Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


Inflation and the Wealth Effect

Posted: 26 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

The wealth effect and inflation have become very prominent in the present. The following article will discuss their influence on the society, and their interrelation.

Tips to Stay Calm During an Interview

Posted: 26 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

A lot has been written about avoiding nervousness and tension before an interview, but how can one relax and stay calm during an interview? The following Buzzle article will tell you a few ways by which you can beat the stress and stay calm during an interview.

What is the Peter Principle

Posted: 26 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

To what extent do you think a person succeeds in ambitions and final goals? The answer, some might find a little pessimistic, but nonetheless one of the sharpest and truest out there, can be the Peter Principle.

The Key to Effective Long Copy

Posted: 27 Jul 2011 07:05 AM PDT

Ogilvy & Mather long copy

It's the debate that never ends…

Do those long copy sales pages actually work?

Do people really read that much these days?

And, more importantly, do they actually buy from them?

The answer:

They not only work, they often work better.

Of course, that's only if long copy is the right call, and done correctly.

Here's how to figure out if long copy is right for you, and the secret to doing it right.

When to use long copy

First off, not all situations call for long copy. Here are some that generally do:

  1. Expensive – When your offer carries a high price tag and you want the purchase to happen online (as opposed to another sales channel), you'll sell more with long copy.
  2. Information – When selling online education or some other form of information product, the more beneficial copy you deliver, the more you sell.
  3. Feature-rich – When what you're selling has a ton of features, you'll need a lot of copy to explain them all, plus the express benefit of each feature.
  4. Innovative – If your product does something new, or satisfies a desire in a brand new way, you'll need to provide people with a lot of benefit-oriented information.
  5. Online – This may seem redundant since we're talking about selling online in general. But because people can't physically experience what you're offering, long copy may be worth testing when selling just about anything online.

How to make your long copy work

So far we've focused on using long copy in relation to what you're selling. But the more important element is to whom you're selling.

In other words, the secret to giving people all the information they need to buy from you without offending their sensibilities is the same as Megamind‘s distinction between a villain and a super villain:

Presentation!

Here's what that means:

  • If you're the "guru" selling an expensive online information product to "business opportunity" types, you use the garish colors, exclamation points, and yellow highlighter, because that's what got this type of person to buy the last magic-bullet solution that allegedly requires no time, skill, or effort.
  • If you're Amazon selling the expensive and feature-rich new MacBook Air, you go into much more detail than the "product description" for a paperback book, but all within the familiar and trusted purchasing environment that millions shop in every day.
  • If you're 37signals selling the innovative and monthly-billed Highrise web service, you test and discover that long copy works a whopping 37.5% better — as long as it's presented in the beautifully-designed and functional style that 37signals fans have come to expect.

It's all about context

Long copy works, because people want as much benefit-oriented information as they personally need to make the purchase.

Some won't read much of it before buying. Others will read every word.

The key is to make the presentation of this information — your copy and the visual elements of the page — context appropriate. It needs to look and feel like your audience expects content from you to look and feel.

If you have an aversion to long copy, take another look at the Amazon and 37signals examples. The tone and design are completely appropriate for each respective audience. That's why it works.

If you try to throw garish colors, exclamation points, and yellow highlighter at your audience when that's not what they expect to see, you lose. In more ways than one.

Maintain context, and feel free to tell as much as you need to sell (find out by testing). And also feel free to refresh your tactics and strategies with our Copywriting 101 tutorial.

By the way, if you didn't get the Megamind reference about "presentation" above (or even if you did), watch the clip from the film. It's seriously awesome.

About the Author: Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and CEO of Copyblogger Media. Get more from Brian on Google+.

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


How to Close Sole Proprietorship

Posted: 24 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

Closing a business for a businessman is a traumatic experience. But there are circumstances beyond control which compel a businessman to shut down the operations. This article discusses all the aspects involved in closing the business legally.

Pros and Cons of Joint Checking Accounts

Posted: 24 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

Marriages are made in heaven but when it comes to money matters, it becomes a touchy subject. Because of this issue, lot of fights ensue resulting in divorces too. Of course every couple wants to make their marriage work and wants to avoid these petty matters. Therefore joint checking accounts are operated. Let's find out about the plus and the minus side to this favorable alternative.

