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    How To Choose A Good Product Or Service for Your Target Market
    Sometimes being new to the sales industry, or internet marketing, many may confuse their target market and product and/or service to be one and the same. Your target market is a specific group of people whom you are selling your product or service to.Your product or service is what you are using to help your prospective customers or your target market solve the problems that they are faced with, thus making their lives a little bit easier.Objective: Join your target market and your product or service together and the two become one and they both live happily ever after.Now back to choosing. A good friend of mine reminded me of something that I feel is of vital importance when choosing a product or service. When choosing your product and/or service you may want to first consider choosing something that you enjoy being involved with and that is of great interest to you.For example you may like fishing, and you are an expert on choosing the proper bait for bass fishing. There are many people that love to fish and they do not know what you know, so you provide them with information on bass bait and the actual bait that you use to get results.Target market or audience: People who like to fish for bass.Product or service: Information on b
    the above, a bunch of unprofessional, ineffective scams.

    In other words, Spam is a fourletter word.

    Legitimate marketers are staying away in droves and it’s easy to see why. First of all let’s look at some facts. In the United States, it is legal to send unsolicited commercial email. The CAN SPAM act allows for this. You have to provide a way to optout and not hide who you are, and a few more simple but ethical rules.

    Although it is legal, there isn’t an internet service provider in the United States who will allow you to send unsolicited commercial email.

    Larger mailers have optin information from lists they purchase which imply consent but those lists aren’t originated from the mailer, but from other submailers—you get a free thing or access to a particular site and the user checks a box that it is okay to get information from their “affiliates and partners.”

    The “affiliates and partners” they are referring to are those who pay for the email addresses and optin information.

    These guys are sending you mail legally, but the fact is, they are not getting into your email box for the most part. Blocking, filtering, and doing it the “legal” way bulk wise, is just not working.

    Not to mention, there is no way to prove that the recipients opted in or are will

    What's the Most Important Part of an SEO Campaign?
    If you're like many of the business owners that are beginning to see the importance of search engine optimization as a marketing tool, chances are that you've come across quite a bit of contradictory information. You've probably heard a dozen opinions of what the most important part of your SEO campaign is - everything from links to title tags and everything in between.The fact of the matter is that selecting the right keyword phrases is the single most important aspect of any SEO campaign. If you choose keywords that are too competitive you may never achieve any ranking for them, and if you choose keywords that no one searches for you will not receive any traffic even if your web site ranks #1. That's why it's so important to put a little extra effort into your keyword selection or hire a professional to do it. Let's say that you are a real estate agent in Tampa, Florida who wants to generate additional business from the internet. While it may sound great to target the keyword phrase "real estate" because it gets over 67,000 searches each day, you would really be much better off targeting a keyword phrase like "tampa bay waterfront real estate" which gets about 6 searches each day. Visitors searching for 3-4 word keyword phrases are more likely to convert to clients than those searching
    A typical day at the inbox

    Today, I received 374 emails total.

    A pretty light day considering some days I get more than 1,000.

    To clarify what they were35 were for business, 4 were personal in nature, 11 were from groups I asked to get information from like Neiman Marcus and Urban Outfitters, VH1, and a PR Newsletter.

    The balance of 324 was unsolicited (UCEunsolicited commercial email)in other words spam.

    If I extrapolate the UCE I’ve gotten in the last six hours alone, I find I must be missing something about myself on some spiritual level..

    I am a balding, fat man with a small penis that doesn’t work. I am in debt.

    I am looking for a lower interest rate on my mortgage while at the same time making thousands of dollars with no effort on my part in the privacy of my own home—filling out surveys, stuffing envelopes and not selling something that miraculously sells itself.

    Even better, I can be a travel agent without wrinkles; obtain a college degree while waiting for my 1500 advance to show up in my bank account; I can restore my credit rating legally while watching my free satellite TV and munching on my drugs sent courtesy of an offshore pharmacy that has a doctor who will write me a prescription… HMMM…definitely something to consider. NOT.

    I’ve also discovered that I am a prime candidate to help an African Prince transfer funds into the US. He trusts me. All I have to do is give him my bank account information.

