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Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Jan 12th
In the past, traveling usually meant being disconnected from life for chunks of time while in transit. Things have changed dramatically and today travelers can stay connected throughout their trips. However, the ease and cost of staying online during a trip can vary. Here’s a look at the best airports for travelers out of the 40 busiest airports in the US.

Via: Online MBA News
View full post on Business Pundit
Jan 12th
In the past, traveling usually meant being disconnected from life for chunks of time while in transit. Things have changed dramatically and today travelers can stay connected throughout their trips. However, the ease and cost of staying online during a trip can vary. Here’s a look at the best airports for travelers out of the 40 busiest airports in the US.

Via: Online MBA News
View full post on Business Pundit
Jan 6th
New Higher Conversions, Upsell And With Extensive Offline Credibility & Media Coverage. Promote This Healthy Weight Loss Plan And Sign Up Now At Http://affiliates.lunchboxdiet.co.uk
The Lunch Box Diet Voted Best Diet Ever By Elle Magazine
Dec 11th
What is it that drives people to start their own business? An economy that isn’t hiring; the desire for flexibility in your schedule; or the drive to achieve a long-held dream of building a business that’s bigger than us personally — these and many more reasons drive us into startup mode.
Whatever your reason for starting a new business, you’ll need to do your homework — before you start and while you are growing your business. A good place to start is to read some books about what you need to know when starting a business. The following books are a good start on your reading list, to guide you through the ups and downs of the entrepreneurial journey (in no particular order).
“Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months: A Month-by-Month Guide to a Business that Works” by Melinda F. Emerson and Michael C. Critelli
A good start-up book needs to have more than just motivational advice about following your dreams. After you’ve made the big step to go out on your own, the myriad lists of things to do and pay attention to can get overwhelming. This is when you’ll want to read Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months . This start-up book is written using a month-to-month timeline that includes specific action items that you can use to get your successful business off the ground. Don’t miss the companion workbook!
Read our review of “Become Your Own Boss”
“The Lean Startup: How Today’s Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses“ by Eric Ries
Author Eric Ries shares applies the principles of lean manufacturing to software startups. This start-up book contains many stories and case studies from Ries’ experience during the dot com boom as well as with dozens of other companies. It’s an ideal choice for someone who is starting a software or technology-based business and doesn’t have a lot of experience in creating and measuring processes. This book is valuable for anyone looking to drive innovation inside of their new business.
Check out “The Lean Startup” at fine booksellers.
“Escape from Cubicle Nation” by Pamela Slim
The target market for this book is clear. If you are currently employed in a corporation somewhere, silently wishing as you sat in endless meetings that you could be your own boss but are not sure how or where to get started, then get this book. If you’ve recently left the corporate world to start a business you also will enjoy it because it will reinforce your commitment and re-energize you. This book explains things that those who are used to being employes need to know about starting a business — everything from how to get health insurance, to how to get clients.
Read our review of “Escape from Cubicle Nation.”
“Flying Without a Net: Turn Fear of Change into Fuel for Success” by Thomas J. DeLong
Business owners tend to be high-achieving professionals. And with that, comes a series of personality traits that can often sabotage the very success you are looking for. Flying Without a Net isn’t a book about how to start a business. It’s a book about how you “BE”. Thomas DeLong explains how to draw strength from vulnerability. First, understand the forces that escalate anxiety in high achievers and the unproductive behaviors you turn to for relief. Then adopt practices that give you the courage to “do the right things poorly” before “doing the right things well.”
Read our review of “Flying Without a Net”
“Startup from the Ground Up: Practical Insights for Transforming an Idea into a Business” by Cynthia Kocialski
If you have a great idea for a business, but aren’t sure where to begin, then listen to Cynthia Kocialski, author of this practical book for startups. This book is for the entrepreneur who is ready to build a business and not just a job. You’ll learn how to take your product or service concept and translate it into a successful business model. Kocialsko also spends time going over how to recruit and hire a great team as well as how to seek funding.
Read our review of “Startup from the Ground Up”
“It’s Your Biz: The Complete Guide to Becoming Your Own Boss” by Susan Wilson Solovic, Ellen R. Kadin, Edie Weiner
Susan Solovic’s advice is targeted to people who have been thinking about starting a business, but haven’t yet taken the plunge. She gives honest, straight-up advice that includes not getting overly influenced by people trying to convince you to start a business or those trying to dissuade you. She brings up issues that are often ignored or difficult to deal with in the early stages of starting up and then shows you how to deal with them. One example is to build your business with the end in mind and building for being bigger rather than adding on.
