Home Wealth Project
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.
Jul 6th
A reference book for every business owner who is dealing with slow, non-paying customers, would like to improve their in house debt collection, and increase cash flow. Affiliate info: http://www.debtcollectionsteps.com/collecting-debt -affiliates.html
A Complete Step-by-Step Guide To Successful In House Debt Collection
Jun 23rd
The most comprehensive WoW Gold making guide in World Of Warcraft. Superior SEO support from author, updated keyword lists. *increased Payout* Make $38 per sale. Detailed affiliate resources http://www.wowgoldwizard.com/makewowgold/affiliate s
WoW Gold Wizard World Of Warcraft Complete Auction House Farming Guide
Jun 23rd
Completely updated and rebuilt for Cataclysm, big launch promotion from Dec. 3 to Dec. 8. Surefire video salespage converts 10% – 15% on targeted traffic.
Massive Gold Blueprint – World of Warcraft Auction House Mastery
Jun 11th
This Step by Step Guide holds your hand from tenant selection to filling out the lease. Learn the secrets the pros use and stop listing that home in a market that will never sell.
Real Estate Guide – How To Rent My House Guide!
May 16th
This is a hot new guide – That blows away the competition! Complete Video Gold Guide in Hd , amazing free content and sales page is our formula for high conversions. Our opt-in Newsletter will also capture your CB id to ensure comission.
Mayley’s Warcraft Auction House Mastery – Hd Video Gold Guide
May 2nd
Vegetable gardening is booming in this economy, and now that the Obama’s are on board, it’s going to explode! The only product in this niche so jump on early. Offering %75 commissions. Visit http://www.mywhitehousegarden.com/affiliates.html for tools.
How to Create Your Own White House Garden
Mar 31st
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
These days I can’t get through a presentation on the use of social media in marketing without someone inquiring whether they should use Facebook as the primary web presence for their business.
“I mean, it’s free and look at all these cools tools you can add to your Fan Page.”
Let me be very clear on my thinking on this: Facebook is not the house, Twitter is not the house, your social profiles spread far and wide are not the house.
Your hub, your blog, your website—that’s the house. Build the house, fix the house, decorate the house and invite the party to the house, because it’s the one thing you can own and control. It’s an asset you can grow rather than space you simply rent.
Your activity in social media is all about building a persona and brand that draws people to the house, whether you’re a plumbing contractor, consultant, or someone that wants to create a path to a better career. Build rich and engaging hubs on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter or wherever your prospects hang out, but remember you’re always going home.
Focusing too much attention on your Facebook play is like spending a bunch of time decorating and fixing up a neighbor’s house while they are traveling Europe for a year or two. It may be a nice place to throw a party or entertain, but you don’t really own it.
An issue of control
The greatest reason I take this stance is because of control. You don’t control what’s being said, contributed and added to a social network profile like Facebook. You get to rent the space, but anytime Facebook decides it wants to remodel, you have no say.
A lot of smart online folks are raving about Facebook’s recent addition of a commenting tool that integrates with blog commenting systems like WordPress. There are a couple features with this tool that, on the surface, are alluring—comments made on your blog are automatically posted to the person’s Facebook profile for example.
However, here’s what should be the deal killer for anyone considering this tool. The comments don’t sync with your WordPress database, which is another way of saying Facebook now owns your blog comments. Facebook has done nothing that demonstrates them worthy of this kind of trust.
Keep this very important distinction in mind—you’re not a Facebook customer, you’re part of the product that they sell—and that makes all the difference in how they view you.
But, fix up the house
I hope you understand that the real house isn’t the physical real estate that I’m calling your blog or website, it’s the way you interact with customers, your email correspondence, your words, your consistency, your ease of use, your responsiveness, your use of video—all the things we’ve come to collectively call your brand.
There’s little value in working hard to attract people to the house if the foundation is cracked or the chairs aren’t cozy to sit in. You can certainly blow a bunch of cash on expensive art for the walls, but the real money might be better spent on making the house as guest friendly and comfortable as possible.
It’s just different in there
Here’s the other thing about relying on social networks as a primary commerce tool. It’s not an effective pipeline for most marketing related calls to actions. So, even the gentle come by our open house will likely fall flat.
I’ve experienced countless examples of people with huge followings promoting a book launch of even free webinar with little or no response while a mention on that same person’s blog makes the cash register ring loudly.
The porch is the bridge
Since social media relationships are so easily formed and mostly casual in nature, you must go to work on building reasons for people you engage in these settings to gather on the porch first. Do that and you’ll start to form the personal engagement to move them to the party—your blog or email list.