    The problem is that I am a woman who doesn’t suffer those ills. Someone thinks I do…There is something wrong with this picture.

    The future of bulk email and why it is likely to remain dead

    Now, you might be asking why I, who was dubbed the “Spam Queen” in the “Wall Street Journal” three years ago, am even bothering to say anything about email?

    Just to set the record straight, I have never advocated spam or sending spam.

    One reporter said to me, "Some people consider all bulk email as spam. What do you have to say about that?" to which I replied, "Then I guess you'd call me the spam queen," as a joke.

    In our sound byte media world, one editor turned this little quip into a buzzword and I became known almost instantly, all over the world, as representing what everyone, including myself, hates about email.

    The media as usual emphasized sensationalism and missed the point.

    I am not complaining because my marketing business skyrocketed as a result.

    At that time I advocated email as a very effective medium for small business, which because of its low cost lets small businesses level the playing field against big corporations.

    At no small personal risk, I visited the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, DC, and spoke my peace about small businesses and not throwing out the baby with the bathwater before even the very term spam could be legally agreed upon and defined to the satisfaction of marketers, ISPs and the government jointly.

    Small businesses are the lifeblood of the US economy, and entrepreneurs with their dreams are what have made the US the economic powerhouse it still is today.

    Email that is sent to people who WANT to receive it, and that is in accordance with their preferences, still gets a high response. It allows many small businesses to get ahead. I didn't want to see big corporations or the government take over email and bar entry, filter, and extort everyone else while still sending their own advertising messages freely.

    And then came the CanSpam act, which I and many other legitimate marketers welcomed, because it had a great promise of getting rid of the noise while keeping the signal.

    As it turned out, the opposite happened. Email filters from ISP's now block a large amount of legitimate messages, which they call "false positives".

    Marketers can't send the text they would like to send to their subscribers, so they have to resort to filter tricking tactics such as spelling the word spam as sp@@@M so that they can get past the filters that were intended for another purpose entirely.

    In a climate like this, legitimate companies that had been diligently following best practices, and keeping their lists clean for years, suddenly did not want to stay in business with ambiguities in the law and the potential litigation that might ensue even if all the rules WERE followed, so many companies just folded.

    However the people that continue to send email illegally did not fold.

    Often times sending from outside the US borders, they stepped up their operations even more, to the point that there is almost no truly legitimate bulk email left.

    In other words, the signal has become lost in the noise.

    The simplicity is this — bulk commercial email has gotten to the point where it isn’t effective. We just don’t do it anymore. What’s the point? It doesn’t get a response, and we found people are overloaded with advertising messages and no longer willing to receive more, especially in their inbox, unless they specifically asked for it.

    As a marketing professional, the only thing that should count for you at the end of the day is effectiveness. Bulk commercial email has turned into the above, a bunch of unprofessional, ineffective scams.

    In other words, Spam is a fourletter word.

    Legitimate marketers are staying away in droves and it’s easy to see why. First of all let’s look at some facts. In the United States, it is legal to send unsolicited commercial email. The CAN SPAM act allows for this. You have to provide a way to optout and not hide who you are, and a few more simple but ethical rules.

    Although it is legal, there isn’t an internet service provider in the United States who will allow you to send unsolicited commercial email.

    Larger mailers have optin information from lists they purchase which imply consent but those lists aren’t originated from the mailer, but from other submailers—you get a free thing or access to a particular site and the user checks a box that it is okay to get information from their “affiliates and partners.”

    The “affiliates and partners” they are referring to are those who pay for the email addresses and optin information.

    These guys are sending you mail legally, but the fact is, they are not getting into your email box for the most part. Blocking, filtering, and doing it the “legal” way bulk wise, is just not working.

