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    Top 30 Aroma Chemicals Used In Making Fragrances
    Top 30 aroma chemicals used in making fragrances Based on about 800 popular fragrance formulations, which are used in Soaps, Detergents, Toiletries, House-hold products, Incense sticks, Attars, etc, we are able to provide a tentative data of global consumption of synthetic chemicals used in making fragrances.The market data for Attars& Agarbatti is still not clear. The market data for the fragrance con
    of all ages from this method is TRAFFIC! Five of the ten topmost and fastest growing websites in the world are free and mass content-driven, according to the latest Neilsen ratings. Many of us publishers seem to be shy of mass original content. We seem to forget that the internet and the search engines were built to LOVE innumerable mass of original content. Google is not crazy when it agreed to pay $900 million in 3 years 2007-2010, for the 46-million strong MySpace monthly traffic of unique visitors.

    I have studied some of the most successful publishing sites, including our ezinearticles.com, for some quality time and m

    Video - The New Way to Market Your Business
    Creating videos to market your business is one of the best ways to build buzz. Whether you're posting them on your own website, your blog, or to any number of popular video-sharing sites, they're a great way to increase your visibility and credibility. Webs 2.0 is all about building community and connectivity. Videos are one of the best ways to serve that purpose.Videos create visibility. Videos by their very nature are vi
    A few weeks ago, Jason Calacanis stirred up a revolutionary movement that has begun to and would certainly disequilibrate the blogging industry. He threw a challenge to all the free-content social networking sites. How far his challenge can win out in the industry and how long, is a matter left for conjecture. But there is a powerful lesson and inference for any serious commercial blogger to learn from his challenge. This is what I set out to articulate for any Adsense or commercial publisher that seeks to earn a good income from publishing.

    When millionaire blogger, Jason Calacanis speaks, particularly with passion, I always set time apart to listen to him. Last month, precisely on 18th July, in his blog, he came out vociferously against free labour on the social networking sites. He, even with a prophetic tinge fore-told the death of free-content on social networking sites.

    In his 18th July blog, he offered to pay the top-ten(20?) bloggers from the big social networking sites like MySpace.com etc. a minimum of $10 per post (or $1,000 per month?) for a minimum 150 posts per month. In the pursuit of his fervent believe that "...talented people's time in our society is primarily engaged with money...". He advocated the need to remunerate "talented people" because, according to him, "...talent wins, and talent needs to get paid. I love paying talented people so they can sleep well at night doing what they love. That's my biggest joy in business: gettin' people paid".

    With an irrevocable declaration, he said: "I'm absolutely convinced that the top 20 people on DIGG, Delicious, Flickr, MySpace, and Reddit are worth $1,000 a month and if we're the first folks to pay them that is fine with me". He sealed the fate of these and similar sites with his prophetic reason- "The concept of "free" content producers, which I think WIRED called crowdsourcing, is going to be a short-lived joke. A loophole in the content business that will be closed by savvy startups which identify the top 5% of the audience and buy their time.

    Having thrown the challenge, the web world has predictably been buzzing since the 3 weeks ago, when he wrote that 'prophetic statement'. It has caused quite a rumble, with sharp divisions on the two sides of "for" and "against". He is not alone in this drive, many other big bloggers and publishers too have embarked on this same method for quite some time now. They are still at an early but profitably promising stage.

    The undiluted lesson of all ages from this method is TRAFFIC! Five of the ten topmost and fastest growing websites in the world are free and mass content-driven, according to the latest Neilsen ratings. Many of us publishers seem to be shy of mass original content. We seem to forget that the internet and the search engines were built to LOVE innumerable mass of original content. Google is not crazy when it agreed to pay $900 million in 3 years 2007-2010, for the 46-million strong MySpace monthly traffic of unique visitors.

    I have studied some of the most successful publishing sites, including our ezinearticles.com, for some quality time and my

    Top 10 Ways to Sell your Product or Service While you Sleep - Part 1
    Have you wasted valuable time and money on promotion that doesn't work? Have your announcements and news releases been ignored? Have you been too quiet about getting the word out how your product or service will help solve people's problems? Most of us are passionate about our work. We put a lot into coaching training; we know that we want to help others to create a better life or business. If only people would just know tha
    lways set time apart to listen to him. Last month, precisely on 18th July, in his blog, he came out vociferously against free labour on the social networking sites. He, even with a prophetic tinge fore-told the death of free-content on social networking sites.

    In his 18th July blog, he offered to pay the top-ten(20?) bloggers from the big social networking sites like MySpace.com etc. a minimum of $10 per post (or $1,000 per month?) for a minimum 150 posts per month. In the pursuit of his fervent believe that "...talented people's time in our society is primarily engaged with money...". He advocated the need to remunerate "talented people" because, according to him, "...talent wins, and talent needs to get paid. I love paying talented people so they can sleep well at night doing what they love. That's my biggest joy in business: gettin' people paid".

    With an irrevocable declaration, he said: "I'm absolutely convinced that the top 20 people on DIGG, Delicious, Flickr, MySpace, and Reddit are worth $1,000 a month and if we're the first folks to pay them that is fine with me". He sealed the fate of these and similar sites with his prophetic reason- "The concept of "free" content producers, which I think WIRED called crowdsourcing, is going to be a short-lived joke. A loophole in the content business that will be closed by savvy startups which identify the top 5% of the audience and buy their time.

