My Student Credit Card Adventure

 free  Comments Off on My Student Credit Card Adventure
Mar 192023
 

My Student Credit Card Adventure

…And some practical advice too!

My first credit card…

I remember my college days when it seemed there was a credit card advertisement on practically every bulletin board on campus. The banks would travel to the college and set up application booths on registration day. Hundreds of students would apply for a credit card. As an enticement, we were offered freebies like T-shirts, water bottles, and key chains. So I took whatever they were handing out. You can t beat free. The next thing I knew, I had signed on the dotted line. It wasn t long before that little plastic card arrived in the mail. It was time to establish my credit history. I was off to the mall. Life was good!

Stuff happens…

I made my student credit card the solution to all my financial emergencies when I attended college. Needless to say there were plenty of them. There were tuition bills, school supplies, car repairs, and midnight pizzas to pay for. The old saying was true. “When they ve got you, they ve got you”. That little piece of plastic bailed me out of more financial predicaments than I could count. I honestly don t know what I would have done without it. The student credit card “thing” was a pretty cool idea.

My day of reckoning…

The monthly statements arrived one after another. I had been in the habit of making the minimum payment and ignoring the bottom line. Not a good idea. All those credit card purchases left me with a pretty hefty balance. The finance charges were mind-boggling. It was time to take action. I started to allocate more of my monthly income toward my credit card bill and phased out frivolous purchases. My balance actually began to dwindle (Thank God). I developed a better understanding of what credit cards are intended to be. They re certainly not free money! Put simply, they re a convenient loan that has to be repaid.

A word to the wise…

When applying for a credit card, students need to consider the fees involved. Take a hard look at the finance charge, annual fee, and late payment fee. Shy away from cash advances if possible. Consider a low limit credit card. Do a comparison and search for competitive rates. Study your card agreement thoroughly. If you don t understand something, call customer service. Ask questions.

Set up a realistic budget and follow it closely. Avoid impulse shopping on your credit card. Try to use the card only in real emergencies. Try to pay your bill promptly and keep your finance charges to a minimum. This will help you to establish a good credit history.

You may also want to consider using a debit card. The money is deducted right out of your checking account. This way you can t spend more than you have.

Remember to approach credit cards sensibly. When used properly, they can be a real lifesaver!

Isotonix Daily Essentials Kit – 90 servings of daily essential vitamins with Free Shipping. New Customers try it $25 OFF with coupon code FIRST25OFF. (valid thru 3/31)

Norm Goldman, Editor of Sketchandtravel.com and Bookpleasures.com interviews author Carol Laferle

 free  Comments Off on Norm Goldman, Editor of Sketchandtravel.com and Bookpleasures.com interviews author Carol Laferle
Mar 182023
 

Today, Norm Goldman, Editor of sketchandtravel and bookpleasures is honored to have as a guest, the nationally published newspaper columnist and author, Cindy LaFerle. Cindy recently published a book entitled, Writing Home, a collection of essays focusing on home, family and motherhood.

Cindy was at one time editor of a national travel magazine, the Innsider that focused on country inns, B&Bs, and small historic hotels in the USA.

She was also responsible for helping Uncle Ben´s (the rice company) launch its annual Best Country Inns award.


Good day Cindy and thank you for agreeing to participate in our interview.

Norm:

You indicated to me that the Innsider magazine set a standard of quality for smaller inns and B&Bs. Please explain.

Cindy:

Back in the early 1980s, when Innsider was newly launched, smaller historic inns and B&Bs were relatively new to the average American traveler.

They´d been popular for many years in Europe, as you know, Norm, but most Americans were not as comfortable with the idea of staying in small inn or B&B 20 years ago. The old term guest house had negative, seedy connotations and in some cases, that reputation was justified. Those little “Mom and Pop” guest houses weren´t typically AAA rated or listed in guidebooks back then, and sometimes there was a very good reason for that.


That old reputation was hard for the GOOD B&Bs and country inns to conquer at first, since the average traveler was more comfortable at, say, a Holiday Inn.

