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Casual Articles - Advice from a Newbie: How to get Indexed, Market your New Site, Gain Traffic, and Start Affiliating
Silk is a Developed Market ing your site are your primary concerns. You also want to make money. If you are planning to make money from the ads you put on your site, you will need to affiliate with advertisers. The easiest to use and, in my limited experience, most reliable affiliation, is Google Adsense. There you will get content linked ads that will be automatically placed when you cut and paste their code into your website. There are a lot of other affiliate sites out there and you could spend far too much time affiliating rather than creating good, readable content and marketing your site. Good affiliations are only useful if your content attracts traffic. I spent a whole day trying to affiliate with different companies and it was exhausting, tedious work. I am back to my basic affiliation strategy after that experience.Silk signifies luxury; it has always been associated with crowned heads and riches throughout the different ages. Silk has an excellent idiosyncratic, beauty and elegance because of which it is considered as the queen of fabrics compared with other man-made natural fibers in the textile industry. It is the strongest and lightest natural fiber and it has great elasticity, resilience and warmth.Silk is extruded by a domesticated silkworm known as Bombyx mori, which feeds solely on mulberry leaves. The traditional process of silk production requires the killing of hundreds of thousands of silk moths. The larvae are boiled alive, roasted or centrifuged. The female moths are slit open to check for diseases after they have laid the eggs for the next generation. Most consumers are not aware of the cruelty involved in the process of production. However, silk can also be made in a non-violent, eco-friendly and sustainable way.Unlike the conventional method where the pupae are killed before reeling yarn from the cocoons, the adult moths are allowed to emerge alive from the cocoons and then the silk yarn is spun from the open ended or pierced cocoons found in the wild or from those used in breeding cycles. Silkworm rearing, both mulberry and non-mulberry, is a highly labor intensive cottage industry. Mulberry cultivation is indispensable to domesticated silkworm (Bombyx mori) rearing. Mulberry is a multiple tree. It produces a fine wood, branches can be used in basketry, and fruits are edible and can be used to make wine. Its leaves are fed to silkworm, besides being a good fodder for livestock.Non-mulberry or wild silkworms include eri, tassar and muga. Er My strategy is simple: affiliate with natural fits and Google Adsense which is the simplest affiliation of all. I try to connect to affiliates based on products that I use or are useful or tie in to my site. When I started affiliating, I went straight away to the web site of a store that sells the file solutions filing system that I talk about in "Taking Control Over Finances." I also went to the store from which I buy my office and school supplies, as well as Quicken and Amazon. Those are products I use and products that I am comfortable advertising. If you are looking to affiliate, most company web sites have a link to their affiliate programs on the home page or in the "contact" page. Sometimes, you need to search around a bit. Many companies belong to networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction. So I ended up getting accepted by their programs and that led me to affiliate with other companies whose products I think might be useful to my readers. If you look through my site, you will note, that, for the most part, other than the adsense ads, I put ads to other affiliates on the pages related to their products. For example, my Quicken ad is on the page where I discuss how I use Quicken, a link to Amazon is on the page where I have reviewed Jim Cramer's Real Money, and a new site that I found, that offers coupons to major stores is on this page as well as on the article, "Getting More Value Out of What You Buy." I chose to place my ads that way because I want them to really be a natural fit with my content; I don't just want the site to become Conversations that Count! For all of us bumbling newbies out there, I decided to write a discussion of how I got indexed and some good ideas for getting web traffic.What type of impression are you leaving? How effective are your communication skills? As you either thumb through your daily planner or scan through your palm pilot, review your recent interactions. Did any of the following issues arise?· You were asked to speak up or repeat yourself· Your message was misunderstood· You couldn't get the full attention of your audience· You didn't get the results or reactions you had anticipated· You didn’t make the sale or close the transactionThese phenomena are quite common in the course of the typical business day. What causes these missed opportunities? Usually the missed opportunity stems from one of the following communications flaws:· Speaking too rapidly· Speaking with too low of a volume level· Slurring your words or mumbling· Speaking in a tone that lacks confidence, interest, or authority· Failing to organize your thoughts before speaking· Lacking eye contact or other non-verbal body language to support your message· Speaking too much and listening too littleWhether it's nervous energy or just bad habits, the results are the same. Your message is not understood as you intended. Improving your communication skills takes time and practice. Even the best speakers benefit from rehearsal and preparation!