Updates from August, 2009

  • Creating Strong Passwords You Can Remember

    Rick 10:55 am on August 9, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: hackers, passwords, security

    Here is a useful method for creating strong passwords you can actually remember. This information comes from the Tweetlater.com newsletter and was originally developed by Sammie.

    This method involves 9 character passwords with the same beginning and ending characters (2 each) and five characters chosen in the middle according to a formula.

    Step 1: Pick 2 Starting Characters

    To make it easy to remember, all your passwords are going to start with the same characters. But these are not just any characters. Pick 2 characters from the list of special characters that you see above the numbers on your keyboard and to the left of the Enter key.

    These characters are: ~`!@#$%^&*()_-+={}[]:;”‘<>?/|\

    Pick any two of them as your password starting characters. To show you an example as you read through the steps, let’s pick % and * (pick your own two).

    In my example, all my passwords are going to start with %*.

    (More …)

     
  • Why You Need a Blog in a Social Networking World

    Rick 2:39 pm on August 2, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , social networking strategy

    When we look back on the development of blogging over the last 5 or 10 years we can see that blogs were an important step in the “socializing” of the web. Unlike traditional static websites that were more or less just online brochures, blogs were built as personal publishing platforms with a major dose of interactivity. In other words, they encourage one on one interaction. Bloggers express their opinions, as well as connect to other bloggers and web resources, and readers respond by expressing their opinions in the form of “comments”.

    This interaction is what “social networking” is all about – with the most glaring examples being platforms like Facebook and Twitter. They provide you the opportunity to interact with an ever-broadening network of people who share your interests, or are interested in what you have to say.

    Those of us interested in using these social networking sites as marketing tools can find it a bit overwhelming. Keeping up with Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, MySpace, ActiveRain, and many others is difficult and time-consuming. And if there is no comprehensive strategy for our social networking it will eventually become tiresome and of questionable value.

    As part of a sensible online social networking strategy, most “experts” agree it is important to have your blog at the centre of things. Your blog is where you can express yourself in greater depth, and without worrying that you are being too pushy or sales-oriented.

    Generally speaking, your friends and followers on sites like Facebook or Twitter do not like to be bombarded with a sales pitch whenever they read your entries. But using your tweets and Facebook entries to point them to interesting stories, articles, videos, or special offers is perfectly acceptable. The easiest place to point them is your own blog.

    This strategy is no mystery and it has been discussed many times by marketing experts: use your blog to build your online identity, publish your opinions, and present your special products and offers. Use the other social media (Facebook, Twitter, etc.) to drive traffic to your blog.

    In other words, as I said above, your blog should be at the center of your marketing strategy. Looking at it this way may encourage you to reconfigure your whole online marketing strategy. But that is probably a good thing.

     
  • Twitter for Business - Twitter 101

    Rick 8:55 am on July 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: twitter 101, twitter for business

    twitter 101Twitter is getting serious about business. This seems to be the natural evolution for Twitter and they’re encouraging it. They’ve just launched a special guide for the business users – Twitter 101. It is the result of research done by business students, writers and corporate users.

    Twitter 101 is meant to be the definitive guide for optimal Twitter usage. It explains the basics of Twitter, getting started, common Twitter terminology, best practices and includes business case studies. You can also get the Twitter Guide for business as a downloadable slideshow.

     
  • Recession is Over - Bank of Canada

    Rick 10:48 pm on July 23, 2009 | 4 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: canada, recession

    Small businesses in Canada will be glad to hear that the recession is almost offically over. At least according to Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of Canada.

    Carney said today (July 23) that the Canadian economy would see modest growth in the third quarter of 2009. The Canadian economy has been officially in recession for 9 months – quite a bit shorter than the last two recessions in 1990-92 and 1981-82.

    That’s right. The recession that many thought would be a depression only lasted 9 months. Carney attributed the turn around to low interest rates, healthy house sales, government stimulus programs, and continued growth of family borrowing.

    Carney also said that the Canadian economy shrunk so much during this recession that climbing all the way back would take quite a while.

    See The recession is over. Cue the recover.

     
  • More Sources for Blog Content

    Rick 1:16 pm on July 21, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , ,

    Here are some more places you can find content for your blog…

    Youtube.com – This is one of the most widely used and easiest places to find blog content. Say you have a “golf swing tips” blog. Just go to Youtube, search for “golf swing tips” and pick the one you want to include in your blog. Find the embed code and copy it into the appropriate place in your blog. Make sure to accompany the video with a short commentary of your own. You can add links to your commentary, just like an ordinary blog post.