Even so, charming B&Bs and country inns were indeed catching on with sophisticated travelers who were familiar with the smaller inns of Europe –but those travelers really had to work hard to research the quality of American B&Bs/country inns. There weren´t as many inn guidebooks back then, either, although COUNTRY INNS & BACK ROADS, by Norm Simpson, were in print
and highly regarded.

That´s where Innsider came into play. We didn´t establish ratings
per se, but we sought out the BEST places we could find, featuring only those that were clean, well-run, attractive and historically interesting. We didn´t feature anything that was sub-standard and therefore set the bar high for other small inns that wanted to attract business. We also worked with professional inn organizations to improve and help standardize the quality of these small inns — without sacrificing the personality and uniqueness that make them so special. As editor of Innsider, I attended with my staff many conferences for small innkeepers and spoke about what made a first-class B&b or country inn. It was great fun.



Norm:

You also mentioned that you worked as a free lance inspector for
Michigan´s Lake Bed & Breakfast Association. What did you exactly do and perhaps you can elaborate as to what are the ingredients required to have a top quality B&B.

Cindy:

This association was founded to promote high standards for
Michigan´s smaller inns, and I was asked to help establish those. I was part of a small team who were to inspect the member inns. We looked for things such as overall cleanliness in the common rooms and baths; amenities such as tissues, fresh sheets, good lighting for reading, and so on. We made sure that kitchens were exceptionally clean and that breakfasts offered were substantial and/or reflected was advertised. That sort of thing. We had PAGES of items to examine or discuss with the innkeepers on the inspection lists, so I could go on and on. It was all about quality and upgrading the smaller inn for the comfort of guests. If the inn didn´t pass inspection, it lost membership and listing in the state guide.

Norm:

What is your idea of an ideal romantic inn or B&B, and do you have any favorite romantic inns or B&Bs?

Cindy:

That´s a tough question, but I think a romantic inn needs to be
one-of-a-kind and superbly appointed it should be beautifully decorated and offer a few special things you wouldn´t find in other hotels or at home…. special touches like fancy sheets, larger and lovely bathrooms with good toiletries, comfy chairs and space for reading and relaxing together.
An in-room fireplace is always nice.
Local color is important. The romantic inn should also be located
near a wonderful restaurant and other attractions like good shopping or historic sites and recreational activities. I like to be located in a historic district, say, like Savannah or Charleston, in a gorgeous inn that´s within walking distance of a town.


Here in Michigan, there´s a secluded, charming place called the
Victorian Villa (Union City, Michigan). Staying there is an experience in and of itself, even if you never leave the grounds. Everything is authentically Victorian, exquisite and historic, including the building itself. Innkeeper Ron Gibson stages Victorian theme weekends and teas, including a Sherlock Holmes Mystery Weekend, which are seasonal and make it
a special occasion to stay there. It´s just beautiful and the rooms are large you are staying in a mansion that feels like a Victorian home.

Norm:

How did you become a travel writer, and how did your experience as a travel writer give you a wonderful background for the kind of work you do now?

Cindy:

I started out (some 20 years ago) as a freelance features writer for my local paper, and had written a few stories about B&Bs (because I´d always stayed in them and enjoyed them). The photographer, who was newly hired to work for Innsider, approached me and told me that the publisher was looking
for an editor who had some knowledge of B&Bs/small inns and could work part-time as editor-in-chief. My son was a baby then, so the flexibility appealed to me, as did the subject matter & although as the magazine grew, it was not as flexible and involved a lot of travel, which was harder to manage with a family.

But during the nearly 6 years I worked for Innsider, I got a chance to see MANY wonderful historic places in this country, and I learned so much. Travel is essential, I believe, for every writer, no matter what genre they prefer.

And, as corny and clichéd as it sounds here, I also learned there´s no place like home. Travel broadens your perspective and also teaches you to be grateful for what you have. Traveling down south for the magazine, for example, we often drove through some very economically depressed areas en route to the historic inns and Civil War battlegrounds we were going to cover and photograph. Things like that stay with you, sometimes even more
than the beauty you find on the way.

Norm:

Could you tell us something about your recently published book, Writing Home, and why you wanted to write the book.