    Not to mention, there is no way to prove that the recipients opted in or are willi

    Communication - Core of the Corporate World
    Introduction:A review of recent literature on management, job advertisements and career advancement suggests that in today’s competitive employment market employers’ value communication skills more than technical competence. The ability to communicate effectively with others and get along with a variety of different types of personalities is two of the most desirable qualities in job candidates, according to employers. Employers want to discern if you have the ability to organize your thoughts and ideas effectively.The competencies employers seek are:• Communication • Leadership • Critical Thinking • Negotiations • Managing Change • Ethics • Self-Managed Learning • Motivation • Team Work • Interpersonal • Diversity • Technical KnowledgeJob seekers who demonstrate these traits have an advantage with prospective employers.It is in every job advertisement and most job descriptions: “must possess good communication skills.” Microsoft – requires cross functional domain expertise, sophisticated technical and functional know-how of the company’s products, understanding multi-vendor environments and an ability to communicate this understanding simply and effectively to the customer.Siemens – For all positio
    >I’ve also discovered that I am a prime candidate to help an African Prince transfer funds into the US. He trusts me. All I have to do is give him my bank account information.

    The problem is that I am a woman who doesn’t suffer those ills. Someone thinks I do…There is something wrong with this picture.

    The future of bulk email and why it is likely to remain dead

    Now, you might be asking why I, who was dubbed the “Spam Queen” in the “Wall Street Journal” three years ago, am even bothering to say anything about email?

    Just to set the record straight, I have never advocated spam or sending spam.

    One reporter said to me, "Some people consider all bulk email as spam. What do you have to say about that?" to which I replied, "Then I guess you'd call me the spam queen," as a joke.

    In our sound byte media world, one editor turned this little quip into a buzzword and I became known almost instantly, all over the world, as representing what everyone, including myself, hates about email.

    The media as usual emphasized sensationalism and missed the point.

    I am not complaining because my marketing business skyrocketed as a result.

    At that time I advocated email as a very effective medium for small business, which because of its low cost lets small businesses level the playing field against big corporations.

    At no small personal risk, I visited the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, DC, and spoke my peace about small businesses and not throwing out the baby with the bathwater before even the very term spam could be legally agreed upon and defined to the satisfaction of marketers, ISPs and the government jointly.

    Small businesses are the lifeblood of the US economy, and entrepreneurs with their dreams are what have made the US the economic powerhouse it still is today.

    Email that is sent to people who WANT to receive it, and that is in accordance with their preferences, still gets a high response. It allows many small businesses to get ahead. I didn't want to see big corporations or the government take over email and bar entry, filter, and extort everyone else while still sending their own advertising messages freely.

    And then came the CanSpam act, which I and many other legitimate marketers welcomed, because it had a great promise of getting rid of the noise while keeping the signal.

    As it turned out, the opposite happened. Email filters from ISP's now block a large amount of legitimate messages, which they call "false positives".

    Marketers can't send the text they would like to send to their subscribers, so they have to resort to filter tricking tactics such as spelling the word spam as sp@@@M so that they can get past the filters that were intended for another purpose entirely.

    In a climate like this, legitimate companies that had been diligently following best practices, and keeping their lists clean for years, suddenly did not want to stay in business with ambiguities in the law and the potential litigation that might ensue even if all the rules WERE followed, so many companies just folded.

    However the people that continue to send email illegally did not fold.

    Often times sending from outside the US borders, they stepped up their operations even more, to the point that there is almost no truly legitimate bulk email left.

    In other words, the signal has become lost in the noise.

    The simplicity is this — bulk commercial email has gotten to the point where it isn’t effective. We just don’t do it anymore. What’s the point? It doesn’t get a response, and we found people are overloaded with advertising messages and no longer willing to receive more, especially in their inbox, unless they specifically asked for it.

    As a marketing professional, the only thing that should count for you at the end of the day is effectiveness. Bulk commercial email has turned into the above, a bunch of unprofessional, ineffective scams.

    In other words, Spam is a fourletter word.

    Legitimate marketers are staying away in droves and it’s easy to see why. First of all let’s look at some facts. In the United States, it is legal to send unsolicited commercial email. The CAN SPAM act allows for this. You have to provide a way to optout and not hide who you are, and a few more simple but ethical rules.

    Although it is legal, there isn’t an internet service provider in the United States who will allow you to send unsolicited commercial email.