· If you are preparing for an important call or conversation, take a few minutes to jot notes and organize your thoughts. Locate a mirror and smile as you If you are planning a site, or have just written a web site or blog, I have learned that the hardest thing seems to be getting traffic. I am trying to learn more about how to bring traffic to the site, but, the main thing is that with all the content in the world, it could languish in no person's land forever, if you do not promote your site. So, that is what I have been trying to do. How? First of all, I am going into blog sites like "blinkbits" and "bloglines" and creating accounts. So, if you like the content on any of the pages, you can, as of today, add it to those two sites by pressing the buttons on my site. These links take a while to create, but, I am taking that slowly. What happens is that when a reader adds your page to one of these sites, it creates a link which increases your site's rankings. I have also been actually "marketing" the site the way you would market anything else -- I tell people I meet, friends, family, acquaintances, salespeople, anyone we think would get some value out of the site. While it seems old-fashioned, it has generated some people coming in to take a look. I have made it a signature on all of my e-mail so that when I send e-mail, people can learn about the site. I also submitted the site itself to my web design software which has caused a number of people to come in to look at the site. A major marketing device is the blog carnival. When I first published the site, I had no idea what a blog carnival was; now, I understand it a bit more: it is really a place to showcase your articles along with others who are showcasing their articles. On the days of submissions, I do get more traffic; some of it leads to revenue, some of it leads to just people looking at what I am saying. Traffic, however, is very important: if nobody is at your site, nobody can read it. I try to follow up by reading other people's posts, commenting and becoming part of the community that already writes about my topic (personal finance). The best place to find carnivals is at www.blogcarnival.com/bc/clist.html. Not only will you find lists of carnivals on a variety of topics, but there is a submission form which you can fill out to submit your post to the particular carnival in which you have an interest. That site has been an excellent source of information and one that I visit on a very frequent basis. So far, I have submitted several articles to the Carnival of Personal Finance, the Carnival of Investing and the Carnival of Debt Reduction. But, Carnivals exist on tons of topics, not just personal finance: so your website/blog articles need not be on a financial topic to find the carnivals useful. I even posted an article on the Carnival of Bumbling, Struggling Newbies, which I hope will grow as time goes on, because it is a good place for all of us newbies to join forces and support one another. You may be reading this at e-zine. That is a source of articles on a lot of different topics, and this is the third article I have submitted there. (For a list of my articles, click on the author name). Getting on to Google and other search engine indexes is not so easy, but, it does happen if you are patient. Within a week of establishing the site, I finally came up in a search. That is like the Holy Grail -- in the Monty Python sense of the term: hooray me, I got on Google Search. Actually, if you type the exact words "taking control over money" into Google Search, you do get my web site popping up first (at least for now), although I cannot figure out exactly why based on all the site optimization advice I have been reading, but not following. I just stumbled into the number one spot by pure, dumb luck. However, I did not get indexed by luck. I asked Google to index my site, and I have gone onto every search engine I could think of and done the same. I know I am indexed on Yahoo and I am hoping to get into a category index in the open-site directory (which includes AOL). Each search engine has their own rules; be patient and go to each one and let them show you how you can get indexed. You do this by literally looking through the site itself: for example, for Google, go to www.google.com and poke around for a section on getting indexed. They will take you through the process. Being indexed does not mean that people are reading your site: it does mean that the words are being read by the little spiders and other tools that search the web automatically. Real people may or may not find my site through searches depending on what search terms they use. There are a lot of people out there who can teach you site optimization techniques. I have found that such techniques are not so useful for me based on the type of software I am using to create my site and my level of skill as a site designer. Jon at http://www.successpart2.com offered a free e-book on site optimization on his website recently. I downloaded it, and will go through it after I am satisfied that the words on the site, the content, is as good as it can be. That brings me to my main point. Content is key. It does not matter what you do, if you have nothing to say, or you do not say it well, you will not get or maintain traffic. This is advice I read early on (see, www.stevepavlina.com, "How to Make Money on the Web,") and it is advice I continue to read all the time. I feel like it is the content that should count the most. I have not only seen that a number of times written by people with far more experience, but I have found that wasting my time playing with things that take a lot of work to learn have not paid off as much as my plain old common sense approach to the site: keep it going, nurture it, add to it, and fix it up all the time. The traffic will come. I read a lot of free materials about gaining traffic and when I get a good idea, I try to do at least some of it. That is what led me to e-zine. I read about submitting articles there as a way to get your site out, and I began to do that because it made sense to me. Be aware though: Only you know why you are writing your site. If it is because you have information that you wish to share or a product you wish to sell, then keep that focus in mind. My reasons -- to share what I am learning, to learn more about my own personal finances, to be accountable to someone for maintaining my new system of personal finance -- have led me to reject joining certain offered programs. I will not disparage programs, but, I was given an opportunity to try a "training