Cindy:

After Innsider folded due to lack of ad revenue I decided to
work from home and spend more time with my son, who was barely 6 and growing up way too fast. I didn´t want to miss any of that, so I managed to get some freelance jobs writing for local papers as well as national magazines.

That´s when I found I had a knack for writing personal essays and
“slice of life newspaper columns. I found a comfortable niche for myself in that genre. Writing Home is a collection of those short pieces. While they are personal essays, they all chronicle some of the universal themes that touch many of us learning how to let go of children as they grow up; learning how to be a family; watching parents age and die; dealing with midlife crisis in the meantime….One reporter said my pieces were about
finding the sacred in the suburban, and I think that´s a good way to explain my stuff and my new book.


Norm:

What makes a good journalist, and do you find that today a great deal of journalism is pure and simple sensationalism.

Cindy:

I am really saddened at what has happened with journalism today.
Yes, I do think a lot of what´s sold as “news” is often sensationalized to the point where average readers no longer trust what they read anymore.

Readers often tell me that newspapers, for the most part, are very depressing — and that the top stories make them lose faith in our world. A lot of front-page news makes people feel angry and hopeless. Bad news seems to inspire more bad news, but that is what “sells” papers.
I have tried, at various times, to pitch hopeful stories to various editors because I think there are MANY wonderful things going on in our communities that don´t get press. But you know what? I have been told that people don´t really want to read good news, and that good news doesn´t sell papers. How else can we explain the success of those awful, cheesy tabloids that sell like hotcakes in the grocery store checkout lines, for example?

That said, Norm, I want to point out there are a few papers that are as objective as humanly possible, run by editors who believe in the dignity of the world and the intelligence of their readers. The Christian Science Monitor is one such paper. (I am not employed by them, but I have published several pieces in the CSM). It continues to be well-regarded by readers and
other journalists who aim high.

Norm:

What advice would you give to anyone who wishes to pursue a career in journalism or travel writing?


Cindy:

You have to be willing to write for smaller markets, just to get
started. You won´t get into the bigger magazines or newspaper right away, so you need to focus on building a clip file published pieces that show you can write and have a sense for what makes a good travel piece. It takes time and diligence, and a lot of writers give up because it is competitive and the pay isn´t so great. Sometimes you have to be pleased just to get a
byline, which is sad but true. Budgets are being cut right and left at newspapers these days, and the first things to be cut are the lifestyles pieces.

If you can put up with this situation and are willing to pay your
dues and start small, you´ve got a chance. I got started in my local daily, with a circ of less than 20,000, and eventually was able to publish my work in Reader´s Digest and other national publications. Keep at it — and enjoy the process. Ask yourself if you really want to write, or you just want to be published — there´s a huge difference!


Norm:


When you write your various columns, what do you wish to achieve?

Cindy:

I want to make a heartfelt connection to my readers. I want them to feel less alone as they try to make sense of the very complicated lives we are all living &. If someone tells me that they related to a piece I wrote, or that they felt like I was really telling their story well, then I have hit the mark and done my job.

Norm:

Where do your ideas come from?


Cindy:

Ideas come from everyday life, from paying attention to what is around me. I think all writers have to be, in a way, Zen masters. If you are not focused on what is happening around you if you´re always thinking about the next thing on your to-do list — you are not going to write anything that hits
people where they live.

Norm:


Would you like to add anything that we have not discussed?

Cindy:


Thank you for asking me to participate here, Norm. It´s very important for writers to share their experiences and help each other along the way. I appreciate this opportunity.



Norm:

Thanks once again Cindy for participating in our interview and good luck in all of your future endeavors.

Buy NowGet a FREE Beauty Sleep Hero (worth up to £125) when you spend £100+. Use code: MUMLUV

Breaking Down the Language Barrier

 free  Comments Off on Breaking Down the Language Barrier
Mar 172023
 

Pretty soon language will no longer be a barrier that keeps humanity separated.

