presentation with someone she worked with. She says, My colleague was Mary and it was very easy for everyone in the room to say, You know, Mary's findings showed this. But it's very difficult to say Sheetal's findings showed this. So that's where this idea really stuck in my head. It's like, you know, what if I just have an audio name? And, you know, I put it in my email and they have a chance to hear it before they meet me. Ms. Dubey presented her idea at a business development conference in Portland, Oregon earlier this year. It won the top award at the event called Startup Weekend Portland. The service is free. Ms. Dubey hopes her idea will help make introductions a little easier. People can put a recording of their name in their email signature, their Facebook page, their LinkedIn account, or their website. The Portland Seed Fund chose her idea as one of 126 startups to receive money and mentoring support from experts. Ms. Dubey left her job to start Audioname.com. The site has been live since the middle of September. Marketing specialist Larry Shagoris is the author of The Secret to Getting a Job After College. He advises people with really difficult names to consider using a nickname in their job search. Sheetal Dubey says she heard advice like that while researching her idea. She thinks a service like Audioname offers a better choice. There are also sites like herenames.com where people can learn how to say names from around the world. On our site, voaspecialenglish.com, you can find a link to VOA's own pronunciation guide to names in the news. For VOA Special English, I'm Alex Villareal.