program" for 14 days. The free materials were very good and readable, but once I got closer to having to sign up, the posts started looking very much like a sales pitch for a "pyramid" scheme. From what I could gather, the "training company" was going to charge me a lot of money to use my site to promote their site. I have no interest in those type of junk sites: I am not trying to "get rich quick," and I while I am trying to monetize my site, I am not doing so at the expense of my integrity. I just do not believe in the idea of creating a self promoting site that offers no real content value (the original program had content; the sites "affiliated" with it did not. If I had joined, I would have owned a site without content which would lead people to their site: I had no interest in that. How did I decide that the program was a scam? I actually went to the sites under the "customer testimonials." Every site was similar in tone to the training program's marketing materials and looked like fronts for the training program's site. There was little content on the affiliate sites, they were mainly "link" sites bringing people to the training site. What I got from that experience is what I have known: if someone says they have the secret that will make you money, and guarantees you will get rich without a lot of work on your part, I would run from that. They are appealing to greed; if that is you, cool, go for it. I would not do it. And there are a lot of those types of scammers out there in the internet. Another piece of advice is that your e-mail address is gold and getting others e-mail addresses could be gold for you if you eventually want to have a subscription service. Be aware of who you give your e-mail to: it could come back to haunt you in the form of spam -- use common sense or what I like to think of as the "real life" rule. If I would not give information about myself to that person in real life, I will not give them information on the internet. This is true for other aspects of your site as well. If you want to get your site known, and you go to other sites for information or advice, ask and be polite. In the money/finance world of online publishing, I have found that there is both a community and a hierarchy and I do not wish to usurp those at the top or be rude. It reminds me of when I started my current job: in the beginning, I listened more and chose not to impose my views. As the years have gone on, I am more openly opinionated. Now, with a website, obviously, you wrote it because you have something to say; but, that does not mean you need to knock the others down in order to say it. I know that seems common sensical, but I have seen more experienced people talk about how other people have demanded information or help from them and how offensive such demands really are to them. Thus, having good content, gaining traffic and building your site are your primary concerns. You also want to make money. If you are planning to make money from the ads you put on your site, you will need to affiliate with advertisers. The easiest to use and, in my limited experience, most reliable affiliation, is Google Adsense. There you will get content linked ads that will be automatically placed when you cut and paste their code into your website. There are a lot of other affiliate sites out there and you could spend far too much time affiliating rather than creating good, readable content and marketing your site. Good affiliations are only useful if your content attracts traffic. I spent a whole day trying to affiliate with different companies and it was exhausting, tedious work. I am back to my basic affiliation strategy after that experience. My strategy is simple: affiliate with natural fits and Google Adsense which is the simplest affiliation of all. I try to connect to affiliates based on products that I use or are useful or tie in to my site. When I started affiliating, I went straight away to the web site of a store that sells the file solutions filing system that I talk about in "Taking Control Over Finances." I also went to the store from which I buy my office and school supplies, as well as Quicken and Amazon. Those are products I use and products that I am comfortable advertising. If you are looking to affiliate, most company web sites have a link to their affiliate programs on the home page or in the "contact" page. Sometimes, you need to search around a bit. Many companies belong to networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction. So I ended up getting accepted by their programs and that led me to affiliate with other companies whose products I think might be useful to my readers. If you look through my site, you will note, that, for the most part, other than the adsense ads, I put ads to other affiliates on the pages related to their products. For example, my Quicken ad is on the page where I discuss how I use Quicken, a link to Amazon is on the page where I have reviewed Jim Cramer's Real Money, and a new site that I found, that offers coupons to major stores is on this page as well as on the article, "Getting More Value Out of What You Buy." I chose to place my ads that way because I want them to really be a natural fit with my content; I don't just want the site to become Nursing Job Descriptions an interest. That site has been an excellent source of information and one that I visit on a very frequent basis.Nursing is one of the disciplines of medicine and focuses on assisting individuals, families, and communities in attaining and maintaining their health. Nursing is also termed as a science, which focuses on offering quality healthcare to individuals and their families throughout their lives.There are many options for seekers in the nursing profession. It is a very diverse field that offers many different departments to work in. One can work with hands-on a patient, in a lab to carry out various tests or at a research facility. There are vast options in this field and people can opt for the one that interests them the most. The nursing profession has many applications in modern day medicine. Nurses can specialize as Registered Nurses (RNs), Nurse practitioners, head nurses or nurse supervisors, Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs), home nurses, home health nurses, or nursing aides. Each specific type of nurse has a different set of responsibilities.The Nursing profession requires special skills, and different level of patient interactions. Nurses perform a variety of duties in day-to-day health care. Their duties vary as per their field of work and specialization. Generally, nurses perform daily duties for providing appropriate health care services to patients. They also assist in providing clinical assessments, treatments, diagnosing medical conditions, assessing emergencies, ordering diagnostic studies, leading cardiac arrest codes and documenting medical care.Nurses perform specialized duties in providing medical and psychiatric care to a variety of patients including hospitalized and ambulatory individuals with acute and chronic conditions, monito So far, I have submitted several articles to the Carnival of Personal Finance, the Carnival of Investing and the Carnival of Debt Reduction. But, Carnivals exist on tons of topics, not just personal finance: so your website/blog articles need not be on a financial topic to find the carnivals useful. I even posted an article on the Carnival of Bumbling, Struggling Newbies, which I hope will grow as time goes on, because it is a good place for all of us newbies to join forces and support one another. You may be reading this at e-zine. That is a source of articles on a lot of different topics, and this is the third article I have submitted there. (For a list of my articles, click on the author name). Getting on to Google and other search engine indexes is not so easy, but, it does happen if you are patient. Within a week of establishing the site, I finally came up in a search. That is like the Holy Grail -- in the Monty Python sense of the term: hooray me, I got on Google Search. Actually, if you type the exact words "taking control over money" into Google Search, you do get my web site popping up first (at least for now), although I cannot figure out exactly why based on all the site optimization advice I have been reading, but not following. I just stumbled into the number one spot by pure, dumb luck. However, I did not get indexed by luck. I asked Google to index my site, and I have gone onto every search engine I could think of and done the same. I know I am indexed on Yahoo and I am hoping to get into a category index in the open-site directory (which includes AOL). Each search engine has their own rules; be patient and go to each one and let them show you how you can get indexed. You do this by literally looking through the site itself: for example, for Google, go to www.google.com and poke around for a section on getting indexed. They will take you through the process. Being indexed does not mean that people are reading your site: it does mean that the words are being read by the little spiders and other tools that search the web automatically. Real people may or may not find my site through searches depending on what search terms they use. There are a lot of people out there who can teach you site optimization techniques. I have found that such techniques are not so useful for me based on the type of software I am using to create my site and my level of skill as a site designer. Jon at http://www.successpart2.com offered a free e-book on site optimization on his website recently. I downloaded it, and will go through it after I am satisfied that the words on the site, the content, is as good as it can be. That brings me to my main point. Content is key. It does not matter what you do, if you have nothing to say, or you do not say it well, you will not get or maintain traffic. This is advice I read early on (see, www.stevepavlina.com, "How to Make Money on the Web,") and it is advice I continue to read all the time. I feel like it is the content that should count the most. I have not only seen that a number of times written by people with far more experience, but I have found that wasting my time playing with things that take a lot of work to learn have not paid off as much as my plain old common sense approach to the site: keep it going, nurture it, add to it, and fix it up all the time. The traffic will come. I read a lot of free materials about gaining traffic and when I get a good idea, I try to do at least some of it. That is what led me to e-zine. I read about submitting articles there as a way to get your site out, and I began to do that because it made sense to me. Be aware though: Only you know why you are writing your site. If it is because you have information that you wish to share or a product you wish to sell, then keep that focus in mind. My reasons -- to share what I am learning, to learn more about my own personal finances, to be accountable to someone for maintaining my new system of personal finance -- have led me to reject joining certain offered programs. I will not disparage programs, but, I was given an opportunity to try a "training program" for 14 days. The free materials were very good and readable, but once I got closer to having to sign up, the posts started looking very much like a sales pitch for a "pyramid" scheme. From what I could gather, the "training company" was going to charge me a lot of money to use my site to promote their site. I have no interest in those type of junk sites: I am not trying to "get rich quick," and I while I am trying to monetize my site, I am not doing so at the expense of my integrity. I just do not believe in the idea of creating a self promoting site that offers no real content value (the original program had content; the sites "affiliated" with it did not. If I had joined, I would have owned a site without content which would lead people to their site: I had no interest in that. How did I decide that the program was a scam? I actually went to the sites under the "customer testimonials." Every site was similar in tone to the training program's marketing materials and looked like fronts for the training program's site. There was little content on the affiliate