The Internet has become the ultimate medium for communication amongst humans. When it first began, websites were predominantly written in English, but over time all the major languages in the world have voiced themselves to their fellow tongued colleagues and brethren. There is a new technology on the Internet that although in its early development, could revolutionalize communication on our planet: Universal translation software.

If you’ve read ‘Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’ you’ll recall the science-fiction idea of the Babel fish. You take a small fish and put it in your ear and then automatically you can understand any language in the whole Universe in your own tongue. Pretty unbelievable stuff huh! But now on the Web there are numerous sites that are turning this dream into a reality. One of the main sites is http://world.altavista.com/tr where they actually call their service ‘Babel fish Translation’.

There are two main options on this site that you can try out for free. The first is to insert 500 words at a time in your native language, choose the language you want to interpret to, and push the ‘translate’ button. For example, say you’ve met a French person through a website dedicated to healthy living and you want to send them your recipe for Grandma’s famous vegetarian soup, but you speak English. Just push the English-French option, paste the recipe in, and in a few seconds, wow, it’s right in front of you ready to send in French! Now don’t get me wrong, this concept is in its infancy so the language is far from a perfect grammatical interpretation, however it will definitely get the main ideas across to this person who otherwise you wouldn’t have been able to communicate with. If you were in the same town or city you could use body language, or see each other a webcam, but I think it would look a little strange watching someone miming out the actions of how to chop up a carrot!

The second option is for translating a whole website. Say you’ve got a website for your e-commerce business exporting a new kind of deodorant, but in this instance you are a French person (a country know for its fine scents) and you would like to enter the Japanese online market as you are well aware that they have a strong stigma against body odor. Well, just click on French-Japanese, put in your web address, and in a few seconds, bang, the whole site has been interpreted into Japanese. You can then add a Ja/ at the end of your address thus making a whole new website just for Japanese speaking people. To do this you may have to download a Japanese language pack from your computer but that shouldn’t be much of a problem

Some people may complain that your language is bad, or get some misinterpretations of ideas because of the newness of this technology, but I do think it can be very useful. You can have some contact with people and information that otherwise may have been totally impossible before. When the concept is evolved further, as is the case with all worthwhile technological additions to human society, I believe the results will be spectacular.

Imagine anyone and everyone being able to connect and read each other’s ideas and information. Humanity could reach a level of understanding and appreciation of each other’s differences that then could have huge effects that resound across perceived boundaries bringing everyone much closer together. Hey, maybe one day we could all realize that we are all human beings, all individuals, and all from the same place: Earth.

Isotonix- Homepage

The right dating strategy

 free  Comments Off on The right dating strategy
Mar 162023
 

So, you have decided to do it. Get out there to the cyber space and try you luck. I mean, many people do it and talk about it, so why not, right?

Yea, you are right, but a good plan will help you get the results YOU want.

1.Get some great digital photos of yourself – No matter what the sites tell you, this is not optional. A photo is worth 50,000 words online. If you want t o do better then that, upload a voice or video message. You will get MUCH more results.

2.Write up a profile – It is a good idea to have something prepared in advance. Write up a list of what you are looking for in a partner, a list of important things about your personality (especially the positive stuff), and come up with a snappy username and title.

3.Send emails – Sure, you could just put up a profile and wait for folks to write you. But you will get much better results if you take the initiative.

So say you have found someone who looks really good to you. How do you initiate contact? You could send them message, try the instant-message, or send a note or wink, which are pre-written little emails that express your interest but not much else

What should you say? Here is where it is important to read the persons profile. It gives you things to talk about. Then, a good rule of thumb is compliments and questions. An earnest compliment on the persons accomplishments, writing style, or life goals will say a lot. If you are emailing a woman, avoid talking too much about her beauty; you may come off as shallow, or trying to get into her pants. Men may respond better to this sort of flattery. People love to talk about themselves, so ask her something about an aspect of her profile: her work, her location, her hobbies. Ask open-ended questions. Do not give out your personal email address or phone number in this initial email; wait until you are both interested and it is apparent that it is going somewhere. Keep it short and light-one to two paragraphs should do it, and leave heavy topics for later. And sign your real first name.