Why Bad Writing is Essential to Good Blogging

Posted: 26 Jul 2011 06:30 AM PDT

image of open dictionary

I’ve been blogging for six years now, and in that time I’ve noticed something — anyone can do it.

At first, I thought that this was a good thing. But then I realized that every good thing has a shadow side.

So here’s the downside of the accessibility of blogging: It makes the already-terrible writers much, much louder.

There are too many bloggers out there.

How can this be a good thing for you?

For too long, the bar has been set way too low with millions of blogs contributing to the noise without adding anything substantive to the discussion.

Our fame-obsessed culture has driven teenagers and baby boomers alike to create their own blogs — all for the sake of being heard. They’re taking up space with half-formed opinions and rants, and it’s given the blogosphere an infamously bad name.

But now, there’s a new phenomenon: The prolific, mediocre blogger.

This person actually understands the basics of SEO and social media and can attract a decent readership.

The problem, though, is that their content sucks.

This probably drives you real writers completely nuts. But maybe it’s not all bad.

Here are three reasons why these awful wordsmiths can actually make you a better blogger.

1. Envy leads to action

Be honest: part of the reason why you hate these champions of mediocrity is jealousy.

Because if you’ve stuck around the Internet long enough, you’ve seen how even a terrible writer can build his own tribe.

You’ve seen spam queens go into six digits on Twitter and typo-ridden articles go viral on Facebook.

And this pisses you off (and it should.)

But we need you to act, not sit back silently judging and mocking. Okay, you can judge and mock too, if you really want.

We need you to move, not lock up out of protest. We need your voice, and we need it now.

Don’t just complain. Act. Fight awful quality with excellence.

2. Competition is (always) good

Social media has, indeed, leveled the communication playing field.

Now, if you have a good story or idea, you can share it, without having to know the right people or possess the right skills.

The days of the gatekeeper are ending.

This, for the most part, explains a lot of the frustration you’re feeling. There are terrible writers out there with nothing to say, and they’re saying a lot … very poorly.

They are stealing away your readers and making them dumber by the minute.

This is actually a good thing.

It forces you to up your game, to woo your followers back to your well-crafted blog. This is not a sprint to the bottom; it’s a marathon to the top.

And those who are truly excellent in their craft and committed to finishing will win in the end.

3. Bad writers need coaches (i.e. you)

The fact that you’re an excellent writer irked by all this mediocrity may be an internal prompting to give back.

More people are blogging, because they recognize the value of building a platform. But they’re breaking the first rule of Copyblogger.

You can help them.

Look at it this way: If you’re really good at writing, you can help others become better writers. Instead of seeing these mediocre bloggers as a threat, why not view this situation as what it really is — an opportunity?

You could begin a writing consulting practice.

You could start coaching amateurs on how to stop sounding stupid and start writing like a pro.

You could help, instead of criticize.

The opportunity is there — do with it what you will.

What do you think? Does this just frustrate you further, or are there some legitimate lessons we can learn from mediocre bloggers?

About the Author: Jeff Goins is a writer and marketing guy who helps people use digital media to amplify their voice. Follow his blog or connect with him on Twitter.

Why Split-Testing is Like Sex in High School

Posted: 25 Jul 2011 06:40 AM PDT

image of apple with lipstick

Everybody's talking about it.

Most of it is rumor, hearsay, and innuendo …

We idolize the exploits of the people we look up to, and try to skirt the mention of our own experiences (and shortcomings).

No, I'm not talking about sex — I'm talking about split-testing.

What does split-testing have to do with sex?

Actually, quite a lot…

Let me explain.

Everybody says they're doing it …

Just like sex in high-school, split-testing is all the rage.

Everyone likes to pretend they're an expert. Buzzwords and rumors abound … stories about increasing conversion rates by an order of magnitude by changing the color of a checkout button (but nobody shares the magic color!).

Most importantly, nobody wants to admit that they don't really know what they're doing, or (gasp!) have never done it themselves. Many join the conversation without wanting to let on that they don't even know what split testing is!

Let's start with a simple definition.

Split-testing, also known as "A/B testing", is an invaluable strategy that compares two versions of a web page, with one difference between them — say, for example, a different headline.