sites, they were mainly "link" sites bringing people to the training site. What I got from that experience is what I have known: if someone says they have the secret that will make you money, and guarantees you will get rich without a lot of work on your part, I would run from that. They are appealing to greed; if that is you, cool, go for it. I would not do it. And there are a lot of those types of scammers out there in the internet. Another piece of advice is that your e-mail address is gold and getting others e-mail addresses could be gold for you if you eventually want to have a subscription service. Be aware of who you give your e-mail to: it could come back to haunt you in the form of spam -- use common sense or what I like to think of as the "real life" rule. If I would not give information about myself to that person in real life, I will not give them information on the internet. This is true for other aspects of your site as well. If you want to get your site known, and you go to other sites for information or advice, ask and be polite. In the money/finance world of online publishing, I have found that there is both a community and a hierarchy and I do not wish to usurp those at the top or be rude. It reminds me of when I started my current job: in the beginning, I listened more and chose not to impose my views. As the years have gone on, I am more openly opinionated. Now, with a website, obviously, you wrote it because you have something to say; but, that does not mean you need to knock the others down in order to say it. I know that seems common sensical, but I have seen more experienced people talk about how other people have demanded information or help from them and how offensive such demands really are to them. Thus, having good content, gaining traffic and building your site are your primary concerns. You also want to make money. If you are planning to make money from the ads you put on your site, you will need to affiliate with advertisers. The easiest to use and, in my limited experience, most reliable affiliation, is Google Adsense. There you will get content linked ads that will be automatically placed when you cut and paste their code into your website. There are a lot of other affiliate sites out there and you could spend far too much time affiliating rather than creating good, readable content and marketing your site. Good affiliations are only useful if your content attracts traffic. I spent a whole day trying to affiliate with different companies and it was exhausting, tedious work. I am back to my basic affiliation strategy after that experience. My strategy is simple: affiliate with natural fits and Google Adsense which is the simplest affiliation of all. I try to connect to affiliates based on products that I use or are useful or tie in to my site. When I started affiliating, I went straight away to the web site of a store that sells the file solutions filing system that I talk about in "Taking Control Over Finances." I also went to the store from which I buy my office and school supplies, as well as Quicken and Amazon. Those are products I use and products that I am comfortable advertising. If you are looking to affiliate, most company web sites have a link to their affiliate programs on the home page or in the "contact" page. Sometimes, you need to search around a bit. Many companies belong to networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction. So I ended up getting accepted by their programs and that led me to affiliate with other companies whose products I think might be useful to my readers. If you look through my site, you will note, that, for the most part, other than the adsense ads, I put ads to other affiliates on the pages related to their products. For example, my Quicken ad is on the page where I discuss how I use Quicken, a link to Amazon is on the page where I have reviewed Jim Cramer's Real Money, and a new site that I found, that offers coupons to major stores is on this page as well as on the article, "Getting More Value Out of What You Buy." I chose to place my ads that way because I want them to really be a natural fit with my content; I don't just want the site to become Start Your Own Website in 10 Easy Steps niques. I have found that such techniques are not so useful for me based on the type of software I am using to create my site and my level of skill as a site designer. Jon at http://www.successpart2.com offered a free e-book on site optimization on his website recently. I downloaded it, and will go through it after I am satisfied that the words on the site, the content, is as good as it can be.If you're a beginner, starting a website doesn't have to be difficult. If you begin with a good idea and take it step-by-step, you'll reap the rewards of a popular website.Here are ten steps to online success:1. Choose a domain name. Then, get it hosted.Your domain name can be your own name, your company name, or a descriptive word for phrase describing what you do.I often use GoDaddy.com for registration and hosting, but there are many inexpensive registrars and hosting services. Ask your friends for recommendations. Compare what the services offer, and read hosting service reviews.2. Decide the theme or niche for your website.Don't try to be all things to all people. For the best placement at search engines, select just one theme and build your site around that. If you want to expand, set up additional domain names and websites, one for each major subject.For example, let's say that you're a writer and your website is about railroad history. Don't also try to include your favorite recipes or webpages about your skydiving service.3. Create five webpages related to your theme.If you don't know HTML, you can use a WYSIWYG program. (WYSIWYG = What You See Is What You Get)If you have Netscape or Mozilla browsers, they include a free WYSIWYG program, Composer. There are other free WYSIWYG programs available online, too.Your webpages should include an index.html (your main/entry page), another page that talks about you and how to contact you, plus at least three pages about your website's theme. Create