Guys: Women are not necessarily into the strong silent type. They want someone who is enthusiastic, active, and warm. If you are not any of those things, for God is sake, pretend to be.

Take note: our email system does not save your messages forever. You might need to save them on your machine or print them out, lest they get deleted at some point. If you are in contact with a bunch of different people at once, devise a system to keep track of them. Once you start talking on the phone, take notes during the conversation. You can even capture IM logs for later perusal. If you are juggling several different prospects, this is really important.

4.…Have some fun – Yeah, I know you are looking for the future mother/father of your children, the person you hope to grow old with. The decisions you make could potentially affect the course of your life. But really, do not think about that. Just imagine you are going out bar-hopping, except that you are going to a magical bar which you can populate with precisely the kind of partner you like. Then have a great time.

Finally, if whatever you are trying does not seem to be working, revise your strategy. Einstein said, Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result.

Yaya – Jaters.com Admin

www.jaters.com – Free Jewish dating, Jewish singles & Jewish matchmaking service

Buy 2 products, 3rd is FREE With Code BUY2GET1!

The truth about selling e-books on the internet

 free  Comments Off on The truth about selling e-books on the internet
Mar 152023
 

If you’ve surfed the internet for a while lately, you might have noticed the incredible amount of hype generated around e-books, information products, resale rights and similar stuff. Indeed, it is a popular subject since it promises a way to generate passive income, like real estate or wall-street shares, with a minimal amount of effort.

Truth is, many internet marketers are now using all this hype to their own interest, by selling poor-quality informational products at very high prices, or promising blatantly ridiculous incomes: don’t get caught in the marketing trap!!

I’m Albert Z. and I’ve been selling e-books for a while on the internet: I own the site Culture-Books and can tell you a couple of REAL things about selling e-books online!!

What you might have been taught up to now is that:

selling e-books requires no effort

you can make very high incomes every month (> 2000$/month)

selling e-books requires no skills

there is no investment to be made

it works on autopilot



Now, check those statings with the truth:

selling e-books requires some months for setting up your activity

you will make low incomes (100s), unless you write yourself a very good piece of text, which is time-consuming

selling e-books requires designing skills, copywriting skills (for most of your sales), a sense of marketing and lots of organization

indeed it does work on autopilot! but if you want to increase your activity over time you will HAVE to devote some time to it!

you will need a website, hosting, and provided you don’t spend any money on designing, seo tools etc, initial goods for selling, you will end up spending about 50-100$, provided you’re a savvy money-saver!



As you can see, selling e-books is not very different from any other real-life activity: it requires work and skills, lots of time (at least initially) and a little bit of overhead to set up everything!! But it does indeed have some advantages:

overhead costs are very low if compared with other activities

once set up, it requires very little maintenance time

it’s fun (which is very important 😉 ), watch the style of an e-book store here , doesn’t it look fun?

it earns quite good money for the low amount of effort required



So, how do you go about selling ebooks?? There are mainly 3 ways: eBay, ClickBank, or your own website. The route I chose was eBay + personal website, because they are sinergic (they help each other): having a site makes it so much easier to upload your images, to have a professional look etc; plus you get webspace and you can just send out emails with a link for downloading your product (instead of attaching your product with the mail, which incurs in many problems with spam filters or filled email boxes!!). eBay on the other hand brings good free, relevant traffic on your site and gives you some extra exposure which may never hurt. It’s common to offer a product for 1.50$ on ebay, but selling it for 1.30$ on your site. This is a legal and intelligent way to “redirect” eBay watchers to your own site without spending a dime!!

Bear in mind however that eBay and PayPal (your everyday staple when selling ebooks) charge pretty high “default” fees that will quickly cut your revenues on low-cost ebooks (for instance, if you sell a 1.50$ ebook on ebay with paypal, you might only get 0.50 revenue, which sucks big time!!) so you’re better off selling products with a higher cost, in the range of 5-10$ (so even if you lose that 1$ in fees, you’ll still keep a good % of your money)!