    Larger mailers have optin information from lists they purchase which imply consent but those lists aren’t originated from the mailer, but from other submailers—you get a free thing or access to a particular site and the user checks a box that it is okay to get information from their “affiliates and partners.”

    The “affiliates and partners” they are referring to are those who pay for the email addresses and optin information.

    These guys are sending you mail legally, but the fact is, they are not getting into your email box for the most part. Blocking, filtering, and doing it the “legal” way bulk wise, is just not working.

    Not to mention, there is no way to prove that the recipients opted in or are will

    Social Bookmarking and Increasing Web Traffic
    One of the newest ways to increase traffic on your website and get your business ranked higher in the search engines is thru social book marking. In fact social book marking is all the rage. Moreover it is a natural tendency of to think in this way and it is helping smaller website entrepreneurs and Bloggers get their messages out to society.Social Bookmarking and Increasing Web Traffic was recently the number one topic on the ezines of the top online website marketing consultants and already there are over 300 eBooks out on the subject and available online to help you develop your own Social Bookmarking Strategy to increasing your Web Traffic.Social Bookmarking is an evolution of the social networking revolutions occuring on the Internet with the next up and coming generation of Internet users and surfers. Although just recently social bookmarking has become popular it actually started in 1996 when the Internet was just really getting going.If your website has more people bookmarking it, your rankings will go up and it will drive more traffic to you, thus it makes sense to work with others doing the same thing to advance both you and them. Search: Social Bookmarking and learn all you can and then develop a strategy to insure your website is viewed and bookmarked by the most
    esses level the playing field against big corporations.

    At no small personal risk, I visited the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, DC, and spoke my peace about small businesses and not throwing out the baby with the bathwater before even the very term spam could be legally agreed upon and defined to the satisfaction of marketers, ISPs and the government jointly.

    Small businesses are the lifeblood of the US economy, and entrepreneurs with their dreams are what have made the US the economic powerhouse it still is today.

    Email that is sent to people who WANT to receive it, and that is in accordance with their preferences, still gets a high response. It allows many small businesses to get ahead. I didn't want to see big corporations or the government take over email and bar entry, filter, and extort everyone else while still sending their own advertising messages freely.

    And then came the CanSpam act, which I and many other legitimate marketers welcomed, because it had a great promise of getting rid of the noise while keeping the signal.

    As it turned out, the opposite happened. Email filters from ISP's now block a large amount of legitimate messages, which they call "false positives".

    Marketers can't send the text they would like to send to their subscribers, so they have to resort to filter tricking tactics such as spelling the word spam as sp@@@M so that they can get past the filters that were intended for another purpose entirely.

    In a climate like this, legitimate companies that had been diligently following best practices, and keeping their lists clean for years, suddenly did not want to stay in business with ambiguities in the law and the potential litigation that might ensue even if all the rules WERE followed, so many companies just folded.

    However the people that continue to send email illegally did not fold.

    Often times sending from outside the US borders, they stepped up their operations even more, to the point that there is almost no truly legitimate bulk email left.

    In other words, the signal has become lost in the noise.

    The simplicity is this — bulk commercial email has gotten to the point where it isn’t effective. We just don’t do it anymore. What’s the point? It doesn’t get a response, and we found people are overloaded with advertising messages and no longer willing to receive more, especially in their inbox, unless they specifically asked for it.

    As a marketing professional, the only thing that should count for you at the end of the day is effectiveness. Bulk commercial email has turned into the above, a bunch of unprofessional, ineffective scams.

    In other words, Spam is a fourletter word.

    Legitimate marketers are staying away in droves and it’s easy to see why. First of all let’s look at some facts. In the United States, it is legal to send unsolicited commercial email. The CAN SPAM act allows for this. You have to provide a way to optout and not hide who you are, and a few more simple but ethical rules.

    Although it is legal, there isn’t an internet service provider in the United States who will allow you to send unsolicited commercial email.

    Larger mailers have optin information from lists they purchase which imply consent but those lists aren’t originated from the mailer, but from other submailers—you get a free thing or access to a particular site and the user checks a box that it is okay to get information from their “affiliates and partners.”