links so that people can click from one page to the other, and already kno That brings me to my main point. Content is key. It does not matter what you do, if you have nothing to say, or you do not say it well, you will not get or maintain traffic. This is advice I read early on (see, www.stevepavlina.com, "How to Make Money on the Web,") and it is advice I continue to read all the time. I feel like it is the content that should count the most. I have not only seen that a number of times written by people with far more experience, but I have found that wasting my time playing with things that take a lot of work to learn have not paid off as much as my plain old common sense approach to the site: keep it going, nurture it, add to it, and fix it up all the time. The traffic will come. I read a lot of free materials about gaining traffic and when I get a good idea, I try to do at least some of it. That is what led me to e-zine. I read about submitting articles there as a way to get your site out, and I began to do that because it made sense to me. Be aware though: Only you know why you are writing your site. If it is because you have information that you wish to share or a product you wish to sell, then keep that focus in mind. My reasons -- to share what I am learning, to learn more about my own personal finances, to be accountable to someone for maintaining my new system of personal finance -- have led me to reject joining certain offered programs. I will not disparage programs, but, I was given an opportunity to try a "training program" for 14 days. The free materials were very good and readable, but once I got closer to having to sign up, the posts started looking very much like a sales pitch for a "pyramid" scheme. From what I could gather, the "training company" was going to charge me a lot of money to use my site to promote their site. I have no interest in those type of junk sites: I am not trying to "get rich quick," and I while I am trying to monetize my site, I am not doing so at the expense of my integrity. I just do not believe in the idea of creating a self promoting site that offers no real content value (the original program had content; the sites "affiliated" with it did not. If I had joined, I would have owned a site without content which would lead people to their site: I had no interest in that. How did I decide that the program was a scam? I actually went to the sites under the "customer testimonials." Every site was similar in tone to the training program's marketing materials and looked like fronts for the training program's site. There was little content on the affiliate sites, they were mainly "link" sites bringing people to the training site. What I got from that experience is what I have known: if someone says they have the secret that will make you money, and guarantees you will get rich without a lot of work on your part, I would run from that. They are appealing to greed; if that is you, cool, go for it. I would not do it. And there are a lot of those types of scammers out there in the internet. Another piece of advice is that your e-mail address is gold and getting others e-mail addresses could be gold for you if you eventually want to have a subscription service. Be aware of who you give your e-mail to: it could come back to haunt you in the form of spam -- use common sense or what I like to think of as the "real life" rule. If I would not give information about myself to that person in real life, I will not give them information on the internet. This is true for other aspects of your site as well. If you want to get your site known, and you go to other sites for information or advice, ask and be polite. In the money/finance world of online publishing, I have found that there is both a community and a hierarchy and I do not wish to usurp those at the top or be rude. It reminds me of when I started my current job: in the beginning, I listened more and chose not to impose my views. As the years have gone on, I am more openly opinionated. Now, with a website, obviously, you wrote it because you have something to say; but, that does not mean you need to knock the others down in order to say it. I know that seems common sensical, but I have seen more experienced people talk about how other people have demanded information or help from them and how offensive such demands really are to them. Thus, having good content, gaining traffic and building your site are your primary concerns. You also want to make money. If you are planning to make money from the ads you put on your site, you will need to affiliate with advertisers. The easiest to use and, in my limited experience, most reliable affiliation, is Google Adsense. There you will get content linked ads that will be automatically placed when you cut and paste their code into your website. There are a lot of other affiliate sites out there and you could spend far too much time affiliating rather than creating good, readable content and marketing your site. Good affiliations are only useful if your content attracts traffic. I spent a whole day trying to affiliate with different companies and it was exhausting, tedious work. I am back to my basic affiliation strategy after that experience. My strategy is simple: affiliate with natural fits and Google Adsense which is the simplest affiliation of all. I try to connect to affiliates based on products that I use or are useful or tie in to my site. When I started affiliating, I went straight away to the web site of a store that sells the file solutions filing system that I talk about in "Taking Control Over Finances." I also went to the store from which I buy my office and school supplies, as well as Quicken and Amazon. Those are products I use and products that I am comfortable advertising. If you are looking to affiliate, most company web sites have a link to their affiliate programs on the home page or in the "contact" page. Sometimes, you need to search around a bit. Many companies belong to networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction. So I ended up getting accepted by their programs and that led me to affiliate with other