Read our review of “It’s Your Biz”.
“The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything” by Guy Kawasaki
This Guy Kawasaki startup classic will not only prepare you for business ownership, but will give you insider advice on everything from raising money to motivating your staff. Even though this startup book is written from the perspective of a venture capitalist evaluating new businesses, it’s an excellent read for any small business owner or manager. Readers will gain valuable insights into bringing entrepreneurial thinking into their organizations and entrepreneurs will get time-tested ideas for bootstrapping. But it’s particularly valuable to those who are seeking investors and external financing.
Read our review of “The Art of the Start.”
“The Barefoot Executive: The Ultimate Guide for Being Your Own Boss and Achieving Financial Freedom” by Carrie Wilkerson
The author, Carrie Wilkerson, explains how life circumstances practically forced her into working from home. If you are a solo-preneur running a home-based or online business, you will find the business models with tables and charts easy-to-understand and implement. Chapters include such subjects as finding a target markets, developing marketing strategies, and brand development. Especially important are the common pitfalls listed to avoid in starting a business from home. This book is ideal for those in “soft” services, such as online marketers, professional business service providers or consultants, who plan to work from home.
Read our review of “Barefoot Executive”.
“Rework” by Jason Fried, David Heinemeier Hansson
There aren’t too many shortcuts for starting a business, but Fried and Hansson, from 37 Signals have created one. This book distills all the essentials of starting a business and condenses it into a short and comfortable format for any new business owner to read. Rework is the ideal read for small service businesses who are looking to focus more on doing business and less on the paralysis of planning. Rework takes basic business fundamentals like positioning your niche, choosing the right people, doing what works, being more efficient, etc. and spins them in an interesting way.
Read our review of “Rework”.
“The Six-Figure Second Income: How To Start and Grow A Successful Online Business Without Quitting Your Day Job” by David Lindahl and Jonathan Rozek
Most of us don’t think of ourselves as being an expert, but if you did an inventory of your life and what you know, you just might be surprised. The Six Figure Second Income is a book about how to start an online information business. Don’t worry, this isn’t a get rich quick book. It’s a roadmap for how you can harvest the expertise you have in a niche area and sell it online. This book is full of simple, easily understood, and easy-to-follow advice on how to get started with little or no cost.
Check out “The Six Figure Income” at fine booksellers.
“Million Dollar Consulting” by Alan Weiss
This is what many people call the consultant’s bible. Alan Weiss has a global firm specializing in management and organizational development. Known as “The Rock Star of Consulting,” he has written 32 books that have been translated into 9 languages. Million Dollar Consulting is a handbook for any professional who is selling themselves into the C-Suite. Weiss covers the basics of setting up your office, networking, writing proposals, pricing and most importantly, becoming an indispensible resource to your clients.
Check out “Million Dollar Consulting.”
If you’ve been dreaming of starting your own business, this list will give you the ins and outs of the process from ground up to growth. Even seasoned entrepreneurs can pick up a few pointers as they get into the process of growing their business or starting out in another industry.
Looking for other business books to read? Here at Small Business Trends you will find:
225+ business book reviews (a new one every weekend)
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Dec 10th
Deborah Shane, author and branding strategist, once coined the phrase “raise your business metabolism.” It refers to increasing the pulse of how a business responds to its environment.
Given the increased spending expected for social media campaigns – Forrester predicts $4.4 billion in social media interactive spending by 2016 — it should be no surprise that businesses are scrambling to raise their metabolism on social media.
One of the best books to help your team is The Social Organization: How to Use Social Media to Tap the Collective Genius of Your Customers and Employees. It covers the best ideas for managing employees and customers through social media. Authors Anthony Bradley and Mark P. McDonald, group vice presidents at Gartner Research, crafted a thoughtful book. I received a review copy after reading a flier for upcoming HBR publications. My take is that small businesses reliant on digital communities, whether as a business model or to augment to an existing business, will gain new insights.
Build an Agile and Balanced Organization
This book bears some resemblance to Empowered, another great examination of how organizations can refine social media usage into a collaborative experience. But The Social Organization is focused on community roadmaps and identifying potential misuses of social media, rather than examining a specific social media platform. If you are looking for a break from the Facebook vs. Google + debate, you are in luck.