    EzineArticles.com – This is the best article site on the web. Search for articles using keywords. Pick the article you want to re-publish. Copy it into your blog, making sure to publish it just as you found it. That includes retaining the author’s “resource box”, links to his or her websites, and all links within the article.

    Google News/Yahoo News/Bing News – If you occasionally want to publish a current “news” story, then one of the high profile news sites will give you lots of ideas. For example I just did a search in Bing News (bing.com) for “electronic gadgets” and found:

    - Third of teens use cell to cheat
    - Sony CEO says restructuring steps on track
    - iPhone to hit stores as Apple awaits Jobs’ return

    …and many more.

    Most of these stories provide good fodder for blog posts. Remember, don’t just copy the news story, and be sure to add your own comments.

    Free Original Articles with reprint rights – About the only place you will find top quality free articles is in a membership site of which you are a member. For example, if you are an AgentMapIt member we provide free articles ideal for use in blogs and newsletters. These are high quality, original, “free” PLR articles (PLR stands for “Private Label Rights”). For example, see Free Green Tips.

    PLR Articles – You can buy groups of articles that have been written by someone else and bundled as a package of PLR articles. PLR stands for “private label rights”, which means that you can publish the articles as they are, modify them, just use parts of them, and put your own name on them as the author. Most PLR packages are poorly written – often by non-English speakers – and often 5 or more years old. They have probably been recycled several times, so if they are any good they have probably been published elsewhere a number of times. I don’t recommend using PLR articles.

    Outsource your blog post writing – There are all kinds of people out there prepared to write quality short articles for next to nothing. For example, if you are using the Categorize and Cycle approach (where you have 4 or 5 categories and try to write on article a week in each) you could have a ghost writer create 5 articles for each of 4 categories (20 short articles). Chances are you can find someone to do this for less than $150. Often they will do it for as low as $5 each. Stretch those articles out over two or three months (you can add your own stuff between outsourced articles) and you have a pretty inexpensive way to create a totally original blog.

    Of course different writers will have different areas of expertise, and the writing quality will vary from writer to writer. A good place to find writers is on forums such as The Warrior Forum.

    Outsource your entire blog – Finally I would be remiss not to mention our own blogging service. Our Blog and Mail service includes setting up and maintaining your blog, writing and posting unique articles at least once a week, helping you create a contact list, and sending an email to that list at least once a month. In other words, this is an entire marketing program built around having your own blog and regular email campaign. You really don’t have to do anything. We do the entire thing.

    This approach is even more effective when integrated with an aggressive Twitter campaign.

    As you can see, even if you have very few ideas and have limited writing skills it is not that difficult to create your own interesting and effective blog. However it is important to remember what I said at the beginning of this report: without traffic your blog might as well not exist. The very first thing
    you should do is think through how you intend to get traffic to your blog.

    In my estimation the traffic generation methods discussed by would-be blogging gurus usually come down to SEO and they do not work for local business blogs. The only method I have found that does actually generate traffic is the Blog and Mail method outlined elsewhere in this blog.

     
  • Blogging Myth #2 - The Search Engines Will Send Lots of Traffic

    Rick 9:17 am on July 20, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: blog formula, , blog success, , , , marketing blogs

    If you’ve done any research into blogging, you’ve probably been exposed to the standard formula for blogging success. This formula has been promoted by countless gurus and web marketers trying to sell blogging advice and “systems” and it goes like this:

    1. Pick an interesting topic for your blog
    2. Write interesting posts with catchy titles
    3. Optimize your blog posts for the Search Engines
    4. Promote your blog on blog directories and bookmarking sites

    If you do these things, the forumula says, you will get the attention of the Search Engines (especially Google), and they will send you a “stampede of targeted traffic”.

    In case you haven’t noticed, this formula relies almost exclusively on the Search Engines for traffic, and because of this it is seriously misleading. I can state with no hesitation at all that if you use this formula to get traffic to your blog you will almost certainly be disappointed by the results.

    Yes, there are bloggers who get tons of traffic, and much of that traffic is driven by the Search Engines. But what you’re not told is that these bloggers have built up their list of followers over quite a long period of time, usually using a strategy other than simply relying on the hit and miss results you get from the search engines.

    And if you are a local business – a real estate agent, accountant, lawyer, chiropractor, restaurant, landscaping company, etc., etc. – you are addressing a narrowly targeted local niche where the fact is only local followers matter to you. You will soon find that to rely on the search engines to deliver a lot of traffic from such a relatively small target market will be extremely disappointing.