companies whose products I think might be useful to my readers. If you look through my site, you will note, that, for the most part, other than the adsense ads, I put ads to other affiliates on the pages related to their products. For example, my Quicken ad is on the page where I discuss how I use Quicken, a link to Amazon is on the page where I have reviewed Jim Cramer's Real Money, and a new site that I found, that offers coupons to major stores is on this page as well as on the article, "Getting More Value Out of What You Buy." I chose to place my ads that way because I want them to really be a natural fit with my content; I don't just want the site to become Internet Marketing - How I Use Article Writing to Supercharge My Internet Marketing not believe in the idea of creating a self promoting site that offers no real content value (the original program had content; the sites "affiliated" with it did not. If I had joined, I would have owned a site without content which would lead people to their site: I had no interest in that.Internet Marketing - How I Use Article Writing to Supercharge My Internet MarketingInternet Marketing has so many different methods and strategies that can be applied to initiate massive success. One of the essential keys to internet marketing is that of qualified traffic generation.The bottom line is, if you don’t get quality traffic to your internet marketing web site, you will not have an effective internet marketing campaign.The key there is qualified traffic. And one of the ways that I have found that I receive the very best qualified traffic is that of article writing and submission.You see, one of the things that I like about article writing and submission is that, unlike classified ads or banner ads, when someone clicks into my web site after reading one of my articles, I know they already like me! They already like my style, or they would not have clicked through to one of my links. They would have simply gone to read another article if they didn’t like me.So how do I do it?1) I write articles about my niche topics, and insert a link or two in the allowed bio area2) I submit my articles to online ezine directories3) The online directories publish my articles4) People read my articles, and if they like what I have to say, they click through to my links. How did I decide that the program was a scam? I actually went to the sites under the "customer testimonials." Every site was similar in tone to the training program's marketing materials and looked like fronts for the training program's site. There was little content on the affiliate sites, they were mainly "link" sites bringing people to the training site. What I got from that experience is what I have known: if someone says they have the secret that will make you money, and guarantees you will get rich without a lot of work on your part, I would run from that. They are appealing to greed; if that is you, cool, go for it. I would not do it. And there are a lot of those types of scammers out there in the internet. Another piece of advice is that your e-mail address is gold and getting others e-mail addresses could be gold for you if you eventually want to have a subscription service. Be aware of who you give your e-mail to: it could come back to haunt you in the form of spam -- use common sense or what I like to think of as the "real life" rule. If I would not give information about myself to that person in real life, I will not give them information on the internet. This is true for other aspects of your site as well. If you want to get your site known, and you go to other sites for information or advice, ask and be polite. In the money/finance world of online publishing, I have found that there is both a community and a hierarchy and I do not wish to usurp those at the top or be rude. It reminds me of when I started my current job: in the beginning, I listened more and chose not to impose my views. As the years have gone on, I am more openly opinionated. Now, with a website, obviously, you wrote it because you have something to say; but, that does not mean you need to knock the others down in order to say it. I know that seems common sensical, but I have seen more experienced people talk about how other people have demanded information or help from them and how offensive such demands really are to them. Thus, having good content, gaining traffic and building your site are your primary concerns. You also want to make money. If you are planning to make money from the ads you put on your site, you will need to affiliate with advertisers. The easiest to use and, in my limited experience, most reliable affiliation, is Google Adsense. There you will get content linked ads that will be automatically placed when you cut and paste their code into your website. There are a lot of other affiliate sites out there and you could spend far too much time affiliating rather than creating good, readable content and marketing your site. Good affiliations are only useful if your content attracts traffic. I spent a whole day trying to affiliate with different companies and it was exhausting, tedious work. I am back to my basic affiliation strategy after that experience. My strategy is simple: affiliate with natural fits and Google Adsense which is the simplest affiliation of all. I try to connect to affiliates based on products that I use or are useful or tie in to my site. When I started affiliating, I went straight away to the web site of a store that sells the file solutions filing system that I talk about in "Taking Control Over Finances." I also went to the store from which I buy my office and school supplies, as well as Quicken and Amazon. Those are products I use and products that I am comfortable advertising. If you are looking to affiliate, most company web sites have a link to their affiliate programs on the home page or in the "contact" page. Sometimes, you need to search around a bit. Many companies belong to networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction. So I ended up getting accepted by their programs and that led me to affiliate with other companies whose