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    Effective Ways To Drive Laser Targeted Traffic To Your Website: Part 1
    Traffic generation is one of the key ingredients of a successful web business. If you generate enough traffic to your website, you will have more customers and more customers will bring more profit. In other words, traffic is money.Traffic is all about profit. If you want to establish a solid business you need to have a work plan. You work plan should take into consideration preparing high quality product with a professionally designed website. But having good product with a professionally designed website by itself is not sufficient. Successful business plan should incorporate researching and finding best ways to promote your products or services.There are several ways to promote your products or services on the Internet. The result of each traffic source varies from one source to the other.It is important to focus on web traffic sources that bring visitors that are looking for your products or services. Traffic sources that bring visitors that are looking for your products
    serious and dedicated. This program is important, and spirited in the way things used to be when people were really neighbors to each other. That perspective is no longer old-fashioned – and we had better wake up to the reality – it has become a survival necessity.

    When a massive disaster happens and thousands of people are injured, NO city has thousands of ambulances, or thousands of empty hospital beds. And even worse, virtually ALL of the hospitals in the East Bay are sitting within one mile or less from an active earthquake fault line. Even if there are roads open, and even if you could get to a hospital, it might be destroyed, or shut down and evacuated. If nobody can help us for 24 hours or more, as they realistically predict, how can we survive? We will have to help ourselves and each other. Do you know how? Can you spare a few hours a week to learn?

    Free or very inexpensive classes have been available in West Coast cities for 15 years, and other courses are available through many employers and corporations. Have some folks in your neighborhood or at your job taken them? Does anybody know what to do? Does anybody care?

    A final thought: Let a start be made.
    It’s not like it’s something really hard and difficult to do. Almost anyone can do it. You can do it too, for yourself, for your family. Your kid's school can do it. If you have any kind of neighborhood group, softball team, bridge club, poker night, bowling team, park or

    Website Promotion Using Your Email Signature
    One of the really great ways to promote your website is by using your email signature function. This often-overlooked technique is a handy way to include your website address in every email you send out whether business or personal and thereby keeping your URL in front of people.The nice thing about using the email signature is that an email scrubber will not see the signature as a traditional “link” associated with and contained in junk mail. The results are that you can slip your URL in under the radar, more or less.This is especially helpful for three specific reasons:1. To promote your website URL link as mentioned above.2. To provide a link to an online resume—many Internet providers today offer free personal websites. You can build a dedicated resume-site and use the site link in the email signature. In this way, when you send out job query/ email cover letters, just tell the potential employer to click the link to your resume page appearing in the si
    "The Bay Area has the highest concentration of earthquake faults in the world." -Bill Lettis, earth sciences consultant.

    What happened in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast of the United States was not only the worst natural disaster in the history of this country, but also the loudest wake-up call ever experienced by our comfortable over-confident society. We never dreamed something of such horror and magnitude could ever happen here - even though all the TV meteorologists told us it might, then days before the storm hit land, told us it would.

    “The bad news: The chances of the Big One happening in the next 30 years are about 90%, and the odds are that it will be in our own back yard.” –reporter Chris Treadway, Montclarion January 1999.

    Along the West Coast from Canada to Mexico, we still think the Big Quake won’t really happen, even though we’ve been told repeatedly by every geologist and every emergency response and emergency management agency that it will. The odds of Katrina happening were extremely small - less than a 1% probability. The odds of the Big Quake have been reported conservatively at about 70% probability, and by the specialists in the trenches, 90%.

    In the next 30 years, by the way, doesn’t mean after 30 more years (hello) it means any time now, within this 30 year span. It could be today, or tonight while you sleep. How prepared are we? There is no question of IF it will happen; the only question is WHEN, and Katrina surely is telling us we’d best not wait till the last minute to do what we can to prepare. That will be way too late..

    Here are a few things we DO know:
    1. The areas of destruction probably will be vast, and potentially spread over a much larger area than Katrina.

    2. Those areas will look a lot like New Orleans did, except possibly there will be less flooding and more bleeding.

    3. There will be thousands more physical and trauma injuries, as structures collapse on people, and buildings and cars trap or crush people, and torn power lines cause electrocutions and fires.

    4. The Big Quake is likely to be worse than Katrina. I won’t say more; you already know this.

    5. All city, county, and state Disaster Planning and Response agencies have been telling us since 1989, very clearly and specifically, that every citizen should expect and be prepared to manage on our own without outside help for at least 24 hours to three days immediately following a major disaster of any kind.

    6. An abundance of information and detailed instructions have been published and widely distributed for free, everywhere on the West Coast. Have you read some of it?