    The “affiliates and partners” they are referring to are those who pay for the email addresses and optin information.

    These guys are sending you mail legally, but the fact is, they are not getting into your email box for the most part. Blocking, filtering, and doing it the “legal” way bulk wise, is just not working.

    Not to mention, there is no way to prove that the recipients opted in or are will

    Revenue Sharing Programs Build Online Income Part One
    Long term Income with revenue affiliate revenueYou may be considering earning money online and are wondering how to go about it. You may have no specific ideas about how to achieve this aim in some cases but wonder if there is some income opportunity going or some form of home based business. Well there are programs that have evolved over the last few years and they can be known by a few different names such as revenue sharing programs or affiliate programs.What is an affiliate or revenue sharing program?Well in its simplest sense you are like an agent for a company but you travel the information superhighway, rather than drive on your local highway. If a company has agents bringing in business – paying customers , they will then share some of the money received as an incentive.There are thousands of affiliate programs available to you covering many areas from food to vitamins. Where to begin with so much choice is potentially daunting and a bit of a headache. Having a strategy at the outset makes for common sense.What do you need to become an affiliate? A computer with a connection to the internet. There are many techniques that you can build into your strategy for getting the very most out of your earnings. A website, simple or complex, on
    so they have to resort to filter tricking tactics such as spelling the word spam as sp@@@M so that they can get past the filters that were intended for another purpose entirely.

    In a climate like this, legitimate companies that had been diligently following best practices, and keeping their lists clean for years, suddenly did not want to stay in business with ambiguities in the law and the potential litigation that might ensue even if all the rules WERE followed, so many companies just folded.

    However the people that continue to send email illegally did not fold.

    Often times sending from outside the US borders, they stepped up their operations even more, to the point that there is almost no truly legitimate bulk email left.

    In other words, the signal has become lost in the noise.

    The simplicity is this — bulk commercial email has gotten to the point where it isn’t effective. We just don’t do it anymore. What’s the point? It doesn’t get a response, and we found people are overloaded with advertising messages and no longer willing to receive more, especially in their inbox, unless they specifically asked for it.

    As a marketing professional, the only thing that should count for you at the end of the day is effectiveness. Bulk commercial email has turned into the above, a bunch of unprofessional, ineffective scams.

    In other words, Spam is a fourletter word.

    Legitimate marketers are staying away in droves and it’s easy to see why. First of all let’s look at some facts. In the United States, it is legal to send unsolicited commercial email. The CAN SPAM act allows for this. You have to provide a way to optout and not hide who you are, and a few more simple but ethical rules.

    Although it is legal, there isn’t an internet service provider in the United States who will allow you to send unsolicited commercial email.

    Larger mailers have optin information from lists they purchase which imply consent but those lists aren’t originated from the mailer, but from other submailers—you get a free thing or access to a particular site and the user checks a box that it is okay to get information from their “affiliates and partners.”

    The “affiliates and partners” they are referring to are those who pay for the email addresses and optin information.

    These guys are sending you mail legally, but the fact is, they are not getting into your email box for the most part. Blocking, filtering, and doing it the “legal” way bulk wise, is just not working.

    Not to mention, there is no way to prove that the recipients opted in or are will

    Bank Business Loan - Is A Bank Business Loan the Answer?
    It is a fact that at one point in time or another nearly all entrepreneurs need a bank business loan, either to start up the enterprise, expend it, or to bridge difficult times when the consumer turns fickle. Of the many lenders and types of loans available, a bank business loan will probably be the best bet for starting the venture. A bank business loan is often the best way to establish and maintain your venture's credit rating, if it is fastidiously repaid.But, if you are experiencing financial problems, is a bank business loan a good idea to use to get current on the debts? Just what is a bank business loan and what is the application procedure? A bank business loan is an unsecured loan that does not require collateral of any kind. It is based entirely upon the credit rating of all of the involved partners; the prospectus or the plan that was developed that outlines the venture, including both the financial liabilities and the anticipated income. You will have to provide well-organized and scrupulous detail, together with a good credit rating for this type of loan. A bank business loan is the primary vehicle for starting up an enterprise and gets a venture off to a good start, however it is a poor remedy for existing financial problems.It is far better to obtain professi
    the above, a bunch of unprofessional, ineffective scams.

