Sunday, November 4, 2012

Forum Marketing And Advertising Can Be ... - A Home Business


forum marketing method

People have been turning to the Internet for many years so as to make more money or replace their income, and the reason being,? is that this can be extremely effective. With regards to the most popular choice for making cash online you are going to see that many Web Marketers will choose affiliate marketing as a result of the simplicity of getting started with this kind of advertising and marketing. Needless to say with regards to advertising and marketing your affiliate links loads of men and women use forum marketing in an effort to create sales, and this can be effective. Something you might not have thought of in relation to advertising a link is by adding your link to your own personal forum that you generate.

While you are operating your own forum I am certain you already comprehend the fact that you can promote as much as you would like, since this is your forum to do with what you wish. I?m sure you understand a large number of forums that are operated by other individuals won?t allow men and women to add advertising and marketing links for affiliate pages. If you decide not to allow your members to advertise their affiliate links you?ll be the only person with targeted products being promoted in an affiliate manner. This also means that anytime any individual buys any sort of affiliate products which they find on your web page you?re going to be earning a commission for this item.

Obviously there?s another way that you could end up earning money from your forum, and that is by simply adding a program such as AdSense or some other type of pay per click program. This is actually a set and forget technique of earning an income as you will not need to do anything except include these advertisements on your web page and you get paid each time someone clicks on the ad. You also have the opportunity of selling marketing and advertising space to other Internet Marketers who have products in your niche that they?d like to advertise on your forum.

Another thing you will be able to do is to promote products directly in a forum post, and this can be very effective mainly because many people will browse the posts that are there. While affiliate marketing is very profitable, some people do not use this kind of marketing and advertising, but by selling marketing and advertising space and collecting cash from clicks on google AdSense you will still have the ability to generate a substantial income.

When it comes to creating the forum itself you?re going to find that there?s a lot of different scripts available today that will allow you to do this quite easily. What this means is that even if you are a complete newcomer to the Internet you will have the ability of installing a forum on your site very easily. If you?re new to the Internet and looking to get going in Internet Marketing and advertising, or if you are just looking for ways to make more money in your Internet Advertising ventures, setting up your own forum could be? one? of the? best things? you could? ever do.

Source: http://www.easy-home-business.com/blog/forum-marketing-and-advertising-can-be-effective-for-making-money-but-having-your-own-forum-is-more-effective/

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

[WATCH]: Truth About Staying Ripped and Continually Getting ...

Rating: 4

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Source: http://muscle-building-tips.vrg-healthfitness.com/2012/11/03/watch-truth-about-staying-ripped-and-continually-getting-stronger-and-building-muscle-4/

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Family Left Without a Home after Fire | WHNT.com ? Huntsville ...

Piney Chapel Fire

LIMESTONE COUNTY, Ala. (WHNT) ? A Limestone County family is lucky to be alive after a fire rips through their home. Fire crews were called to?Kings Mobile Home Park on Airfield Road in Piney Chapel around 10:30 p.m. Thursday. When they arrived, firefighters found a mobile home engulfed in flames. Thankfully, a neighbor saw the fire and got the couple living there out before the flames took over. Firefighters battled the blaze for a couple hours before getting it under control. The home and everything inside is destroyed. Only a frame remains standing. No one was injured in the fire.

Source: http://whnt.com/2012/11/02/family-left-without-a-home-after-fire/

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Sandy's political impact: Citing climate change, Bloomberg endorses Obama (+video)

Independent New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has long listed global warming as one of his top concerns. He says hurricane Sandy brought the presidential election 'into sharp relief.'

By Ron Scherer,?Staff writer / November 1, 2012

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks to the media during a news conference in New York in this October 26 photo. Bloomberg on Thursday endorsed President Obama for a second term, citing the importance of Obama's record on climate change, particularly in the aftermath of the devastating blow dealt to the New York area by superstorm Sandy.

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

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Billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg is not afraid of supporting political candidates of either party ? as long as they support the issues he cares about.

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'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // --> New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg backed President Barack Obama on Thursday, saying the incumbent Democrat will bring critically needed leadership to fight climate change after the devastation wrought by Hurricane Sandy.

On Thursday, in an on-line opinion piece on Bloomberg.com, the Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-Independent said hurricane Sandy had ?brought the stakes of Tuesday?s presidential election into sharp relief.?

Exactly what does that mean?

In a few words, it means he is endorsing President Obama.

Cynics might say Mayor Bloomberg is thinking of who can get him the most aid to fix up New York after the devastation from the storm. Certainly New York will be asking Mr. Obama or whoever is president to pay a tab that will certainly stretch into the billions and billions of dollars.