    7. The State of California (and I believe Oregon and Washington as well) has mandated every county and city to provide disaster preparedness and civilian disaster response training for their citizens. Do you know where to get it? The majority of these training programs are based on a similar framework called CERT (Citizens Emergency Response Training) or NERT (neighborhood Emergency Response Training) and the training is provided through either Police or Fire Departments. Oakland California has its own program called CORE (Citizens of Oakland Respond to Emergency) which contains most of the elements of CERT.

    Common weak points in most citizen training programs have been:
    1. They often have inadequate staffing and funding (most are free to the citizens) and
    2. Most of them use some type of (often sketchy) version of "Standard" First Aid. (See the article “Why Isn’t Standard First Aid Good Enough”)

    "One thing we know about the Bay Area is that there is no escape – we all live near a fault-line." -Bill Lettis, earth sciences consultant.

    The evolution of Oakland's CORE program began in 1989 with the Loma Prieta Earthquake and the collapse of a mile of freeway at the Cypress Overpass. In that catastrophic event, the responsibility for commanding the massive response and rescue operations fell upon Battalion Chief Manny Navarro. He was surprised to see, firsthand, that the greatest number of rescues were not made by the million-dollar earth-moving equipment, not the fire engines or the ambulances or the sonar devices. The greatest number of rescues were made by the people who lived near the freeway, in the neighborhood.

    Why? Because in the first crucial moments, they were already there. They rushed to help, climbing up on dangerously unstable broken structures to pull people out and hand them down to others waiting to receive them below, and carry them to a safe area. With no equipment and no training, they responded as human beings and did whatever they could. In his own words, Chief Navarro was professionally and personally “stunned.” Later he said (and I paraphrase, but this is essentially accurate) “I realized we’re spending the most money for the fewest results. It was obvious – We should be training the people in the neighborhood.” And that became a priority of the Oakland Fire Department, and would ultimately result in legislative mandate at the state level..

    Now, in theory at least, every citizen in California can receive Disaster Preparedness and Disaster Response Training. However there are some shortfalls. Over the years, municipal OES (Offices of Emergency Services, which usually direct the citizen training, overseen by Fire or Police Department administration) have had repeated staffing and funding cuts. They’ve been cut, trimmed, and cut some more. (You know the drill.) And sometimes, scheduled citizen’s courses can be canceled, delayed, or otherwise trumped by other (higher priority?) activities of the agencies that oversee them. Perhaps that's what happened to the Disaster First Aid all-day training course and Hands-On Workshops.

    The CORE volunteers and instructors are serious and dedicated. This program is important, and spirited in the way things used to be when people were really neighbors to each other. That perspective is no longer old-fashioned – and we had better wake up to the reality – it has become a survival necessity.

    When a massive disaster happens and thousands of people are injured, NO city has thousands of ambulances, or thousands of empty hospital beds. And even worse, virtually ALL of the hospitals in the East Bay are sitting within one mile or less from an active earthquake fault line. Even if there are roads open, and even if you could get to a hospital, it might be destroyed, or shut down and evacuated. If nobody can help us for 24 hours or more, as they realistically predict, how can we survive? We will have to help ourselves and each other. Do you know how? Can you spare a few hours a week to learn?

    Free or very inexpensive classes have been available in West Coast cities for 15 years, and other courses are available through many employers and corporations. Have some folks in your neighborhood or at your job taken them? Does anybody know what to do? Does anybody care?

    A final thought: Let a start be made.
    It’s not like it’s something really hard and difficult to do. Almost anyone can do it. You can do it too, for yourself, for your family. Your kid's school can do it. If you have any kind of neighborhood group, softball team, bridge club, poker night, bowling team, park or c

    RFID Labels
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    it will happen; the only question is WHEN, and Katrina surely is telling us we’d best not wait till the last minute to do what we can to prepare. That will be way too late..

    Here are a few things we DO know:
    1. The areas of destruction probably will be vast, and potentially spread over a much larger area than Katrina.

    2. Those areas will look a lot like New Orleans did, except possibly there will be less flooding and more bleeding.

    3. There will be thousands more physical and trauma injuries, as structures collapse on people, and buildings and cars trap or crush people, and torn power lines cause electrocutions and fires.

    4. The Big Quake is likely to be worse than Katrina. I won’t say more; you already know this.

    5. All city, county, and state Disaster Planning and Response agencies have been telling us since 1989, very clearly and specifically, that every citizen should expect and be prepared to manage on our own without outside help for at least 24 hours to three days immediately following a major disaster of any kind.