Then you measure how many people take the desired action (like buying a product) on each page, to see which variation works better.

Now that we've explained it, let's be honest.

You don't split-test, do you? Maybe you did something once — a small, unsatisfying and inconclusive experiment, but you're not testing on a regular basis … right?

Most people don't want to admit this, because they feel like they're the only ones not doing it. Everybody knows that split-testing is absolutely critical to effective marketing online — so who wants to admit that they're the only ones who aren't doing it?

Well, relax.

It turns out that "most people" can't be the "only one" — funny thing, right?

Hardly anyone is really doing it…

Everybody's talking about it, but that doesn't mean everybody's actually doing it.

The truth is that many of the exploits that you hear about are fueled by a vivid imagination, rather than experience; only a very small proportion of the talkers are actually doing the things that they describe.

And that's okay … maybe you aren't ready.

To do split testing right, you don't just need to test different variations of a page, you need to measure results, and the differences between the results generated by each variation.

This is challenging, and often impossible for websites that are just starting out and don't have much traffic.

Let's explain why with a short example:

Variation 1: One page page received 974 visits, and 5 people converted
Variation 2: The modified version of the page received 961 visits, and 7 people converted

You'd think that Variation 2 is the clear winner, right?

Wrong.

Crunching the numbers, we find that there is only a 45.27% chance that over time, Variation 2 will continue to outperform Variation 1.

In other words, there's a 54.73% chance that the difference between their success rates was the result of random chance.

Okay … where did I get these numbers?

Split testing is all about finding results that you can be confident in based on statistical significance. This isn't a touchy-feely kind of confidence — it’s calculated mathematically, and you want it to be at least 90%, and ideally 95% or more to choose a winner.

You don't have to worry about calculating the numbers yourself; there are free tools out there that can calculate the statistical significance of your results for you (you just plug in the number of impressions and actions for each variation, and the rest is done for you), and split-testing tools like Google Website Optimizer will do the calculation for you as well (and plugs right into Premise).

If you don't want to calculate the actual significance of your test, here's a rule of thumb that you can use (borrowed from Tim Ash's book Landing Page Optimization):

  • If there are 100 impressions in your sample, you need to see a 20% difference between variations to be sure that they actually mean something.
  • If there are 1,000 impressions, you need a 6.3% difference.
  • If there are 10,000 impressions, you need a 2% difference.
  • If there are 100,000 impressions, you need a 0.063% difference.

Do you notice the trend here?

To detect small differences in improvements (which are what most split-tests are likely to reveal), you need a pretty large sample size.

The moral of the story is that if you don't have much traffic, then maybe you need a solid growth strategy instead of better split-testing.

But what if you do have the traffic?

After all, most sites and blogs have at least a bit of traffic, which is enough to test the more important things, like headlines and opt-in placement.

Most aren't doing it very well …

Like sex in high school, split-testing is something at which even those who are doing it don't have much experience, and their actions are often controlled by impulses and urges, rather than skilled intent.

Let's take a quiz, and see if you're making any of the mistakes of most would-be split-testers:

Do you test one thing at a time? Most wannabe split-testers don't; they change half-a-dozen things at a time, based on the latest and greatest ideas to have entered their minds. The trouble with this is that when things work (or don't work), you don't know which changes are responsible. To effectively split test, you need to isolate variables, which means testing one thing at a time!

(Okay, yes, it is technically possible to test multiple things at once — it's called multivariate testing. In practice, though, doing it requires huge traffic numbers, and a much more complex setup — if you're not already doing it, then it's probably not for you.)

Are you measuring results? I mean actually measuring, with numbers? This is also a rarity — more often, it's an anecdotal "I feel like we're getting more sign-ups" kind of 'measurement'. Be careful with this, because as humans beings we all suffer from a confirmation bias, which means that we're much more likely to favor evidence that supports what we want to believe. Measuring with actual numbers is critical to effective split testing!

Do you let your experiments run until you've reached a 95% confidence level? This is where the greatest number of mistakes are made; an experiment is setup and allowed to run, until the experimenter feels that "this one is working better". This occurs before reaching the point at which the numbers actually prove what you're trying to prove, which means that the results are really inconclusive, and can't be trusted. And what's the point of doing experiment after experiment if none of the results can be trusted? You absolutely have to let experiments run until you reach a statistical confidence in the results!