    For more ideas on traffic strategies that do (and don’t) work, get this free report called Blogs That Work.

     
  • Blogging Myth #1 - Blog It And They Will Come

    Rick 7:55 am on July 20, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , getting traffic to your blog, how to get blog traffic

    If you’re tempted to start a blog because you think it will give you instant fame and exposure, you’re going to be disappointed. If you’ve been told that hundreds or thousands of viewers will flock to your blog each day just because Google loves what you have to say, don’t believe it.

    Getting traffic to your blog is the biggest and most important issue for bloggers. Not topic, not content, not design.

    Traffic. That is where your blogging strategy should start. If you don’t have a traffic strategy you’ll be spending a lot of time writing stuff that very few people will ever see.

    There’s no doubt that a blog can often be the best way to put a consistent face on your business. Rather than a static website that makes no attempt to invite visitor interaction, a blog can be a perfect way to engage your people and build a relationship with them.

    But there is a problem with blogs, and we might as well state it right at the beginning. Your blog will only be effective if it has two things: good content and quality, targeted traffic.

    And of these two things (content and traffic) traffic is by far the more difficult issue. Getting quality traffic is the problem for web marketers. In fact, if your website or blog has no traffic it might as well not exist.

    Blogs That Work – Get The Free Report

    So, this may sound odd, but it is really the place to start in developing a blogging strategy.

    Ask yourself: “How can I generate traffic to my blog?” If you don’t have a good answer to this question you should probably stop before you go any further.

     
  • Is Twitter Working For You?

    Rick 11:52 pm on July 19, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , twitter apps, twitter success

    Have you had any success with Twitter? Is it doing what you want it to do. Are you using some Twitter apps that help make it more effective?

    I started using Twitter a few months ago and then stopped after a short time. It didn’t make much sense to me and, it was cluttered with spam, and to tell you the truth, I couldn’t get my own act together.

    Last week after watching a couple of Perry Belcher’s videos I decided to take another crack at it. You can follow me here.

    Figuring out your own objectives is something you really have to do before you can expect any serious results from any of your marketing efforts – online or offline. That’s especially true with Twitter where you are trying to put yourself out there in 140 characters or less. The message has to be simple, concise, easily summarized and easily grasped. It also has to be enticing enough or interesting enough to get people to respond – to get them to follow you, or read your tweets, or click thru to your linked sources.

    But I don’t pretend to be a Twitter expert (yet). I can see that it has potential but I’m still trying to figure out the best way to get the most out of it.

    Have you had any Twitter success?

     
  • New social site wants your expertise

    Rick 4:14 am on July 17, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: expert tips, , tip drop, tip site

    TipDrop.com is a brand new site where people can show off their expertise on a very wide range of topics. TipDrop combines aspects of Twitter, Digg, and Wikipedia, and in some ways it is like a giant multi-topic forum.

    Say you’re interested in dog training. If there is a dog training topic already created in TipDrop you can share your insights in (relatively) short entries of 255 words max. If there is no topic in your area you can create one.

    Other members can vote your tips up or down. The more votes a tip gets, the higher it stays on the tip page for that topic.

    This is a great way to build a focused identity for yourself based on the quality of your tips. Check it out at TipDrop.com.

     
  • Search Engines Are Changing

    rickh 9:56 am on July 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , web promotion, web traffic,

    Getting traffic from the search engines is changing.

    If you have a website promoting local services (such as a local real estate site) it is difficult to compete with search engine optimization experts who have built sites targeting your most important keywords. These “experts” have no interest in serving your market with useful information. What they want is to gain local ranking so Google will send searchers to click on their pay per click ads.


    It’s a free world, so people can do whatever they want with their websites. But it’s too bad Google has to reward website owners who play the game this way.

    See the rest of the article…The Search Engine Ranking Game is Changing.

     
  • Powering a House with Solar Cells

    rickh 9:00 am on July 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , solar heating, solar home, solar power

    Is it practical to power your house with solar electricity? Well, in a recent article at How Stuff Works they asked the question “How many solar cells would I need in order to provide all of the electricity that my house needs?”

    Making a series of assumptions about electricity use and basing the hardware costs on today’s rates, the writers concluded that it would cost at least $30,000 to generate enough to provide the electrical requirements of a typical home. And that doesn’t even include the cost of space heating, water heating, cooking, and clothes drying – all of which it was assumed would be done by natural gas.