    6. An abundance of information and detailed instructions have been published and widely distributed for free, everywhere on the West Coast. Have you read some of it?

    7. The State of California (and I believe Oregon and Washington as well) has mandated every county and city to provide disaster preparedness and civilian disaster response training for their citizens. Do you know where to get it? The majority of these training programs are based on a similar framework called CERT (Citizens Emergency Response Training) or NERT (neighborhood Emergency Response Training) and the training is provided through either Police or Fire Departments. Oakland California has its own program called CORE (Citizens of Oakland Respond to Emergency) which contains most of the elements of CERT.

    Common weak points in most citizen training programs have been:
    1. They often have inadequate staffing and funding (most are free to the citizens) and
    2. Most of them use some type of (often sketchy) version of "Standard" First Aid. (See the article “Why Isn’t Standard First Aid Good Enough”)

    "One thing we know about the Bay Area is that there is no escape – we all live near a fault-line." -Bill Lettis, earth sciences consultant.

    The evolution of Oakland's CORE program began in 1989 with the Loma Prieta Earthquake and the collapse of a mile of freeway at the Cypress Overpass. In that catastrophic event, the responsibility for commanding the massive response and rescue operations fell upon Battalion Chief Manny Navarro. He was surprised to see, firsthand, that the greatest number of rescues were not made by the million-dollar earth-moving equipment, not the fire engines or the ambulances or the sonar devices. The greatest number of rescues were made by the people who lived near the freeway, in the neighborhood.

    Why? Because in the first crucial moments, they were already there. They rushed to help, climbing up on dangerously unstable broken structures to pull people out and hand them down to others waiting to receive them below, and carry them to a safe area. With no equipment and no training, they responded as human beings and did whatever they could. In his own words, Chief Navarro was professionally and personally “stunned.” Later he said (and I paraphrase, but this is essentially accurate) “I realized we’re spending the most money for the fewest results. It was obvious – We should be training the people in the neighborhood.” And that became a priority of the Oakland Fire Department, and would ultimately result in legislative mandate at the state level..

    Now, in theory at least, every citizen in California can receive Disaster Preparedness and Disaster Response Training. However there are some shortfalls. Over the years, municipal OES (Offices of Emergency Services, which usually direct the citizen training, overseen by Fire or Police Department administration) have had repeated staffing and funding cuts. They’ve been cut, trimmed, and cut some more. (You know the drill.) And sometimes, scheduled citizen’s courses can be canceled, delayed, or otherwise trumped by other (higher priority?) activities of the agencies that oversee them. Perhaps that's what happened to the Disaster First Aid all-day training course and Hands-On Workshops.

    The CORE volunteers and instructors are serious and dedicated. This program is important, and spirited in the way things used to be when people were really neighbors to each other. That perspective is no longer old-fashioned – and we had better wake up to the reality – it has become a survival necessity.

    When a massive disaster happens and thousands of people are injured, NO city has thousands of ambulances, or thousands of empty hospital beds. And even worse, virtually ALL of the hospitals in the East Bay are sitting within one mile or less from an active earthquake fault line. Even if there are roads open, and even if you could get to a hospital, it might be destroyed, or shut down and evacuated. If nobody can help us for 24 hours or more, as they realistically predict, how can we survive? We will have to help ourselves and each other. Do you know how? Can you spare a few hours a week to learn?

    Free or very inexpensive classes have been available in West Coast cities for 15 years, and other courses are available through many employers and corporations. Have some folks in your neighborhood or at your job taken them? Does anybody know what to do? Does anybody care?

    A final thought: Let a start be made.
    It’s not like it’s something really hard and difficult to do. Almost anyone can do it. You can do it too, for yourself, for your family. Your kid's school can do it. If you have any kind of neighborhood group, softball team, bridge club, poker night, bowling team, park or

    Traffic Building - Classified Ads V
    So in all cases, experiment with classified ads first, then do not advertise again in the ones that do not show a reasonable return. The ones that produce are worth trying a solo ad in. If the solo ad does not pull as many more subscribers than the difference in the cost, then you might consider dropping back to the classified ad.Of course, you also have to take into account that your full-size solo ad might not be as well-written or targeted as the classified, so it may not all be the fault of the ezine.Generally, you should use the classified ads to test your headlines and content, and then you can simply expand that in the solo ad.Another idea for testing is PPC. Although I am by no means suggesting PPC for lead generation at this point (I have written another section on PPC), it can be useful for headline and copy testing. Basically what you do is set up small campaigns, bid on a few of your popular keywords, and rotate several different headlines and body cop
    majority of these training programs are based on a similar framework called CERT (Citizens Emergency Response Training) or NERT (neighborhood Emergency Response Training) and the training is provided through either Police or Fire Departments. Oakland California has its own program called CORE (Citizens of Oakland Respond to Emergency) which contains most of the elements of CERT.