Bradley and McDonald go beyond slogans to elaborate how a community is best managed. Purpose is behind the best recommendations, such as this one on page 12 that I liked:
“ ‘ But,’ we often hear, ‘communities on the public Internet seem to appear and grow spontaneously to millions of participants without an obvious, explicit purpose.’ That may be the appearance, but almost all successful social Web sites started with a defined purpose and limited scope.”
The authors present balanced assessements of the difference between a grassroots campaign that thrives and one that is launched haphazardly. Examples exhibit how embedding communities have worked, such as SHIFT at CEMEX, the cement producer. CEMEX management created a community of 18,000 users focused on the company’s strategic initiatives. Other noted examples include FICO. Prohibited from advising customers directly, FICO encouraged customers to share credit-building and credit-managing techniques among themselves.
Understand What Elements Contribute to a Roadmap for Success
The book explains how six elements – social principles, social benefits, social costs, business benefits, business costs and business impact – reveal the business justification for establishing a community. There’s also a No-Go-Grow decision model, detailing choices for community collaboration. The authors note the purpose for a roadmap:
“Without a roadmap, you can only discuss business value in general terms – by saying, for example, that collaboration will ‘make us more productive’ or ‘improve effective communications’… A roadmap of well-defined goals suggests specific goals that can be measured – for example, ‘use consultant networks to create more new business proposals.’ ”
Through quotes and examples, the authors take time to show how to “eat an elephant” – the authors’ metaphor for tackling a huge undertaking to transform an organization. But in attempting a community, reminders of value and cost abound, such as the following:
“Don’t fall into this ‘It’s cheap’ trap. Launching a social media effort often has significant cost beyond the technology…. Significant success rarely, if ever, comes cheap or easy. Social media is no different.”
The Social Organization also touches upon shifting the ownership to the community itself – how to make it grow beyond the community manager into a worthwhile engagement. The authors caution against overlooking the subtle communication signals that can stifle growth. Overauthority can result from not recognizing one’s role. There’s a note on the fundamental differences between a collaborative environment and a standard organizational structure – the de-emphasis of methodology used to accomplish a result:
“Mass collaboration is different from other ways of working. By its fundamental nature, no one can predict of prescribe the means a community will choose to accomplish its purpose–for example, around a detailed plan of action or a set of rules and procedures–because the means will emerge. Only outcomes can be managed.”
The authors’ selection of introspective questions that managers should consider as a community emerges beyond its launch is a nice addition. In fact, the chapter is useful for many small businesses that have grown beyond their initial blogging efforts and are looking for community managers.
Technical jargon is minimal, so the book maintains its manager-level tone throughout. This makes the material accessible to small businesses that operate like a big business but are one IT person or team short.
Online communities have become powerful business models, without a doubt, as well as a functional aid to spread the word and convey information. Moreover, small businesses and customers love to share and build communities that matter. The Social Organization can help ensure your community will be well managed long after its launch.
Build the Best Social Media Communities With “The Social Organization”
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Dec 10th
Deborah Shane, author and branding strategist, once coined the phrase “raise your business metabolism.” It refers to increasing the pulse of how a business responds to its environment.
Given the increased spending expected for social media campaigns – Forrester predicts $4.4 billion in social media interactive spending by 2016 — it should be no surprise that businesses are scrambling to raise their metabolism on social media.
One of the best books to help your team is The Social Organization: How to Use Social Media to Tap the Collective Genius of Your Customers and Employees. It covers the best ideas for managing employees and customers through social media. Authors Anthony Bradley and Mark P. McDonald, group vice presidents at Gartner Research, crafted a thoughtful book. I received a review copy after reading a flier for upcoming HBR publications. My take is that small businesses reliant on digital communities, whether as a business model or to augment to an existing business, will gain new insights.
Build an Agile and Balanced Organization
This book bears some resemblance to Empowered, another great examination of how organizations can refine social media usage into a collaborative experience. But The Social Organization is focused on community roadmaps and identifying potential misuses of social media, rather than examining a specific social media platform. If you are looking for a break from the Facebook vs. Google + debate, you are in luck.
Bradley and McDonald go beyond slogans to elaborate how a community is best managed. Purpose is behind the best recommendations, such as this one on page 12 that I liked:
“ ‘ But,’ we often hear, ‘communities on the public Internet seem to appear and grow spontaneously to millions of participants without an obvious, explicit purpose.’ That may be the appearance, but almost all successful social Web sites started with a defined purpose and limited scope.”
