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    An Important Aspect Of Dominating A Niche
    There are many variables when it comes to dominating a niche, whatever the market may be.However, one thing about people on the internet is fundamental. Often times, people are looking information on the internet, and help on certain areas. They may be looking for things they are interested in, or they need some help or guidance for a big decision. What you can do is to brand yourself as a valuable asset to these people. Make them recognize you as an authority and make them want to come back to you for further information.So the missing link to getting the most out of
    than optimal, but acceptable method is creating an alternative text-only or html duplicate of your flash site.

    I don't find either of these to be great ways to deal with flash. Instead breaking up flash elements, and having

    Make Your Business Plan Read Like An Action Novel - Receive Stronger Responses and Real Results
    Let’s face it, nobody confuses writing or reading a Business Plan with a Bruce Willis action movie or a Tom Clancy novel. A Business Plan is a serious presentation that details an economic opportunity being offered for funding, licensing or sales consideration. Detail, research, financials and harvest options, key elements of any plan, can be dry, less than electric stuff. However, Business Plans that achieve success invariably are written with an air of urgency, excitement and color that separates them from the usual, boring template-based submissions.I write business plans,
    One of the huge drawbacks to flash is the inaccessibility, and the hard time that search engines have in understanding flash sites (which lead to poor search rankings). Most of the recommendations designers have towards making it accessible and search engine friendly is to simply use flash sparingly and never use it to provide functional elements like navigation.

    However this really limits what you can do with flash, and prevents you from taking advantage of all that flash can offer. There are many ways you can make flash accessible and search engine friendly while using it for more than simple design aspects.

    The Basics -

    If you feel your whole site needs to be flash, you should at least break it up into several pages and add an html sitemap. You can link to the sitemap at the bottom of every page so that search engines with then acknowledge that the other pages even exist. Another less than optimal, but acceptable method is creating an alternative text-only or html duplicate of your flash site.

    I don't find either of these to be great ways to deal with flash. Instead breaking up flash elements, and having

    Finite Capacity Scheduling; Management Issues
    If you are in management it behooves you to learn about finite capacity scheduling models and how you can increase your output in your production cycles. Efficiency is indeed the name of the game when it comes to output and low costs. I therefore recommend the book; Finite Capacity Scheduling : Management, Selection, and Implementation (Oliver Wight Manufacturing) by Gerhard Plenert. accessible and search engine friendly is to simply use flash sparingly and never use it to provide functional elements like navigation.

    However this really limits what you can do with flash, and prevents you from taking advantage of all that flash can offer. There are many ways you can make flash accessible and search engine friendly while using it for more than simple design aspects.

    The Basics -

    If you feel your whole site needs to be flash, you should at least break it up into several pages and add an html sitemap. You can link to the sitemap at the bottom of every page so that search engines with then acknowledge that the other pages even exist. Another less than optimal, but acceptable method is creating an alternative text-only or html duplicate of your flash site.

    I don't find either of these to be great ways to deal with flash. Instead breaking up flash elements, and having

    Networking Your Way to Profit: Part 4; Business Cards Advice for Start-Ups
    Is your business card just for handing out at business meetings, because everyone else does so? Or is it a real marketing tool for you?Provided you’ve got the design and content right (see my article ‘Networking Your Way to Profit: Part 3: Your Hidden Marketing Opportunity’) it can be one of the hardest working marketing weapons in your arsenal.But only if you use it properly to position yourself.And that’s where the quality of the card you use counts. It speaks volumes about you and your business.Start-up business people know they need business cards.
    antage of all that flash can offer. There are many ways you can make flash accessible and search engine friendly while using it for more than simple design aspects.

    The Basics -

    If you feel your whole site needs to be flash, you should at least break it up into several pages and add an html sitemap. You can link to the sitemap at the bottom of every page so that search engines with then acknowledge that the other pages even exist. Another less than optimal, but acceptable method is creating an alternative text-only or html duplicate of your flash site.

    I don't find either of these to be great ways to deal with flash. Instead breaking up flash elements, and having

    Bridge Over Troubled Waters: 3 Questions for Group Problem Solving
    Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton asked why. —Bernard BaruchWe've all had the experience of sitting in a staff meeting discussing some important issue to be solved or challenge to be overcome. Everyone is throwing out there thoughts and suggestions with one idea being trumped or dismissed by the next.Then there is that moment of silence. One person interjects the most reasoned position.Somehow while others were entrenched in the verbal exchange this team member found a simple and concise way of bringing all the information to
    flash, you should at least break it up into several pages and add an html sitemap. You can link to the sitemap at the bottom of every page so that search engines with then acknowledge that the other pages even exist. Another less than optimal, but acceptable method is creating an alternative text-only or html duplicate of your flash site.

    I don't find either of these to be great ways to deal with flash. Instead breaking up flash elements, and having

    You Have Found The Perfect Job-Now Follow Up Part 2
    In part one I wrote about ways to follow up after an interview. Keep in mind that following up after an interview will assure the employer that you have an interest in the job and they will be more likely to take the next step if they fill that you are a potential candidate and their chances of you taking the job are high. Employers do not want to waste time interviewing people who have no interest in taking the job.Here are some additional tips on following up:Follow up with a phone call and thank them for giving you the opportunity to meet with them about their job o
    than optimal, but acceptable method is creating an alternative text-only or html duplicate of your flash site.

    I don't find either of these to be great ways to deal with flash. Instead breaking up flash elements, and having a mix of HTML and flash allows much more remote to provide accessible alternatives. Most designers will be saying “Well Duh” at this point, but I am talking about doing more than just using flash for banners or simple animation.

    Most designers will tell you that using flash for navigation is an accessibility and search engine death wish. However, with new CSS methods you can now have navigation hidden behind flash. With these methods, users with flash see the bells and whistles that you spend so much time working on, and those who do not can still navigate normally (including search engines).

    This is often refered to as Fharner Image Replacement, but instead of using a display: none box – it uses a span with a large text indent and overflow: hidden to hide the navigation and/or text. (developed by Mike Rundle)

    CSS

    #navigation { /* FLASH DETAILS */ }

    #navigation span { text-

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