What are the tools you will need for your activity?? The ones I feel a MUST are:

an autoresponder (if you keep your pc on 24/7 you just really need Outlook Express with an autoreply filter set up, if you wish to turn off you pc then you need a cgi quality autoresponder: you find out more about both of them here), this is ESSENTIAL for the automation of your activity

a domain and a host, I use godaddy for it’s cheapness (3.96$ a month with 500mb space and 20gb bandwidth, enough for a small business)

an html editor (there are many free ones, just check on google!)

a free image editor (for the design of your site), i recommend the GIMP, an open source (free) software that rivals photoshop!

a shopping cart system (i use osCommerce, but i’ve heard good rumors about zencart too!)



If you’d like to find out some software or information about internet businesses, drop by my site , I’ll be glad to help!! Also if you’re interested in exchanging opinions or partnering, I am always very friendly ;)

I hope this article was useful for you, have a nice day!!

Free Shipping on Metal and Wood Swing Sets, Play Sets, Monkey Bars, and More!

How To Be a Humble Equal and Make the Sale

 free  Comments Off on How To Be a Humble Equal and Make the Sale
Mar 132023
 

I remember two sales conversations I had with prospects, both of them several years ago. One was “successful” and one was “unsuccessful,” meaning one person hired me, and the other person didn’t. But, ultimately both were unsuccessful. How can a sale be unsuccessful?

When you make a sale to a new customer, whether it’s for a $2000 service, or for a $15 product, you are beginning a new, and deeper, relationship with the one who buys. And, successful long-term relationships, which happen to be both the most satisfying and the most profitable, can only happen between equals.

My “unsuccessful” sale was easy to diagnose. I was in a needy place- I “needed” them to buy because my eye was on the bottom line- to put it frankly, I needed the money. And, obviously, they ran far away.

First lesson: don’t bring your neediness to your prospects. But, when you are needy, how do you keep from doing that? Keep reading.

Now, with my “successful” sale, I did everything right. I said the right things, they liked what I said, we moved forward. Then the fun began.

As we began working together, this client wasn’t following through with their commitments from our sessions. They had trouble making decisions for themselves. They wanted my advice on everything. It was not only exhausting for me, but as much as I wanted to, I just couldn’t deliver all of what they wanted.

Although I got paid, I felt depleted, and they felt unsatisfied. What happened?

When I sat with the whole situation in my heart, I realized that the roots went back to the sales conversation. I had positioned myself as the “expert” who would take care of everything. And, that’s what happened….

In both situations, an unequal relationship had been set up- either I was one up or one down, the prospect was either one down or one up.

A sale is an agreement. And a healthy, sustainable, functioning agreement can only happen between equals.

In order to reach a successful sale, where you and the person you are selling to feels taken care of and happy, you must be equals.
On the face of it, this doesn’t seem to make sense- your prospect has a problem, and you have the solution. But, that’s only half the story. For anyone in business, it’s really obvious that you have a problem, too: Your business needs customers in order to thrive. So, in any sale, you have two people with needs, and two people with the solution to the need. A meeting of equals.

Now, hold on, we’re going to get a little bit more subtle here. If you just see yourself as two people with needs serving each other, it’s very easy to get attached to any particular prospect as the answer to your need. This is a common trap for a business owner, but it’s a little more rare for a customer to get attached to a particular business as the solution for their need- they just look elsewhere.

So, how do you acknowledge the need you have, stay confident in offering the solution, and yet not get attached? Lots of people talk about not being needy on your prospects, but when you are needy, what then?

To be an equal, you need to acknowledge your own neediness, but without making your prospect the source of your help, they are only a possible channel. You also need to stand in your confidence, but not by making the prospect smaller than you, merely by realizing yourself as a potential channel for delivering help.

The only way I’ve found to consistently catch this balance is to find true humility. True humility is to bow to your prospect, both in the strength of being of service to them, and in the vulnerability of your need.

True humility is found in your heart. It is an incredibly powerful place to stand, it is incredibly effective for your sales process, and it feels great.
Actually, it feels more than great. It feels sacred.