Are you tracking your experiments? Rather than flittering from experiment to experiment, keep a journal that documents each experiment, and the lessons that you learned from them. This will prevent you from running repeated experiments that test more or less the same thing, without ever learning your lessons. Setup your experiments as hypothesis tests — each experiment is meant to test a guess about something that you think will influence your audience!

Do you focus your experiments on your conversion goals? There's no point in experimenting just for the sake of experimenting, and yet it's more common than you might believe. There's no point testing something unless you think it will contribute to the conversion goals that you have for your site. So rather than setting up test after test, consider first what your objectives are, and what you might be able to test that will contribute to reaching that objective!

You've probably answered "no" to at least some of these questions, but that's fine — the important thing is to learn and adjust your practices, so that the experiments that you run tomorrow will be more effective and fruitful than the experiments that you ran yesterday.

Now that you've got the processes worked out, let's talk about some of the things that you might want to experiment with.

Do you feel like experimenting?

Experimentation can be great, but if you're a professional blogger or business owner, you're not just in it for the fun — you need to focus on the experimentation that will be most gratifying to your bottom line.

Here are some of the most important things that you should be sure to split-test:

The headline. This is the single most important thing that you can split-test, because the headline is the first "gateway" that your readers have to pass through. You will lose more people at the headline than anywhere else on the page, so test the headline first.

Opt-in placement, text, and colors. Try different placements of the opt-in box on your site, different calls to action, and different box and button colors. Since you probably get more sign-ups than sales, this is a much better place to start your testing.

The order button text and colors. Experiment with changing the text of the order button (options include "Get It Now", "I Want Access", "Buy Now", "Add to Cart", "Proceed to Checkout", and more), and with the color of the buttons (yellow, red, blue and green are good places to start). This applies to your email opt-in box as well.

The format of the offer. This is a little more work to test, but if you have the option to do it, you might find that a lot more customers are willing to buy one format than another. Experiment with your offer as an ebook, report, video series, podcast training program, infographic and so forth.

The price. This isn't always possible to test, but if it is, you might find that you're leaving a lot of money on the table; it's possible that increasing the price will not affect sales, and it's even possible that increasing the price will increase sales as well!

The style of the introduction. After the headline, the first thing that your audience will read is the opening paragraph. Experiment with different styles — try making bold statements, vs. telling a story about their problem, vs. describing the ideal outcome. See what works best for your audience.

The product imagery. Try different versions of your product picture — you'd be surprised how much of an effect this sort of thing can have.

Trust seal choice and placement. Different audiences will respond to different trust seals, and will want to see them in different places. Good places to test are near the description of your guarantee, and of course near your order button.

Email subject line. This is just as important as the headline of your sales page, particularly if you're using confirmed opt-in, in which abandon rates of 20-30% are common. Split-test the email subject line of your email confirmation messages to make sure that as many subscribers as possible actually get on your list.

There are lots of other things that you could test — for more ideas than you'll ever be able to test, check out the Landing Page tutorials here on Copyblogger.

Getting started with split testing…

If this is the first time you're hearing about split-testing, then your head is probably spinning right now.

That's okay — it's a lot of information to take in.

Even if you've been thinking about split testing for a while (and have even tried a few experiments), you might be wondering about one thing: how to actually get the experiments going.

That's where Premise comes in — it's a drop-dead simple and complete landing page package that plugs right into WordPress, and you can use to:

  1. Generate all kind of landing pages, including templates for Sales Pages, Content (SEO) Pages, Pricing Table Pages, Email Opt-In Forms, Video Pages, Tab Scroller Pages, and Thank You Pages.
  2. Add all kinds of standard elements into your landing pages with the click of a mouse.
  3. Run split tests to make sure that you're incrementally advancing towards your conversion goals!

So enough fence-sitting … if you want to get serious about split-testing, go get Premise and get started!

Okay, over to you …

Have you experimented with split-testing? What has your experience been? Where did you get stuck?

Do you have a Premise success story to share?