But, that?s not what Bloomberg says made him decide to support Obama.

One of Bloomberg?s major concerns as mayor for the past 11 years has been global warming. He?s tried to lower New York City?s carbon footprint by planting more trees, getting more people to ride bikes, and looking for alternative energy supplies for one of the nation?s largest consumers of power.

From Bloomberg?s viewpoint, Obama has marched in the same direction by setting higher fuel-efficiency standards for cars and trucks, tightening controls on mercury emissions, and closing the dirtiest coal plants.

There was a time when Republican Mitt Romney was just as concerned about global warming, says Bloomberg. As governor of Massachusetts, Romney signed into law a regional cap-and-trade plan designed to reduce carbon emissions to 10 percent below 1990 levels.

Mr. Romney says he is still worried about the environment. But, as far as Bloomberg is concerned, he has ?reversed course,? abandoning the cap-and-trade program he once supported.

Bloomberg says that?s not his only problem with Romney. He disagrees with the governor?s current views on abortion, Obamacare, and marriage equality for lesbians and gay men.

In another example of Bloomberg supporting people who agree with him, he has endorsed Sen. Scott Brown (R) of Massachusetts in his battle against Democrat Elizabeth Warren because of his stance on gun control. Senator Brown opposes a National Rifle Association bill that would have made it legal for someone who lives in a state with weak gun control laws to carry a concealed weapon in states like New York that have tough laws.

This is not to say Bloomberg is overjoyed with Obama.

?As president he devoted little time and effort to developing and sustaining a coalition of centrists, which doomed hope for any real progress on illegal guns, immigration, tax reform, job creation and deficit reduction,? he writes. ?And, rather than uniting the country around a message of shared sacrifice, he engaged in partisan attacks and has embraced a divisive populist agenda focused more on redistributing income than creating it.?

In fact, Bloomberg says he could have voted for the 1994 and 2003 versions of Romney because ?I have found the past four years to be, in a word, disappointing.?

Disappointment aside, he?s voting for Obama.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_TueQBPTyzM/Sandy-s-political-impact-Citing-climate-change-Bloomberg-endorses-Obama-video

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Mr. Burns Endorses Mitt Romney for President

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Stop Procrastinating by "Clearing to Neutral"

By Thanh Pham

We often procrastinate because there is this one hidden thing holding us back. It is this?one thing?that makes you procrastinate and most people are not even aware what this is, but if you eliminate it you can say goodbye to?procrastination?forever.

Krakow's mini-boom in IT attracts Polish and foreign techies

One of the clearest illustrations of ?brain gain? in Poland comes from the southern city of Krakow which is experiencing a mini-boom in information technology ? at a time when much of Europe?s tech scene is in a windless ocean.

The global reverse migration ? turning brain drain to brain gain in many countries ? is obvious here: Some 70 IT and multinational firms have opened, employing 20,000 skilled workers ? Poles and foreigners alike. Cisco opened in May, and its 90-person staff will soon climb to 500. Google moved an R&D office here. State Street, Capgemeni and Lufthansa, Shell, Brown Brothers, and Philip Morris, to name a few, are all present.

The hopeful call Krakow a small Silicon Valley of Central Europe. And the buzz here is a magnet for brain gain: It?s a small oasis of Polish bohemia with 14 colleges and universities, and a bar-arts-and-film scene, and ? not destroyed like Warsaw in World War II ? it retains its Austro-Hungarian architectural charm.

Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz.

In reporting for The Christian Science Monitor?s ?brain gain? project, I met a cluster of young and bright reverse migrants here in a translucent glass-and-steel tech-park. Recent-hires at the British firm Element14, an online interface provider for electronic parts sales, they are part of the vanguard of Poland?s brain gain. Their profiles tell as much about this city?s bright future as the vibrant draw it is at the moment.

Jaroslaw Grabon, a software engineer, was born in Poland, but his family moved to Germany. Now, in an admittedly ?wrenching? decision, he?s come back to Krakow, leaving a flat and friends in Munich. He says he got a call from a Krakow headhunter for Shell, and decided, out of curiosity and interest in the country, to move back.

?I felt better in Poland than Germany in ways I can?t easily explain, but it was a big decision. I left the whole family. I sent out 120 CVs and got 80 positive replies. Gdansk was a possibility but I decided on Shell. Then moved here [to Element14].?

Alessandro Lombardi couldn?t get work in his native Italy ? but, here, he?s wired-in.