products I think might be useful to my readers. If you look through my site, you will note, that, for the most part, other than the adsense ads, I put ads to other affiliates on the pages related to their products. For example, my Quicken ad is on the page where I discuss how I use Quicken, a link to Amazon is on the page where I have reviewed Jim Cramer's Real Money, and a new site that I found, that offers coupons to major stores is on this page as well as on the article, "Getting More Value Out of What You Buy." I chose to place my ads that way because I want them to really be a natural fit with my content; I don't just want the site to become How to Make More Money with a Tupperware Fundraiser ing your site are your primary concerns. You also want to make money. If you are planning to make money from the ads you put on your site, you will need to affiliate with advertisers. The easiest to use and, in my limited experience, most reliable affiliation, is Google Adsense. There you will get content linked ads that will be automatically placed when you cut and paste their code into your website. There are a lot of other affiliate sites out there and you could spend far too much time affiliating rather than creating good, readable content and marketing your site. Good affiliations are only useful if your content attracts traffic. I spent a whole day trying to affiliate with different companies and it was exhausting, tedious work. I am back to my basic affiliation strategy after that experience.Tupperware? That was my initial thought, too. I pictured the Tupperware parties of which I’d heard so often – and the sole party I intended. How could you raise money with a Tupperware fundraiser if everyone had to attend a party somewhere? And who would host all those parties?!No Party Needed!Then I learned that a Tupperware fundraiser is not based on parties. A Tupperware fundraiser is run much like any other fundraiser, except that you offer a quality, durable product instead of cheap consumables.Think back to the last fundraiser you had. Maybe you offered an array of candles – or coupon books. Many of your workers felt they were pushing products people neither wanted nor needed. Instead of appealing to the buyer, they were trying to sell products that were easy to get at low prices.It all boiled down to a basic feeling that you were dealing with mediocre products, which produced mediocre sales efforts.Tupperware Fundraisers Are SuccessfulThe Tupperware company offers Tupperware fundraisers for non-profit organizations and schools – and a Tupperware fundraiser is likely to be highly successful.Tupperware fundraisers offer a straight 40% profit! How much can you raise? How much are you determined to raise?Imagine you commit to raise $12,000 for a new, public playground. The children in your neighborhood have no place to play. Parents have no place to go and play with their little ones. You need swings, sandboxes, brightly-painted jungle gyms, and some open, green space.You manage to round up a group of 200 volunteers who are willing to participate in your Tupperware fundraiser. Each volunte My strategy is simple: affiliate with natural fits and Google Adsense which is the simplest affiliation of all. I try to connect to affiliates based on products that I use or are useful or tie in to my site. When I started affiliating, I went straight away to the web site of a store that sells the file solutions filing system that I talk about in "Taking Control Over Finances." I also went to the store from which I buy my office and school supplies, as well as Quicken and Amazon. Those are products I use and products that I am comfortable advertising. If you are looking to affiliate, most company web sites have a link to their affiliate programs on the home page or in the "contact" page. Sometimes, you need to search around a bit. Many companies belong to networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction. So I ended up getting accepted by their programs and that led me to affiliate with other companies whose products I think might be useful to my readers. If you look through my site, you will note, that, for the most part, other than the adsense ads, I put ads to other affiliates on the pages related to their products. For example, my Quicken ad is on the page where I discuss how I use Quicken, a link to Amazon is on the page where I have reviewed Jim Cramer's Real Money, and a new site that I found, that offers coupons to major stores is on this page as well as on the article, "Getting More Value Out of What You Buy." I chose to place my ads that way because I want them to really be a natural fit with my content; I don't just want the site to become a big advertising space. Also, I do not want to spend a ton of time on affiliations: I want to spend time on content and traffic. The affiliations are not hard once you get the hang of it. The main thing for newbies, like myself, is creating a good, solid web site with excellent content. You can submit parts of it, the articles, to other places to help you build traffic. You can place ads very simply using adsense and affiliate based on "natural fits." And keep working on what works for you. I have learned a lot so far and you will too. Come back to the site for more marketing tips, or to leave a comment and your own advice. I am always searching for information on this topic and on the topics of money and finance. And remember, your web site may be a lot of work, but, it is rewarding -- I am very proud of my site and how much I have learned in a short period of time. I was with some friends the other day who did not understand that I had created a real web site and who knew nothing about this potential revenue stream. They looked at my site and were stunned that I had created it: it felt good to get such high compliments from my friends and it feels good for me to look at my site and feel that sort of pride. I hope that some of my suggestions are helpful to you. They are all based on my own actual experience. In creating a web site, experience really is the best teacher.
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