Meet the Chinese disabled woman who battled adversity to build a leading business
- Yu Lina was a qualified accountant with more than a decade of experience but couldn’t convince employers to give her a job when she moved cities
- So she took a chance and set up her own company, going on to become a market leader in her city

A brief news report about a promising career 16 years ago changed the life of Yu Lina.
In the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou, Yu, who has walked with the aid of crutches since she contracted polio as a three-year-old, read that stenographers were in high demand and could command high hourly rates thanks to a boom in conferences.
Yu had a degree and extensive experience in accounting but had been struggling for months to find a job after moving to the city with her parents.
The article opened a door of hope.
She bought a stenotype machine and some textbooks and spent the next six months teaching herself how to transcribe speeches on the equipment.
She then decided to set up a company providing stenographic services. Today, Hangzhou Gold Finger Stenography Service is a leading player in the industry in Zhejiang province, with clients ranging from government departments to big companies.