Most people’s marketing efforts in social media fall flat for that single reason alone. No matter how engaging your efforts seem on Facebook, they’ll never match the power of your email list or loyal blog following.
It’s not enough to get followers and fans, you must create the bridge that leads them to the house and that’s a step that eludes the social media first mindset.
Facebook and Twitter have an appropriate place in the overall brand and business building efforts, but you’ll never find your social media efforts paying off unless you invest appropriately in the house.
This post originally appeared on AMEX OPENForum
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View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Sep 29th
Discuss Small Business With The White House Today
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Join me today at 2pm ET for a Tweetchat surrounding the live broadcast of OPENForum’s Q and A with Karen Mills, Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration. Small business owners posed questions for Mills and OPENForum’s Scott Roen will moderate the discussion.
In light of the recent Small Business Jobs Bill, tight lending environment, and impending changes to how small businesses deal with health care, I thought it might be interesting to hang out with some other small business owners to chat live on Twitter during the event.
Here’s how you can join
1) Bookmark this page – http://openforum.com/whitehouse – and fire it up at 1pm CT today in a browser window.
2) Login or Join Tweetchat (free tool that facilitates this kind of thing) – enter #OPENLive as the hashtag and the join the conversation
(Yes, you will need to have two browser windows open and do a bit of multi-tasking, but you can do it!)
Here are two recent articles on the Jobs Bill that I found interesting.
FYI – I contribute to OPENForum as a blogger, but this discussion is not sponsored in any way by AMEX. I just thought it might be useful.
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View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Sep 22nd
The White House should replace Summers with Bernie Marcus, if only to keep us all entertained.
National Economic Council director Larry Summers will be swapping the White House for Harvard before the end of this year. The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein explains the meaning behind Summers’ move:
Summers’s announcement comes on the heels of Peter Orszag’s and Christina Romer’s departures, but it’s unquestionably the biggest of the three. As head of the NEC, Summers ran the White House’s economic-policy process. He was also, by most accounts, Obama’s lead economic adviser. His West Wing office put him physically closer to the president than any other member of the team. His long experience in government — including a stint as Treasury secretary during the Clinton administration — gave him a level of political seasoning that the other council members didn’t have, and that Obama relied on heavily at the outset of his presidency. His reputation for brilliance gave him an edge in an administration that prizes academic accomplishment.
His departure leaves a tremendous power vacuum in the Obama administration’s economic policy team — and at the exact moment that the recovery seems to be slowing. With Orszag, Summers and Romer gone, the administration is without three of its strongest voices. That makes the choice on NEC director — the person who will have to build and manage the economic policy process as the new team gets its footing — a lot more important. With Summers, the administration got a very strong economic adviser, but not someone known for his managerial talents. Now, as a host of less senior voices vie for influence, the administration might approach the choice of his replacement differently.
NPR has more on who the White House might be considering to replace Summers:
The administration is said to be considering a woman to replace Summers, who announced Tuesday that he will leave at the end of this year. NPR’s John Ydstie said there are reports that the White House wants to replace Summers with “a business person to try repair relations with the business community, which has complained they don’t have a voice in the White House.”
“One name being circulated is Anne Mulcahy, former CEO of Xerox,” Ydstie said. Others said to be under consideration include current Xerox chief executive Ursula Burns and Laura Tyson, who held the National Economic Council director’s post during the Clinton administration.
The Christian Science Monitor describes how leaving might be good for Summers:
Rumors are flying about why Summers is leaving – or whether he is being forced to leave. His short tenure – he assumed office in January 2009 – was rife with controversy. Summers has come under fire for his ties to Wall Street, his aggressive manner in meetings, and his economic-policy arguments.
Indeed, controversy seems to follow Summers wherever he goes. During his tenure as president of Harvard, the blunt-spoken economist sparked national fury when he suggested that the underrepresentation of women in science and engineering careers may be due to a difference in aptitude.
Of course, all that controversy would make for a fascinating memoir. And the signs certainly seem to suggest that a book may be in the works.
The Economist goes as far as to call Summers’ end a sideshow:
Meanwhile this is all, to no small extent, a sideshow. With Democrats set to lose seats (and perhaps majorities) in November, the 2011 agenda will be quite limited. The bulk of the consequential economic policymaking will be done by the Federal Reserve. Mr Summers may well have calculated that his influence would be at least as great, and his headaches reduced, from an office in Cambridge and a column at the Financial Times.
Wonder what the probability is of Summers getting replaced by another Goldman Sachs alumnus.
View full post on Business Pundit
Sep 7th
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First Lady launches the first in a series of dance parties in the East Room of the White House as the Democrats get in line for the whole kabuki: The… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!