    The numbers go like this. A “typical” home in the US requires an average of 600 watts per hour every 24 hours to run the lights, appliances, computers, refrigerators, TVs, and fans and motors on other appliances such as the furnace, clothes washer and dryer, and so on. That is approximately 14,400 watt-hours per day. To generate that much electricity using solar cells you would need about 41,000 square inches or 285 sq. ft. of solar panels.

    At today’s prices that would come to about $16,000. And then, because the sun is not available for parts of some days or at all on other days you would need a battery storage system that would cost at least the same – roughly another $16,000. So that puts the price at about $32,000 for the system.

    At today’s cost of electricity off the grid that much electricity would cost roughly $525 per year. At these rates, to recover the up-front costs would take more than 50 years. Long before that time had passed the entire system would have to be replaced. In fact with today’s technology the battery system would probably have to be replaced several times over that time period.

    So it is no wonder that not very many “solar houses” are being built. Even if we accept these numbers at face value it does not mean that solar energy has no place in the energy mix of the future. It just means that it is important to think long and hard about where it is practical to use it.

     
  • New Feedback Program for Agents

    rickh 8:07 am on July 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: agent feedback, feedback, real estate listings, real estate marketing, referrals

    Here’s a video that shows how to get  feedback automatically from other agents who show your listings.


    Feedback video


    Getting feedback is very helpful, but is often quite difficult. The right feedback can help your clients sell their homes more quickly. This new program is included with AgentMapIt Gold.

     
  • What kind of salesman are you?

    Rick 4:29 pm on July 14, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: real estate, ,

    A real estate salesman had just closed his first deal, only to discover that the piece of land he had sold was completely under water.

    “That customer’s going to come back here pretty mad,” he said to his boss. “Should I give him his money back?”

    “Money back?” roared the boss. “What kind of salesman are you? Get out there and sell him a houseboat.”

    If you’re looking for some ideas on creating a successful blog, check out this free report: Blogs That Work.

     
  • Going Green at Home

    Rick 3:35 pm on July 14, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: energy saving, , green tips

    One of the most obvious areas where a homeowner can go “green” is in the use of energy in the home. The biggest energy hogs are heating, air conditioning, electrical appliances, lighting, and water usage. For some practical tips for saving energy around the home see this free series of Green Tips for Homeowners. This is a series of articles that can be reprinted in your real estate or other local business blog, website or newsletter.

     
  • Blogging Code of Ethics

    Rick 6:30 pm on December 22, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , code of ethics,

    The other day I followed a link in one of the many internet marketing pitches I receive on a daily basis. It offered me yet another reason why I should join a “fantastic new membership site” that would show me how I could get tons of traffic to my blog.

    The pitch was in the form of a blog post and the claim was that if I received less than 1000 visitors a day and 300 subscribers then I obviously needed help. One of the topics was “How to write posts that get comments.”

    I had a closer look at the blog and I noticed that the very post that I was reading had only two comments.

    So how can this be? If this person is using her own strategy and getting at least 1000 visits to her blog every day; and if she is applying her own strategies for generating comments how could a post have only two comments? Shouldn’t this post have hundreds of comments? It doesn’t make sense, does it?

    (More …)

     
  • Blogging Strategy - Staying On Message

    Rick 4:21 am on December 12, 2008 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ,

    Here’s the second part of creating an effective blogging strategy. In the first part called “Your Blog Will Fail Without a Strategy” we said you should focus on creating a consistent and distinctive “brand”. Your blog should be viewed as a “Channel” which you use to send information to your readers and visitors. And that information – that “content” – should reflect a unique and consistent character, point of view and style.

    But I find it is very easy to lose track of what I’m doing if I don’t have a clear plan. There’s a great temptation to start going off on tangents in response to the hot topic of the moment. Or, just as bad, I can get in a rut and just talk about the same things over and over again.

    If you’re blog is about real estate investment, for example, you’ll find yourself tempted to spout the same “Five Rules for Smart Investing” over an over again in different words.

    One effective technique for channeling your thoughts and encouraging yourself to cover a range of interesting and relevant material is to use what I call the C & C method – Categorize and Cycle. Here’s what I mean:

    First, you choose a series of categories which you will try to write something about on a regular basis. And then you cycle through the categories.

    Wordpress and other blogging platforms lend themselves very nicely to the idea of “categories”. In fact they almost force you into that approach. Choosing interesting categories gives you a way of organizing your blog, and organizing your thoughts too.