    Having thrown the challenge, the web world has predictably been buzzing since the 3 weeks ago, when he wrote that 'prophetic statement'. It has caused quite a rumble, with sharp divisions on the two sides of "for" and "against". He is not alone in this drive, many other big bloggers and publishers too have embarked on this same method for quite some time now. They are still at an early but profitably promising stage.

    The undiluted lesson of all ages from this method is TRAFFIC! Five of the ten topmost and fastest growing websites in the world are free and mass content-driven, according to the latest Neilsen ratings. Many of us publishers seem to be shy of mass original content. We seem to forget that the internet and the search engines were built to LOVE innumerable mass of original content. Google is not crazy when it agreed to pay $900 million in 3 years 2007-2010, for the 46-million strong MySpace monthly traffic of unique visitors.

    I have studied some of the most successful publishing sites, including our ezinearticles.com, for some quality time and m

    Keeping Notes to Trigger Your Memory
    You should always takes notes at a meeting. Sometimes that is not possible, but you may have the back of a business card to jot a few things down. When I leave a meeting or networking event, I always take time to recap my conversations. I have actually been known to slip out of the meeting for a couple of minutes to jot things down on a notepad I always carry with me. If it were polite, I would record the conversations. Carrying the
    rate "talented people" because, according to him, "...talent wins, and talent needs to get paid. I love paying talented people so they can sleep well at night doing what they love. That's my biggest joy in business: gettin' people paid".

    With an irrevocable declaration, he said: "I'm absolutely convinced that the top 20 people on DIGG, Delicious, Flickr, MySpace, and Reddit are worth $1,000 a month and if we're the first folks to pay them that is fine with me". He sealed the fate of these and similar sites with his prophetic reason- "The concept of "free" content producers, which I think WIRED called crowdsourcing, is going to be a short-lived joke. A loophole in the content business that will be closed by savvy startups which identify the top 5% of the audience and buy their time.

    Having thrown the challenge, the web world has predictably been buzzing since the 3 weeks ago, when he wrote that 'prophetic statement'. It has caused quite a rumble, with sharp divisions on the two sides of "for" and "against". He is not alone in this drive, many other big bloggers and publishers too have embarked on this same method for quite some time now. They are still at an early but profitably promising stage.

    The undiluted lesson of all ages from this method is TRAFFIC! Five of the ten topmost and fastest growing websites in the world are free and mass content-driven, according to the latest Neilsen ratings. Many of us publishers seem to be shy of mass original content. We seem to forget that the internet and the search engines were built to LOVE innumerable mass of original content. Google is not crazy when it agreed to pay $900 million in 3 years 2007-2010, for the 46-million strong MySpace monthly traffic of unique visitors.

    I have studied some of the most successful publishing sites, including our ezinearticles.com, for some quality time and m

    Top 10 Holiday Franchises - Small Businesses Made for the Season
    Owning a franchise is a wonderful business opportunity that more and more individuals are taking advantage of each and every day. And, with all businesses there are certain times of the year that are more profitable than others. For the following 10 franchises the holiday season is one of the most profitable times of the year. Of course, more work is required to match the demand during the holiday season but the owners of the follow
    ourcing, is going to be a short-lived joke. A loophole in the content business that will be closed by savvy startups which identify the top 5% of the audience and buy their time.

    Having thrown the challenge, the web world has predictably been buzzing since the 3 weeks ago, when he wrote that 'prophetic statement'. It has caused quite a rumble, with sharp divisions on the two sides of "for" and "against". He is not alone in this drive, many other big bloggers and publishers too have embarked on this same method for quite some time now. They are still at an early but profitably promising stage.

    The undiluted lesson of all ages from this method is TRAFFIC! Five of the ten topmost and fastest growing websites in the world are free and mass content-driven, according to the latest Neilsen ratings. Many of us publishers seem to be shy of mass original content. We seem to forget that the internet and the search engines were built to LOVE innumerable mass of original content. Google is not crazy when it agreed to pay $900 million in 3 years 2007-2010, for the 46-million strong MySpace monthly traffic of unique visitors.

    I have studied some of the most successful publishing sites, including our ezinearticles.com, for some quality time and m

    Increase Your Closing Ratio
    If you have ten opportunities in your pipeline, statics say that the average sales person will only close two of them. The good sales person will close five and the great salesperson close eight of these ten opportunities. The question is why is there such a discrepancy between the average sales rep (80% of people who call selling their professional) and the great sales person? The reality is most sales professional have taken sa
    of all ages from this method is TRAFFIC! Five of the ten topmost and fastest growing websites in the world are free and mass content-driven, according to the latest Neilsen ratings. Many of us publishers seem to be shy of mass original content. We seem to forget that the internet and the search engines were built to LOVE innumerable mass of original content. Google is not crazy when it agreed to pay $900 million in 3 years 2007-2010, for the 46-million strong MySpace monthly traffic of unique visitors.

    I have studied some of the most successful publishing sites, including our ezinearticles.com, for some quality time and my findings show that there is a winning edge in mass original content. All the gimmicks and Search engine Optimization tactics would amount to little without this factor. I hope to dig further around the Calacanis Challenge in my next article for the benefit and proffiting of our budding blogger friends.

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