About the Author: Danny Iny is an author, strategist, serial entrepreneur, and proud co-founder of Firepole Marketing, the definitive marketing training program for small businesses, entrepreneurs, and non-marketers. Visit his site today to download a free split test checker, or follow him on Twitter @DannyIny.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


Does editing affect your bottom line?

Posted: 08 May 2011 09:39 AM PDT

I came across some interesting research about professional editing of web copy. The assertion is that, in the "rush to be first online", material is published without going through the copy desk. So, does this result in sloppy copy?

According to the research, the short answer is "Yes".

The study was carried out in the USA by Fred Vultee of Wayne State University, Arizona, and the findings were presented at the 15th national conference of the American Copy Editors Society (ACES) in March.

Fred was considering the question: "Does quality of online editing affect the bottom line?" While noting that this is hard to measure, he focused on three criteria: professionalism, grammar and organisation. Fred made some fascinating findings, including that the readers in the study:

    • preferred professionally edited articles
    • noticed grammar errors and found them troubling and distracting
    • noticed writing that was garbled and confusing, and when words were misspelled or misused
    • could tell edited from unedited stories in significant ways

The study used reader perceptions of quality, and concluded:

"Readers care about what copy editors do, and copy editors can tell managers that their jobs are therefore critical to their organisations."

That’s comforting news for some of us.

Fred points out, though, that the study was just the beginning. It was based on results from 66 readers – not a huge number – and it didn't record anything about readers' incomes (which can be relevant to how you target copy for your audience). He plans to consider whether poor editing stops readers visiting a website altogether.

You can read a report about Fred Vultee’s study and access his conference presentation on the ACES website. I'd love to know what you think. Meanwhile, I’ll eagerly await more of Fred’s findings.

© Frances King
www.cleartextuk.co.uk/

Friday, July 22, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


The Curator, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

Posted: 05 May 2011 10:28 PM PDT

The Lion, the Witch and the WardrobeContent Curation

The very reason this title is so intriguing is its obvious incongruousness. While this may be an attraction in fiction, it does not serve us well in our daily lives, which are full of decision-making, requiring informative sources. What we need is for our sources to be in line with our goals. And if we’re creating sources for others, we need to ensure they find value in those sources. Content needs to be coherent and cohesive. It needs to be written for the consumer, the client. Put yourself in their shoes and offer them something of real value. The job of a curator is collect and organize things of value for a particular purpose; to be a filter for others who don’t have the time to do it for themselves. You’re essentially creating a set of value propositions. This process requires several skills not accomplishable by computers or programs. The human touch is necessary here, for we have the ability to judge nuances of style, preference and perception.

The Media Maze

Time management can get tricky for the social media specialist. It’s so easy get lost in the social media maze. But, by and large, any time you spend wandering from link to link is time not spent profitably. If you’re on a mission to get something done and you see a site or an article you want to look at or read for some purpose other than what you are immediately pursuing, save the link, or open it in a new tab, and go back to it later. This will help you to control your time. I go tab-crazy…at any given moment I might have between 4 and 10 tabs open in my browser. I have a very curious mind and I’m always trying to learn way too much. I have had to develop strategies to keep that from getting in the way of my work. If you do this too, then you’re a natural curator. Don’t fight it, just learn to manage it. After all, it’s a good place to start in developing curation skills. But curation isn’t just about aggregation.

Curation Is Not Hording

Simply gathering stuff won’t cut it. You have to be selective. Very selective. And you have to know how to judge your audience. There can be a learning curve there for anyone and for any business, but analytical skills and critical thinking skills are vital to the process. The voice of the consumer is becoming louder (to everyone’s ultimate benefit) and we have to listen. Why wouldn’t we? Afterall, we’re consumers, too. There is a shift in control, gaining momentum, and if we don’t pay attention we will be eating dust, make no mistake. It’s not about who’s selling what. It’s about whose expectations are where. Don’t just gather, horde or aggregate content…it’s useless and valueless. Select, arrange and exhibit. In a word: curate. It’s not just for people who work with antiquities.

Welcome!

Posted: 05 May 2011 08:08 AM PDT

Hello and welcome to my website! Have a look around! In the Articles you’ll see samples of my writing that I have written for other sites and blogs. Under Services you’ll see the types of writing services I offer. Here in the Home section you can read my blog on business related topics.