    In other words, Spam is a fourletter word.

    Legitimate marketers are staying away in droves and it’s easy to see why. First of all let’s look at some facts. In the United States, it is legal to send unsolicited commercial email. The CAN SPAM act allows for this. You have to provide a way to optout and not hide who you are, and a few more simple but ethical rules.

    Although it is legal, there isn’t an internet service provider in the United States who will allow you to send unsolicited commercial email.

    Larger mailers have optin information from lists they purchase which imply consent but those lists aren’t originated from the mailer, but from other submailers—you get a free thing or access to a particular site and the user checks a box that it is okay to get information from their “affiliates and partners.”

    The “affiliates and partners” they are referring to are those who pay for the email addresses and optin information.

    These guys are sending you mail legally, but the fact is, they are not getting into your email box for the most part. Blocking, filtering, and doing it the “legal” way bulk wise, is just not working.

    Not to mention, there is no way to prove that the recipients opted in or are willing to get the message since they opted in at someone else’s site, not yours.

    The response rate is pathetic and when that mail does get through, you have many disgruntled individuals who never remember opting in, so in their view, the mail is unsolicited. The only way to get email into inboxes en masse is by not following the rules, so the only messages getting through are the scams, including the pornographic, illegal, and objectionable.

    It is ironic that the very thing people want to rail against, they are getting more of in the aftermath of CanSpam.

    So where does that leave us?

    What can a small businessperson do to get their message out, and not break their bank?

    How to market effectively in the new internet wave

    If you are a small businessperson, there are 3 alternatives that you should consider, which are described in this next section:

    What is effective you might ask? (Ask away, it’s kind of the point here..)

    1) First party offers that impart some value added (a tip; some information, something the consumer is interested in.)

    Lets say John Q. Consumer gave his email address for a newsletter, or for more information on a particular subject, or to play a game.

    Chances are he probably would not be angered to get an email from your company especially since he asked for you to contact him. He would recognize your domain name since he spent enough time on your site to actually ask the info.

    Additionally, your internet service provider would not shut you down for violations and you’d start to build a small but effective list of people who are actually interested in what you, as a business owner, have to say.

    This has been effective since the beginning of the internet. The only problem is, how do you reach people the first time, to get them to your site?

    How do you find a target market for your products that is likely to be interested in what you have to offer and sign up for your newsletter, visit your site, and hopefully buy your stuff?

    Is there anything less costly than television, radio, and (ugh!) banner ads?

    Yes there is. Drum roll please…..Search Engine Marketing. If you write good ads, and compete with the right keywords, people who are already searching for an answer to a question, doing research, comparison shopping will go to a search engine and type in their parameters.

    If you know how to market well, only people who are interested will go to your site.

    If you have a web site that is compelling and you are offering a value added, they will ask for more information or sign up for your newsletter, or get your free download.

    Now, getting to this point can sometimes take a little time, but if you are persistent, and know how to interpret your statistics, you can do this. If you want the result without the learning curve, hire a Search Engine Marketing Firm.

    So the new tools for small businesspeople to stampede traffic to their websites in 2005 and beyond are going to be:

    1) Search Engine Marketing

    2) Publicity, including press releases that provide meaningful news

    3) Providing quality content and expert commentary for radio, TV, and internet hubs in your field

    You can be successful on the internet and these tools help to establish you as an expert in your field, as well as attract the very people who are looking for your product or service at the same time.

    These are the tools of a new form of marketing, which people are calling "In Touch" Marketing, or "intelligent marketing" and is one way to cut through and actually get you the most possible business, at the lowest possible cost, with laser precise targeting. In future articles I will teach you how to use them with deadly precision.

    This is the new way for small businesses and entrepreneurs to succeed in 2005 and beyond.

    Remember, you heard it here first :)

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