Tomasz Wasilewski worked in Warsaw for a Silicon Valley firm that employed many people like him, offspring of ?migr? Poles who went abroad earlier. But he was sold on Krakow and moved here, partly because of the Krakow buzz and partly for the experience.

A young Finnish woman, Marianne Kuukkanen, arrived this year and says that the city?s multicultural environment requires looking ?more closely at oneself, and I think this has made me more efficient and aware at my job and with others.?

They report that the multicultural work environment, the new business models being employed, and the need to stay current in tech developments pipe a new and different mentality into Krakow.

?Everyone who is here can move somewhere else if they want, to any other site. We are not bound by nationality. Poles who return have a much bigger influence than elsewhere and they know this. It is a factor in their choice. Because it is a smaller setting,? says Wojciech Burkot, of his hometown, Krakow. He, himself, is a part of the Krakow buzz as head of Google?s R&D unit here, a reverse IT migrant who came home after years abroad to wrestling with increasing Google?s search engine speed.

The Krakow setting is key to drawing ?people smarter than us that [keep] the company growing ? and improving, says Mr. Burkot.

?It?s all city, city, city,? says Ramon Tancinco, head of strategy and business development in central Europe for Cisco. He spent two years on a team deciding where to locate the office, and landed on Krakow. ?We look at regions not countries, and Krakow is at an East-West corridor and in a stable EU country. When you bake in the student population, that?s very strong.?

Indeed, the area is low income and high education ? some 400,000 students live in the corridor between Krakow and Wroclaw ? giving it a dense population base that overseas firms call ?sustainable advantage.? And the city?s old square with its 11th and 14th century churches and charms and endless cafes are not lost on firms. For example, Kazimierz, the old Jewish quarter made famous in the film Schindler?s List, is rid of its postwar thuggish character and is a cultural center.

The city?s international draw, too, is key, says Elaine Barnes, a senior manager at Element14. ?We need 23 languages in one city. English is the business language, German is No. 2. We looked at Hungary and Finland, Sweden, and Poland. The Czech Republic. We couldn?t find the breadth of language anywhere else [but Krakow].?

The ferment of brain gain among European youth and IT wonks and mavens may be in the air. Yet ? like visiting any school classroom to ?see? education ? it is often difficult to instantly quantify something as amorphous as ?brain gain? taking place.

Google?s Burkot suggests that brain gain is ?incremental in Poland.?

His colleague Tancinco thinks he sees it, though. ?The empirical evidence of gain in Krakow is that when I came here four years ago there was one venture capitalist. Now there are six or seven. That is a barometer. Venture capitalists need to see a talent pool of emerging firms with good ideas or they won?t come. You need to see an incubation, a pool of start ups to be the next ?whatever.? ?

And, another plus for Krakow?s continued boom is that hasn?t recorded the corporate horror stories heard nearby out of Ukraine or Russia. There is less mafia and corruption. ?Go east of here and it is a wilder ride,? says one analyst.

?There is no support for gangsters here, I?ve never been shaken down or been told to give a bribe,? says Richard Lucas, a British citizen who owns 11 companies in Krakow and has been here 21 years.

One bit of learning gained by Mr. Wasilewski, who moved from Warsaw (Poles may seek work overseas but are often reticent to move internally) to Krakow, is about practice. He assumed there was a set of general rules applicable everywhere in the industry he works. But he found out differently.

The US firm he worked for in Warsaw stressed getting jobs done simply. ?They wanted us not to make work complicated by adding structure, but to be efficient and nice to the customer. The focus on being direct and pleasant was a big thing to learn,? he says. ?That was new."

?But they have a different way of resolving client problems than the European firm I work with now. The Americans wanted me to be a buffer, to dissolve problems. But this European firm wants client problems reported directly to the front line. They say, ?put us in direct touch, don?t filter.??

Tancinco from Cisco suggests that Krakow?s advantages are growing geometrically as hires from abroad accumulate here. The bulk of new hires ?spent time overseas,? he says, and they add breadth to local know-how and an intangible element that allows them to be effective in a multinational company.

?With a broader perspective, you learn to work around problems, not to take ?no,? or to treat petty issues as final ? [whereas] working around problems is more difficult if you don?t have a broader view.?

He adds a caveat: ?What I haven?t yet seen are professors starting companies. At MIT, everyone has a side business. In Poland, it is still either-or, business or classroom. Silicon Valley is all about ?And.?"

?But this may change. We?ll see.?

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/krakows-mini-boom-attracts-polish-foreign-techies-164100783.html

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