~Sara

What is Visual Merchandising and Why is it Important

Posted: 21 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

Visual merchandising is a large part of the retail industry, and as simple or uncomplicated as it may sound, there is a lot that goes into this job, making it a very important part of the retail line. Take a look at what visual merchandising is all about, and how it contributes towards better business.

Things to Consider while Starting a Piano Tuning Business

Posted: 20 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

The importance of the piano creates many conceptions about it. Of these, the three common facts are that it is unchanged even after ages of existence, it is one of the most widely used musical instruments and it is also a pain to keep it in good shape. This makes what we can call as the piano tuning business. Find what it takes to start one up.

Tips for Tea Marketing

Posted: 20 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

In today's world, where communication is more through blogging sites and messages rather than personal interaction, marketing a simple product becomes more difficult. How do companies market such simple products and create product lines? This article answers this question by providing tips to market tea.

Participating Vs. Non-Participating Preferred Stock

Posted: 20 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

A preferred stock is of two types - participating and non-participating. Let's learn about the basic difference between the two and the pros and cons of investing through these stocks.

Business Email Etiquette for Busy People

Posted: 20 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

Do you use email in business? Do you use email to communicate with people not in your own culture? What are the do's and dont's of business email etiquette which you need to know?

How to Get More Search Engine Traffic

Posted: 20 Jul 2011 06:40 AM PDT

image of scribe seo logo

Thousands of content creators are getting more targeted search traffic to their sites, their ideas, and their businesses by doing one thing — using our Scribe SEO software.

Here's what just a handful of them are saying about Scribe:

I have been using Scribe for about three months and my presence in organic listings has jumped almost 50%! I have more visitors than ever before and that is converting to more sales. Thank you for such an easy to use, effective tool. I recommend it to everyone I know!
~ Laurie Cohen

Since installing Scribe SEO 10 weeks ago, my traffic has increased 28%. This is a fantastic application.
~ Sharon Kyle

Scribe helps to make sense of SEO, the WordPress way, simple and easy to understand. I taught my 19 year old college freshman how to use and now he’s helping me manage SEO content for my sites and his own. I’ve seen improvement in traffic since using Scribe, especially my wife’s real estate site.
~ Matt Greger

Scribe has been a great resource for me! Without the analysis that Scribe provides, I would be writing my articles in the dark. Scribe allows me to see my articles exactly like the search engines do, which is invaluable!
~ Julie Groth

Those who know me consider me a good writer, mainly because I carefully craft my articles through several drafts. So why do I use and value Scribe SEO? Because it’s like a very clever educator sitting right at my elbow — it's truly a terrific service.
~ David Bennett

My skepticism of Scribe was short lived. Not only has the blog traffic to my site increased when using Scribe, but those posts I had created using it continued to get better traffic than my newer ones I was creating without it.
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Go out and spend the money on Scribe. It's awesome. Seriously.
~ Jay Fleischman

It’s like having your very own SEO Master standing over your shoulder with critical instruction for tweaking your content. The Scribe software service is content optimization at it's finest.
~ Mick McCrory

Scribe can make you more visible. I'm now receiving consistent traffic that's increased weekly since I bought the subscription. So try it for yourself.
~ Tyler Hurst

Scribe takes the guesswork out of blogging, will benefit every aspect of your content … I've been using it and have been very impressed with its speed and how much better it has made my writing in general.
~ Jason Wietholter

Scribe just makes sense for our clients that are new to blogging or those that need an out of the box simple solution for making posts more SEO friendly. It's a simple no brainer recommendation.
~ Sommer Poquette

Prior to using Scribe only 4% of my traffic was coming from search engines. Last night I checked and 53% of my traffic was coming from search. I know you can’t prove causation from correlation, but that is just too big to be a coincidence for me. I am thrilled that people are finally finding me through search!
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As an online marketing director and website consultant, I’ve watched dozens of small business owners glaze over with the thought of performing their own search engine optimization. Thanks to Scribe's SEO software, those days are over. The immediate feedback and virtual hand-holding that Scribe provides gives small business owners the confidence that they can improve the visibility of their website on their own time, without blowing their budget by hiring an SEO pro to manage every page and post on their website. On behalf of all my clients now using Scribe … thank you.
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Click here to try out Scribe for yourself today.