Practical Keys to How to be a Humble Equal… And Make the Sale

* The very first step is to acknowledge your own neediness. If your business needs more sales in order to feel thriving, acknowledge it. Drop the ‘fake it ’til you make it’ approach, and instead be gentle and compassionate with your heart as you allow yourself to feel needy for more money and more sales.

It probably feels terrible- that’s okay, it’s normal for it to feel terrible. But breathe into your heart, remembering that there is more available than you can see. Take the need out of the hands of your prospective customer, and place it into the hands of the Divine.

* The second step is to acknowledge what it’s like to really know your stuff. Whatever your product or service, you are probably really good at it, even despite any self-doubt you might have. Using the Remembrance, or other heart-centering practice, ask your heart to show you the reality of your expertise. My experience is that when my heart shows me my expertise, it doesn’t inflate my ego, but brings me into an incredibly powerful feeling of humility. Try it, you’ll like it.

* The third step is to use your heart to see your prospective customer as they really are, even before you have a conversation with them. With your attention resting in your heart, ask to be shown the truth of who your prospect is, of their heart, and what they really need. Let yourself be willing to be surprised.

The free workbook on my website describes in detail how to be in your heart with a powerful, simple practice. If you need the workbook, links are at the end.

These simple steps may take some practice, but if you allow yourself to slow down and go through them before your sales conversations, you will find yourself in space of just wanting to serve, and, in the process, closing more sales.

My very best to you and your business,

Mark

The Secret of Her Success

 free  Comments Off on The Secret of Her Success
Mar 122023
 

(c) Jim Edwards – All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
=====================================

Despite all the “dot-com” busts a few years ago, the
Internet still represents the ultimate opportunity for some
people to turn their initiative, a good idea, and a few
bucks into a legitimate, profitable business.

One such person, Rosalind Gardner, took her interest in
online dating services and turned it into a business that
generated almost half a million dollars in revenue last year
and should do even better this year.

The fact that she created this business without spending one
dime on product development makes her story even more
amazing.

Rosalind Gardner used to make her living as an air traffic
controller, a job most people consider quite stressful.

After getting tired of swing-shift work, and though she had
no product of her own to sell and needed to make money
relatively quickly, Gardner decided to try her hand at
selling on the Internet.

What she did next might seem simple, but it started an
online venture that would make every dot-com refugee from
1999 drool with envy.

Gardner logged on to OneAndOnly.com, an online dating
service, and signed up as an associate or “affiliate”. She
said they were paying “healthy” commissions to any webmaster
who wanted to refer paying customers to them.

Commonly called “affiliate programs,” this setup enables
entrepreneurs to create a business promoting other people’s
businesses and bypass the entire product development and
product testing phases.

In short, by selling through other people’s affiliate
programs, virtually anyone can set up a business online
promoting almost any type of product or service.

Gardner created a website (101date.com), her storefront on
the Internet.

Though she created her own website pages, she suggests that
an effective way to get started even faster is to go to
dollartemplates.com or 4templates.com, buy a website
template for between $10-$30, and modify it to meet your
needs.

“Instead of spending hundreds or thousands of dollars on
website design,” Gardner advises, “purchase an inexpensive
website template for much less than the cost of dinner and a
movie!”

Gardner also kept the content for her website simple, direct
and effective. Though she wanted to appeal to the widest
possible audience, she kept focused on her narrow “niche” of
online dating.

She wrote a review of the dating service so her visitors
could quickly understand the main benefits, pitfalls,
special features, and other information to see if the
service met their needs. If it did, and they clicked through
her affiliate link to sign up, Gardner made a commission.

To drive traffic to her site, Gardner buys targeted,
keyword-specific ads from google.com and overture.com which
get displayed on the Web’s most popular sites, including
Yahoo!, AOL, and MSN.

This type of advertising means she only spends money when
interested people actively searching for dating information
go to her website.

Gardner also offers a newsletter from her dating website
in order to update her visitors when new dating services and
products come available.

The side benefits of publishing the newsletter are many,
including the fact that she can build trust with her
subscribers by sending them valuable articles and
information on a regular basis.

Instead of just referring them over to the merchant’s site
and losing them forever, Gardner captures them and makes
them her customer first… and then hands them off to the
merchant.