    Common weak points in most citizen training programs have been:
    1. They often have inadequate staffing and funding (most are free to the citizens) and
    2. Most of them use some type of (often sketchy) version of "Standard" First Aid. (See the article “Why Isn’t Standard First Aid Good Enough”)

    "One thing we know about the Bay Area is that there is no escape – we all live near a fault-line." -Bill Lettis, earth sciences consultant.

    The evolution of Oakland's CORE program began in 1989 with the Loma Prieta Earthquake and the collapse of a mile of freeway at the Cypress Overpass. In that catastrophic event, the responsibility for commanding the massive response and rescue operations fell upon Battalion Chief Manny Navarro. He was surprised to see, firsthand, that the greatest number of rescues were not made by the million-dollar earth-moving equipment, not the fire engines or the ambulances or the sonar devices. The greatest number of rescues were made by the people who lived near the freeway, in the neighborhood.

    Why? Because in the first crucial moments, they were already there. They rushed to help, climbing up on dangerously unstable broken structures to pull people out and hand them down to others waiting to receive them below, and carry them to a safe area. With no equipment and no training, they responded as human beings and did whatever they could. In his own words, Chief Navarro was professionally and personally “stunned.” Later he said (and I paraphrase, but this is essentially accurate) “I realized we’re spending the most money for the fewest results. It was obvious – We should be training the people in the neighborhood.” And that became a priority of the Oakland Fire Department, and would ultimately result in legislative mandate at the state level..

    Now, in theory at least, every citizen in California can receive Disaster Preparedness and Disaster Response Training. However there are some shortfalls. Over the years, municipal OES (Offices of Emergency Services, which usually direct the citizen training, overseen by Fire or Police Department administration) have had repeated staffing and funding cuts. They’ve been cut, trimmed, and cut some more. (You know the drill.) And sometimes, scheduled citizen’s courses can be canceled, delayed, or otherwise trumped by other (higher priority?) activities of the agencies that oversee them. Perhaps that's what happened to the Disaster First Aid all-day training course and Hands-On Workshops.

    The CORE volunteers and instructors are serious and dedicated. This program is important, and spirited in the way things used to be when people were really neighbors to each other. That perspective is no longer old-fashioned – and we had better wake up to the reality – it has become a survival necessity.

    When a massive disaster happens and thousands of people are injured, NO city has thousands of ambulances, or thousands of empty hospital beds. And even worse, virtually ALL of the hospitals in the East Bay are sitting within one mile or less from an active earthquake fault line. Even if there are roads open, and even if you could get to a hospital, it might be destroyed, or shut down and evacuated. If nobody can help us for 24 hours or more, as they realistically predict, how can we survive? We will have to help ourselves and each other. Do you know how? Can you spare a few hours a week to learn?

    Free or very inexpensive classes have been available in West Coast cities for 15 years, and other courses are available through many employers and corporations. Have some folks in your neighborhood or at your job taken them? Does anybody know what to do? Does anybody care?

    A final thought: Let a start be made.
    It’s not like it’s something really hard and difficult to do. Almost anyone can do it. You can do it too, for yourself, for your family. Your kid's school can do it. If you have any kind of neighborhood group, softball team, bridge club, poker night, bowling team, park or

    The Little Known Secrets to SAT and ACT Success
    Preparing for standardized tests can be a daunting task, and many high school students begin their SAT or ACT preparation process with the belief that it will be a long and arduous journey. Oftentimes, students begin this journey by enrolling in a SAT or ACT preparation program, and most students undertake this first step thinking that if they can just master the math, English, writing, and in the case of the ACT, science concepts, they will ace the test. Unfortunately, this is not always the case. Success on these exams is a measure of a multitude of factors, including concept knowledge, preparation, stress and time management, as well as test-taking ability. In addition to these factors, family dynamics, self-esteem, motivation, and anxiety can play a large role in how well a student performs.The good news is that there are a number of steps that can be taken that will make this journey a little less arduous, a little more rewarding and a lot more successful. This article wil
    first crucial moments, they were already there. They rushed to help, climbing up on dangerously unstable broken structures to pull people out and hand them down to others waiting to receive them below, and carry them to a safe area. With no equipment and no training, they responded as human beings and did whatever they could. In his own words, Chief Navarro was professionally and personally “stunned.” Later he said (and I paraphrase, but this is essentially accurate) “I realized we’re spending the most money for the fewest results. It was obvious – We should be training the people in the neighborhood.” And that became a priority of the Oakland Fire Department, and would ultimately result in legislative mandate at the state level..