The authors present balanced assessements of the difference between a grassroots campaign that thrives and one that is launched haphazardly. Examples exhibit how embedding communities have worked, such as SHIFT at CEMEX, the cement producer. CEMEX management created a community of 18,000 users focused on the company’s strategic initiatives. Other noted examples include FICO. Prohibited from advising customers directly, FICO encouraged customers to share credit-building and credit-managing techniques among themselves.
Understand What Elements Contribute to a Roadmap for Success
The book explains how six elements – social principles, social benefits, social costs, business benefits, business costs and business impact – reveal the business justification for establishing a community. There’s also a No-Go-Grow decision model, detailing choices for community collaboration. The authors note the purpose for a roadmap:
“Without a roadmap, you can only discuss business value in general terms – by saying, for example, that collaboration will ‘make us more productive’ or ‘improve effective communications’… A roadmap of well-defined goals suggests specific goals that can be measured – for example, ‘use consultant networks to create more new business proposals.’ ”
Through quotes and examples, the authors take time to show how to “eat an elephant” – the authors’ metaphor for tackling a huge undertaking to transform an organization. But in attempting a community, reminders of value and cost abound, such as the following:
“Don’t fall into this ‘It’s cheap’ trap. Launching a social media effort often has significant cost beyond the technology…. Significant success rarely, if ever, comes cheap or easy. Social media is no different.”
The Social Organization also touches upon shifting the ownership to the community itself – how to make it grow beyond the community manager into a worthwhile engagement. The authors caution against overlooking the subtle communication signals that can stifle growth. Overauthority can result from not recognizing one’s role. There’s a note on the fundamental differences between a collaborative environment and a standard organizational structure – the de-emphasis of methodology used to accomplish a result:
“Mass collaboration is different from other ways of working. By its fundamental nature, no one can predict of prescribe the means a community will choose to accomplish its purpose–for example, around a detailed plan of action or a set of rules and procedures–because the means will emerge. Only outcomes can be managed.”
The authors’ selection of introspective questions that managers should consider as a community emerges beyond its launch is a nice addition. In fact, the chapter is useful for many small businesses that have grown beyond their initial blogging efforts and are looking for community managers.
Technical jargon is minimal, so the book maintains its manager-level tone throughout. This makes the material accessible to small businesses that operate like a big business but are one IT person or team short.
Online communities have become powerful business models, without a doubt, as well as a functional aid to spread the word and convey information. Moreover, small businesses and customers love to share and build communities that matter. The Social Organization can help ensure your community will be well managed long after its launch.
Build the Best Social Media Communities With “The Social Organization”
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Dec 10th
It’s easy to forget sometimes, but small business entrepreneurship should also be an adventure in lifestyle design. Be sure you do the work you love and live the life you want. Enjoy!
Entrepreneurship: Creating your best life ever. Creating a business should be about creating a lifestyle as well. How often have you thought about this? Does your small business support the kind of lifestyle you would like to be living? Dr. Shannon Reece
Why your business needs a blog. Blogs can benefit many kinds of business. Want proof? Check out this post about how a blog helped a local insurance company expand its market dramatically. Could this work for you? Check out how to get started. Ryan Hanley
Why you still don’t have a Web presence. Many small business people still aren’t doing much or are doing the wrong thing with the incredible potential that is the Web. Here are some possible roadblocks. Score
More than 25 resources your business needs. Check out this list of resources. Does your business utilize any of them? If so, how do you use them? If not, consider looking over the list to determine whether any of these things can help you. The Frugal Entrepreneur
Improving your Twitter game. A new tool makes adding automated messages in with your regular Twitter stream a breeze. This is set-it-and-forget-it technology you need for your online marketing. Sales Tip A Day
Change is the one constant you can expect in social media. So, if you have a social media campaign already, you can expect that to change too in 2012. How and how much are the operative questions and a few answers can be found here. PitneyBowes
A scam alert for small business owners. Whether you sell your business or begin to take an owner’s draw, you may consider investing your money, as many small business owners do. But watch out! Scam artists lurk everywhere. Don’t be taken in. Open Forum
Make your business the less risky choice. We hear a lot about marketing the remarkable product, but there’s something to be said for reliability too. Here’s one recommendation for making your business the less risky choice. The Solopreneur Life
Meeting the challenge of connection on the go. Small business owners store more and more of what they do online allowing them to access it from anywhere. The trouble is it can sometimes still be maddeningly difficult to stay connected on the road. You’re The Boss
Seven sales apps no small business should be without. Technology can be a wonderful tool, especially for small businesses. That tool can sometimes level the playing field and help small business leaders accomplish more with less. Entrepreneur
Small Business: Discovering Your Best Life Ever
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Dec 6th
Parababasi Is One Of The Best Wealth Program That Teaching You What You Need To Make Money Online. Here, I Have Explained All My Secret Weapons On Home Business. And I Also Gave A Big Commission If You Sell Parababasi
Parababasi – The Best Way To Get Rih Quick
Nov 29th
5 Ways To Make An Email Newsletter Your Best Sales Tool
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
No matter how enamored you may be with social media, email still outpunches just about every tool out there when it comes to cost effective lead conversion.