About the Author: Robert Bruce is Copyblogger Media’s resident raconteur, copywriter and Scribe junkie.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


Secangkir Kopi di Pagi Hari dan Segudang Ide

Posted: 29 Apr 2011 04:30 PM PDT

Berbicara mengenai internet, banyak sekali hal yang bisa anda dapatkan lewat teknologi ini, mulai dari informasi yang cepat dan akurat juga additional income yang sangat-sangat menggiurkan dan kebanyakan ditawarkan dalam bentuk Dollar. Wow… tentu saja hal ini bukanlah sesuatu yang bisa anda lewatkan.

Memang banyak sekali fakta tentang internet yang mungkin telah anda ketahui ataupun anda tidak ketahui, termasuk, taukah anda bahwa salah satu Dewa Olimpia, yaitu Hermes adalah penemu internet? Tentu saja anda tidak tahu kalau anda tidak membaca Percy Jackson karya Rick Riordan. Yes, it is a joke and it is not true. Tapi itu bukan intinya, kecuali anda penggemar dan pencinta cerita fantasi dan terobsesi dengan Greek Mytology, owwww… yeah that’s me. Dengan kata lain, kalau anda menjadi saya, mungkin anda akan menganggap fakta itu menarik tapi jika anda bukan saya, maka fakta jenis itu, well mungkin masih menarik tapi tentu saja tidak semenarik saya menanggapinya.

Mungkin anda mulai berfikir? What my point is… well, there is no point at all actually kecuali fakta bahwa saya baru saja menonton dua film romantis twice in a row pada jam 2 pagi dini hari karena saya baru saja meneguk dua gelas cappuccino (what???!!! they are soooo good so one cup is not enough ^_^), dan sekarang sudah jam 5 lewat dua menit dan saya masih juga belum jatuh tertidur, dan jam 9 pagi saya harus sudah siap untuk acara makan-makan seorang teman, jadi agak tidak etis kalau saya jatuh tertidur dan meminta maaf atas ketidakhadiran saya hanya karena saya minum dua gelas cappuccino malam sebelumnya. Jadi saya memutuskan, dari pada saya jatuh tertidur dan tidak menghadiri acaranya, lebih baik saya membuat satu gelas lagi cappuccino sambil menulis tulisan ini dan berharap semoga jam 9 pagi datang lebih cepat.

Kembali membahas mengenai internet. Sekitar dua tahun yang lalu, saya menemukan sebuah selebaran di tempelkan di dinding lowongan kerja kampus saya. Well, sebagai seorang mahasiswi yang masih sibuk bekerja dengan skripsi, tentu saja mulai mengintip dinding lowongan pekerjaan sudah menjadi suatu keharusan walaupun belum menjadi kewajiban, karena skripsi adalah kewajibannya saat itu. Jadi disanalah, dicari writer untuk menulis paid review untuk website atau blog. Jujur, saya gak tau apa itu paid review, yang saya tau hanya dicari seorang penulis dan saya pikir, well saya bisa nulis. Tanpa ragu-ragu sayapun menelpon nomer telpon yang tertera, dan dua minggu kemudian, I got my first job. Dan petualangan saya sebagai seorang web content writer pun dimulai. Awalnya, memang agak susah karena banyak sekali hal-hal yang tidak saya ketahui, contohnya apa itu reverse mortgage atau pay day loan. Tapi sekarang, dengan dua tahun pengalaman, saya bahkan bisa menyebutkan tipe-tipe diabetes mellitus lengkap dengan penjelasan tentang symptoms dan treatment yang tepat atau dimana anda harus mencari informasi tentang the best online store for gourmet pop corn? hahaha… anda pikir mungkin saya bercanda, well, I’m not. Memang beberapa tulisan yang saya buat memang informative tapi tidak sedikit juga yang bullshit. Makanya, web content writer kebanyakan lebih prefer disebut sebagai ghost writer karena somehow pekerjaan jenis ini memang memalukan tapi, no offense, bisa mendatangkan banyak income.