    Now, in theory at least, every citizen in California can receive Disaster Preparedness and Disaster Response Training. However there are some shortfalls. Over the years, municipal OES (Offices of Emergency Services, which usually direct the citizen training, overseen by Fire or Police Department administration) have had repeated staffing and funding cuts. They’ve been cut, trimmed, and cut some more. (You know the drill.) And sometimes, scheduled citizen’s courses can be canceled, delayed, or otherwise trumped by other (higher priority?) activities of the agencies that oversee them. Perhaps that's what happened to the Disaster First Aid all-day training course and Hands-On Workshops.

    The CORE volunteers and instructors are serious and dedicated. This program is important, and spirited in the way things used to be when people were really neighbors to each other. That perspective is no longer old-fashioned – and we had better wake up to the reality – it has become a survival necessity.

    When a massive disaster happens and thousands of people are injured, NO city has thousands of ambulances, or thousands of empty hospital beds. And even worse, virtually ALL of the hospitals in the East Bay are sitting within one mile or less from an active earthquake fault line. Even if there are roads open, and even if you could get to a hospital, it might be destroyed, or shut down and evacuated. If nobody can help us for 24 hours or more, as they realistically predict, how can we survive? We will have to help ourselves and each other. Do you know how? Can you spare a few hours a week to learn?

    Free or very inexpensive classes have been available in West Coast cities for 15 years, and other courses are available through many employers and corporations. Have some folks in your neighborhood or at your job taken them? Does anybody know what to do? Does anybody care?

    A final thought: Let a start be made.
    It’s not like it’s something really hard and difficult to do. Almost anyone can do it. You can do it too, for yourself, for your family. Your kid's school can do it. If you have any kind of neighborhood group, softball team, bridge club, poker night, bowling team, park or

    Leather - All About Chaps
    If you fancy a Wild West session, you can't beat a pair of chaps for sex appeal. Women and men look great in these - just look at Victoria and David Beckham in their matching cowboy and cowgirl outfits. Of course, you may prefer to wear these chaps with a little less underneath in the privacy of your own home.What’s sexy about chaps? The daredevil spirit, the rough and ready attitude of a cowboy – don’t be afraid to get down and dirty with a cowboy session! You’ll find wearing them gives you a natural swagger, especially if you team them with a good pair of boots.Cowboys used to wear chaps over their denim to protect their legs from rope burns or thorns. Which is why they go so well together with a little bondage gear – how about lassoing your lover (gently!) and roping them down? A leather whip is a good way to show them who’s boss – just be careful how you crack that baby! If you’re into power play, then let one partner act like a headstrong wild horse, while the other t
    serious and dedicated. This program is important, and spirited in the way things used to be when people were really neighbors to each other. That perspective is no longer old-fashioned – and we had better wake up to the reality – it has become a survival necessity.

    When a massive disaster happens and thousands of people are injured, NO city has thousands of ambulances, or thousands of empty hospital beds. And even worse, virtually ALL of the hospitals in the East Bay are sitting within one mile or less from an active earthquake fault line. Even if there are roads open, and even if you could get to a hospital, it might be destroyed, or shut down and evacuated. If nobody can help us for 24 hours or more, as they realistically predict, how can we survive? We will have to help ourselves and each other. Do you know how? Can you spare a few hours a week to learn?

    Free or very inexpensive classes have been available in West Coast cities for 15 years, and other courses are available through many employers and corporations. Have some folks in your neighborhood or at your job taken them? Does anybody know what to do? Does anybody care?

    A final thought: Let a start be made.
    It’s not like it’s something really hard and difficult to do. Almost anyone can do it. You can do it too, for yourself, for your family. Your kid's school can do it. If you have any kind of neighborhood group, softball team, bridge club, poker night, bowling team, park or community center, you've already got the groundwork laid to start a neighbrhood CERT group right there.

    Many of the countless people who died in the Katrina Hurricane and flood were not initially hurt by the storm’s destruction. Hundreds died because they did not have drinking water. The human body can go about 3 days without water and then, pretty much, it dries up and dies. Everyone knew the storm was coming. Anyone could have stored some clean water while they still had it, in plastic bottles or whatever. But they didn’t.

    What are you going to do when 911 can’t come?

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