Now, done correctly, what this really means is effectively using email communication in conjunction with efforts to produce educational content, amplify content throughout social media channels and turn Twitter followers into email subscribers.
It’s integration as much as anything that makes email work, but there are a handful of things that you need to do to get the most out of the email component of the mix.
Grab Attention
It’s not enough to have an email subscribe form tucked into the sidebar of your home page. If you’ve got a great offer to put in front of your visitors you need to make it impossible to ignore, without being obnoxious.
A new breed of popups makes grabbing visitor attention and turning it into email list subscribing almost pleasing. I’ve been experimenting with a rather new WordPress plugin called Pippity.
Once installed and configured this tool will note when you have a visitor that has not been offered your email subscription and briefly take over the screen to make them an offer. The visitor still has lots of control over the screen, but this tool positions your list in a way that’s hard to ignore.
I know there are some that don’t like this tactic, but Pippity gives you so much control, including A/B testing, that you can fine tune the tool’s use to make it work for you. Like it or not, with the right offer, most people see 300-400% jumps in subscribers using this kind of approach. (One tip: Turn it off for mobile browsers, as there’s no way to make it a pleasant experience on a mobile.)
Exchange Value
Giving people a reason to subscribe is even more important than simply grabbing their attention. In order to get willing subscribers these days you must sell the value of what you have to offer and most likely exchange something like a free ebook or report that sounds too good to miss right at the point of subscription.
The act of giving an email address comes with a price these days because all of our email inboxes are jammed. Your free stuff better sound as good as most people’s paid stuff if you want to get subscribers.
Of course, this also means that you need to keep the value exchange high if you expect to keep subscribers. Turning email subscribers into paying customers is not a one-time event; it’s accomplished through a process of building trust over time.
No matter what time frame you choose to offer your email newsletter, once a week or once a month, each issue should be something that people look forward to. It’s great to have a large list, but if less than 10% actually open your emails then you won’t get much return on your efforts.
Serve Snacks
I’ve been producing a weekly email newsletter just about every week since some time in 2002 and I’ve played with different formats, different content, and different ways to present information.
A great deal of what I’ve always tried to do is evolve with overall communication trends and my best advice is that you subscribe to lots of newsletters and pay attention to how others present information and how they change their presentation over time.
Currently, my newsletter format is designed to offer several compelling article abstracts grouped into a set of topics that I believe my readers expect from me. I author about 50% of the content and then hand select a couple blog posts from blogs I read that related.
When I switched to this snack sized, scannable format, I immediately noted that my response and engagement increased dramatically.
Be Sharable
Smart marketers have always employed tools that made it easier for people to share their email newsletter with friends, but these days that means making your content easy to share in social media as well.
Most email service providers have added social media sharing options that you can embed in your content so that a reader could tweet that they just read your article.
The content itself must exist online in order to use this most effectively. Most service providers also allow you to create an online archive version of your newsletter and I recommend you use this approach to socialize your content sent via email.
Go Solo
Once your readers come to appreciate your valuable newsletter content you may earn the right to send them offers. This is something that takes a little bit of experimentation and you can certainly erode trust by sending too many offers or sending offers that just don’t make sense.
While you can mix an offer or two into your regular email newsletter format, I’ve found that sending the occasional offer for a product, program or even joint venture with a product or service you truly believe in, using what is called a solo email is the best approach.
A solo email is designed to do only one thing, deliver the story and make a case for your offer. This can be a straight out offer to buy something or even an announcement for a free online seminar where you intend to make an offer, but it must be about one thing and one thing only.
Let me repeat, sending offers is something you earn, just like earning the subscriber in the first place. You must take care that you treat this trust with respect or you will lose it. Keep the value of your offers as high as the value of your content and your readers will appreciate getting both.
My recommended list of email service providers. (Each allows you to accomplish the things mentioned in this article)
View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing