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| Job Responsibilities of a Commis Chef Posted: 30 Nov 2011 09:00 PM PST If you are interested in cooking and want to create a niche for yourself in the culinary world, then how about becoming a commis chef? Let us take a look at the job responsibilities of a commis chef, through the following article... |
| How to Become a Handwriting Analyst Posted: 30 Nov 2011 09:00 PM PST A handwriting analyst is someone who is a professional expert in analyzing the nature and characteristic traits of people by looking at their handwriting. Also known as the science of graphology, this profession gives an understanding of how the human mind reflects one's handwriting. Learn how to become a handwriting analyst and more, through this article. |
| Impact of a Stock Market Crash on the Economy Posted: 29 Nov 2011 09:00 PM PST The world economy has witnessed many stock market crashes till now. The impact of such a stock market crash results in a weak financial situation in an economy. In this article, we shall learn about the effect of a stock market's crash on an economy. |
| Posted: 29 Nov 2011 09:00 PM PST As the name suggests, a trial balance sheet is a rough draft of a final balance sheet or final accounts. For a step-by-step procedure for the preparation of a trial balance sheet, take a look... |
| Copyscape - Website Plagiarism Search - Web Site Content Copyright Protection Posted: 01 Dec 2011 10:58 PM PST |
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| Buy Website Content, Order Articles - Constant Content Posted: 01 Dec 2011 09:30 PM PST |
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| 10 Sure-Fire Headline Formulas That Work | Copyblogger Posted: 01 Dec 2011 08:44 PM PST |
| Inbound Writer: The First Social Writing Application Posted: 01 Dec 2011 08:38 PM PST |
| Content strategy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Posted: 01 Dec 2011 08:24 PM PST |
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| 6 Ways to Write a Bad Business Blog | Inc.com Posted: 01 Dec 2011 05:49 PM PST |
| Unique content - Textbroker.com Posted: 01 Dec 2011 04:50 PM PST |
| Are Internet Idiots Annihilating Your Productivity? Posted: 01 Dec 2011 03:00 AM PST ![]() Post image courtesy of the incredibly fabulous xkcd. It’s one of the hazards of spending social time online. Every day, everywhere you look, you’re going to find someone who’s doing it wrong. They use the term “rock star.” Or “ninja.” (You hate those hypey cliches!) They have a pop-up on their blog. (Don’t they know pop-ups are the work of Satan?!) They had a launch last week and emailed you three whole times. (Don’t these people realize how full your email box is?) You ping around from site to site, getting increasingly crabby as the entire internet conspires to get on your last nerve. I have a gentle suggestion. It’s time to get over it. The goldfish attention spanWe all know it — distracted by the mashup of content and trivia and advertising that comes to us from all directions, our attention span has shriveled down to about 15 seconds. (That puts us on a par with goldfish. Way to go, human race.) So to get your attention, particularly on the web, people do and say things that are outrageous. We get posts about how content marketing is broken. Or social media marketing won’t ever work. Or that every time you try to sell something to a customer, a baby unicorn dies. And it’s all very entertaining. As long as you understand it for what it is — a bit of linkbait to capture your attention for a minute and create a little controversy. Now we like linkbait just fine at Copyblogger. And I’ve been known to make a few outrageous statements of my own. But know them for what they are — distractions. And if you want to actually build something worthwhile, you need to be careful about how you manage distractions. Drama queens rarely build thriving businessesAll the time you spend chasing down things you hate and ranting about them? That’s time you’re not building something epic. And being known as the person who pitches a fit three times a day is doing exactly nothing for your authority. You may get a lot of attention for being so entertainingly easy to irritate. You may have a great sense of humor, and a fantastic turn of phrase. Your charmingly cranky video rants may get one billion hits on YouTube. But attention is not business. And unless you’re as good a businessperson as Perez Hilton, becoming part of the Distraction Revolution is not likely to make you any money. Do this insteadThere are people who are going to tell you to turn off all distractions, refuse to use email, delegate social media to an $2-an-hour virtual assistant in Mongolia, and work in some kind of state of undistracted purity. I don’t live in that world and neither do you. But you can actually take control of your time without turning into a digital puritan. The first thing I want you to do (oh, this is so un-sexy) is decide what gets you closer to what you want.
Here’s a hint about how to identify this: It won’t feel nearly as comfortable as bitching on Facebook about what’s getting on your nerves today. The second thing I want you to do is to carve out an hour today (ideally, that starts right now. Don’t tell me you can’t — you were going to spend the next hour reading blog posts and twitter anyway) and work on the Big Uncomfortable Important Thing. If you don’t have an hour, spend 20 minutes. And put an hour in your schedule for tomorrow. And the day after that. And the day after that. Use a timer. Work up to the full hour if you have to. Because Big Uncomfortable Important Things are uncomfortable, you will immediately be tempted to go complain about something on Google+. Therefore, you need to turn off your distractions of choice. Not all day, don’t panic. Just for an hour. (Yes, your mobile, too. If you are not a brain surgeon, they can wait for you for an hour. Tell them you were in the toilet.) Work on something important for an hour every day, without distractions. If you’re smart, you’ll make it the first hour, before the time vampires suck all the remaining life out of your day. I realize this is not as much funTrust me, I enjoy griping on the internet at least as much as the next person. Probably more than the next person. Let’s face it, those people are irritating. But an hour a day, every day, in pursuit of what’s actually important to you (heck, you might even ramp up to two hours some day) is going to bring you a lot more reward than the smackdown you were in the middle of when you started reading this post. Get it done. Start now. Believe it or not, it’s even more satisfying than being right. About the Author: Sonia Simone is co-founder and CMO of Copyblogger Media. As long as you’re not complaining about anything, she’d love to hear from you on twitter. Post image courtesy of the incredibly fabulous xkcd. TweetShareComments
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