    Let’s say you are a real estate agent. Your categories might be

    - Buying Real Estate
    - Selling Real Estate
    - Real Estate Investing
    - Local or Regional Information
    - National Real Estate News or Trends

    Or say you’re creating a blog about Golf. Your categories might be

    - Golf swing tips
    - Golf travel destinations
    - Golf course reviews
    - Golf equipment reviews

    This might be too broad. You might want to focus on just one of these areas, say, “Golf Swing Tips”:

    - Putting tips
    - Driving tips
    - Bunker tips
    - Short game tips

    You may be temtped to go too narrow or too broad. Try to settle on a range of categories that cover what you think your target market will be interested in, and which will reinforce the “brand” identification you have selected.

    For example, if you want to be known as the “golf swing tips guy”, then don’t get sidetracked talking about golf travel. Or on the other hand, if you want to become a resource for “golf travel”, then focus on that. And stay focused.

    And don’t choose too many categories because you want to use them to help you decide what to write about. You want to write something about each of them on a regular basis. So four or five is probably good for starters.

    Once you’ve chosen your categories it’s just a matter of “cycling” through them on a regular basis. Not only does this give you a much clearer idea of what to write about, but it also suggests a practical posting schedule.

    For example, if you have five categories then you may want to write something about each of them every week. That would be five posts a week – not an unreasonable schedule if you want your blog to be taken seriously by your readers.

    If you think coming up with interesting material to write about every day is way too difficult, then back it off to every other day. But before you draw that conclusion, read the suggestions I make in the next post where I disuss: “What to put in your posts and where to get the ideas.”

    It’s not as difficult as you might think.

     
  • Your Blog Will Fail Without A Strategy

    Rick 8:04 pm on December 11, 2008 | 4 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , branding, corporate, image, ,

    There’s no doubt that a blog can often be the best way to put a consistent face on your business. Rather than a static website that makes no attempt to invite visitor interaction, a blog can be a perfect way to engage your people and build a relationship with them.

    But it takes commitment to keep a blog going. Unlike a static website that you put up once and then only update from time to time, a blog requires constant attention in order to be effective.

    And that requires a strategy. Sorry, but without an explicit strategy your blog will very likely fail. It will not accomplish what you set out to accomplish with it, and you personally will probably lose interest within a month or two.

    1. Creating a ‘Brand’ With Your Blog

    You need an objective for your blog, and I think the best one is to…
    (More …)

     
  • Why Most People Will Never Make a Full-Time Income Online

    Rick 4:03 am on December 10, 2008 | 6 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: affiliate marketing, Chris Rempel

    I’ve said this before, but it deserves being said again. One of the most persistent internet marketing misconceptions out there is that the place to start your online business is to “select a niche that you are passionate about”.

    Chris Rempel of “Confessions of a Lazy Super-Affiliate” certainly agrees. As he says, “the myth of ‘do what you love and the money will follow’ has been responsible for more failure than likely any other influence – perhaps even more so than laziness or a lack of perseverance.”

    The assumption is that there are tons of people out there interested in every conceivable niche and that no matter which one you choose, a lot of people are going to be interested in what you have to offer. This is simply not true.

    (More …)

     
  • Three Revolutions

    Rick 1:20 pm on December 9, 2008 | 4 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , technology

    I remember a discussion I had many years ago when I was a teenager. It was in my parent’s kitchen and one of my dad’s friends – an intelligent guy who I respected because of his independent streak – was trying to convince me that we (people, the world, mankind) had already discovered just about all the major inventions that were ever going to be discovered.

    This conversation couldn’t have lasted more than about 5 minutes, but I remember it because I was so surprised. I could hardly believe what I was hearing. I’ll never know whether he was just baiting me or actually believed what he was saying.

    But what I do remember was that here was a guy who I respected, going against one of the fundamental beliefs – one of the most obvious “facts” – of post-World War II western society. We had been taught that the discoveries of the first half of the century were just the beginning, and that there were amazing things ahead we could not even imagine.

    (More …)

     
  • Kick Starting Your Local Email List

    Rick 7:45 am on December 9, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , scrubbing

    In a previous post I outlined what I call the “Opt-Out” method of developing an email list. This method allows you to enter contact information into your autoresponder and then
    begin sending them occasional email messages without first asking their permission.

    I am not recommending that you buy lists, plug them into your system and just start sending out emails by the millions. This is the worst kind of spamming, and it is illegal. It is also ineffective because most purchased lists are not targeted and they are usually of very low quality.

    But what if you take the time to scour through Chamber of Commerce lists and look through local websites to develop your own list from their data. Is that good or bad? This would probably give you a fairly up-to-date list, and it would be targeted because it would be aimed directly at business addresses.

    (More …)

     
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