So what’s the secret of her success?

Gardner’s system works because:

~ she keeps it simple;

~ she doesn’t get slowed down by creating the product
herself;

~ she adds her own unique value to the process with her
reviews and newsletter;

~ she only invests in performance-based advertising.

Further, her added step of going the extra mile to offer
free updates, articles and tips to her growing list helps
her business grow MUCH faster than affiliates who just hand-
off to the merchant website.

By building her list, she can bring visitors back to her
site or send them to other sites through her affiliate link
without having to pay for them again.

So if the system is so simple, why don’t more people do it
this way?

My only guess is that maybe it’s too simple! Often people
want something complicated in order to feel like a “system”
will work, but often the opposite proves true.

Simple = Powerful = It keeps working!

For more information about Gardner and the step-by-step
process detailed in her new ebook, “The Super Affiliate
Handbook – How I Made $436,797 Last Year Selling Other
People’s Stuff Online” log on to www.Affiliate-Handbook.com

Fire-up the grill with Rastelli’s premium meats and seafood delivered for FREE + Earn 9% Cashback! ends 9/30. Shop Now!

Do you Blog Surf? 3 Strategic Steps To Doing It Well

 free  Comments Off on Do you Blog Surf? 3 Strategic Steps To Doing It Well
Mar 112023
 

Readers, you can also read this article onmy website at this URL,
http://www.mymarketingnotes.com/vault/content/view/29/38/

One of the most important skills of any marketer (or anyone else for that matter) is the ability to do research quickly, effectively and to communicate information that differs from what “the masses” do.

This article presents a 3 step strategy for using blogs to help in this.

Over the past year or so, blogs have become huge. Before the 2004 U.S. election, scarce anyone heard of blogs. But with the bloggers doing their own version of the news, even computer illiterate people have at least heard of blogs.

So I want to talk about blogs. But not from the usual angle of creating and maintaining one. I want to talk about it from the standpoint of USING other people’s blogs effectively.

If you already blog, then this will be obvious to you, though you might have been so focused on creation that you didn’t pay attention to consumption. Common problem. I’m here to help you get past it. 🙂

The amazing thing about blogs – the good ones at least – is that they are like finding information gold mines.

The owners maintain them and their quality for several reasons.

* to generate new content that search engines love
* to keep people coming back for more
* to sell their stuff in a low pressure marketing context
* self-fulfillment through self-expression

There are likely other reasons, but I consider these the relevant ones.

These motivations push the publishers to keep the quality of good blogs high. If they stop, their traffic dwindles. If they start hyping stuff, then the low-pressure context is gone.

Thus, it is that blogs form one of the most intensely useful sources of free information anywhere.

So the question is, do you effectively blog surf? And more to the point, how do you do it?

Well, I don’t have THE ANSWER for how to do it. But I do have some suggestions that have generated great results for me.

1 – Google the following – with the punctuation as I show them:

+blog +”subject phrase”

Thus if I’m interested in blogs on fly fishing (a niche if there ever was one), my google would be

+blog +”fly fishing” (over 61,000 matches)

If my interest was in sequential autoresponders then my search would be:

+blog +”sequential autoresponders” (243 matches)

This gives me the ability to get a list of blogs on the subject which I then …

2 – Bookmark for future reference. Create a folder for, say, fly fishing. All the high quality fly fishing blogs you find go into that folder. Make new folders for blogs on other subjects.

Now if I’m interested in seeing what’s new in fly fishing, I go to my bookmarks and have a virtual field trip.

But there’s one more thing I do, too. And this is critical if you want to keep your blog surfing fresh:

3 – Bookmark the search results page.

Why?

Because the results delivered up by the canned search will vary over time and as Google changes their criteria. The top blog today might turn out to be 5th next month and a complete newcomer might end up 1st on the list.

Now you have an effective method for blog surfing. Enjoy.

Looking for Vegan vitamins? Try Isotonix vitamins and supplements. $125 Ships Free. New Customers get 25% Off first purchase using coupon code FIRST25OFF. Shop Now! (ends 5/31)