That is why, dengan dua tahun pengalaman dan asam garam bekerja di beberapa perusahaan sekaligus dan pernah menjadi asisten admin untuk beberapa waktu, saya pikir cukup buat saya menulis untuk orang, bagaimana kalau orang menulis untuk saya. Wow, gaya sekali bahasa saya ya? Seorang teman yang dulu pernah bekerja di tempat yang sama dengan saya, yang kemudian saya tahu bahwa dia juga senior saya di kampus (mengingat walau bekerja di satu perusahaan, semua komunikasi dilakukan secara online), dan kami pun memutuskan untuk memulai sendiri bisnis web content writer ini. Beberapa nama sempat menjadi references, dan akhirnya dipilihlah Gudang Content. Beberapa dari anda bertanya-tanya, mengapa Gudang Content. Well, entahlah nama itu muncul begitu saja di pikiran saya dan rekan kerja saya menyetujuinya begitu saja, dan ketika mengecek di gmail nama itupun masih tersedia. So, why not? Kalau anda berfikir saya tipe orang yang percaya mengenai nama hoki, hari keberuntungan atau warna yang tidak boleh saya pakai di hari Senin atau sejenis itu, well anda salah. Mungkin anda mendapati saya fantasi story freak dan terobsesi dengan greek mytology dan pencita penulis Inggris dan menulis tentang Dark Humor dan Harry Potter untuk skripsinya dan masih banyak lagi hal aneh tentang saya, tapi saya bukan tipe Feng-shui atau membaca ramalan bintang setiap saat (walau faktanya saya juga follower @ZodiacFact di Twitter, hanya untuk sekedar have fun). Jadi walau nama Gudang content dipilih tidak berdasarkan jumlah huruf hoki atau entah bagaimana G adalah jenis huruf keberuntungan, tapi saya percaya dengan kerja keras, Gudang content bisa menjadi Gudang segala sesuatu yang anda cari, mulai dari Gudang untuk tulisan-tulisan informatif untuk blog anda sampai Gudang solusi bagi anda yang mencari professional content writer seperti saya (hehe promosi).

So, intinya saya mulai membuka mata bahwa menjadi web content writer mungkin adalah salah satu kesempatan saya untuk mulai melihat dunia. Dimulai dari dunia maya dulu, baru kemudian mungkin dunia yang sesungguhnya, dunia menulis yang sesungguhnya. Karena walau bagaimanapun membosankannya menulis tentang Online Casino setiap hari, saya tetap menikmati pekerjaan ini dan semoga akan selalu begitu, mengingat Gudang Content baru saja dibentuk dan saya tidak boleh jatuh tertidur karena bosan saat menjalankan project ini.

Jika anda tertarik untuk menjadi client saya, mungkin anda bisa mengunjungi www.gudangcontent.wordpress.com untuk info lebih lanjut atau anda bisa add facebook account Gudang Content dan follow @GudangContent on Twitter untuk recent updates.

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Is it Safe to Invest in Bonds?

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Safety Tips for Janitorial Workers

Posted: 19 Jul 2011 10:00 PM PDT

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How to Create World-Class Content by Never “Writing” Again

Posted: 20 Jul 2011 06:00 AM PDT

image of vintage blueprint

Sitting at your desk, “grinding it out” is so last century.

Thing is, that didn’t work real well last century either.

Writing content that grips, moves, and sells is not about pulling inspiration out of the sky. You don’t need to sweat blood in order to come up with great stuff.

If you want to be the next Dostoevsky, that’s a different game.

If you want to write content that brings people to you and your business, relax.

Stop trying to write. Do more … research.

Dig up everything you can on your business, your industry, your product. Never stop asking questions of your customers. Never stop watching the trends and news and innovations of your business.

Start gathering. Collecting. Connecting

Start assembling.

You’re more detective than writer.

Put the pieces together. Your personality — your voice — will naturally be infused into what you’ve made, making it unique.

Don’t believe me? Take it from one of the greatest direct response copywriters who ever lived:

Copy is never written. Copy is assembled. ~ Eugene Schwartz

Try it. You’ll like it.

About the Author: Robert Bruce is Copyblogger Media’s resident raconteur and copywriter.

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