Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Content Writing on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


The Trickster's Ruse

Posted: 04 Oct 2011 01:18 AM PDT

The worst part about trusting people isn’t when you give them the initial okay, it is the eternity afterwards while you hope you made the right choice. This isn’t so important if you want to gain employment at a place like Taco Bell. The structure of Taco Bell is mechanical, no one worries if the manager at their local Taco Bell, Wal-Mart, or Minimum-wagetown, is trustworthy. As long as they don’t sexually harass you, and give you enough hours to pay your bills, everything is fine.

Someone finally gave me a shot to do content writing for them. It may seem odd to say it, but it has been the most stressful thing that has ever happened to me. That isn’t shocking, my life has been short and rather easy. Compared to say, sleeping in until 11am and then walking to class, something like this should seem stressful. The problem was why it was stressful.

Let me say that my final goal is not to be a content writer. The work seems fair, the pay is workable, but it is not what I spent four years learning. It is not what keeps me awake at night with a passion that forces me to scrounge about for my notepad at 4am. Content writing is a means to an end. It allows me to work where I play, to sit on my butt for 20 hours a day instead of just 12. So when someone bit, and asked me to do some content writing for them, I didn’t know what to say. Ignore that I quite literally didn’t know what to say, and then put on top of that the metaphorical “I didn’t know what to say”. How much money do I ask for? How do I ask who they are? How do I get paid? A few hundred questions went bouncing around in my brain.

I’ve accepted the work. Then I was asked to give a rate, aka how much do I want to be paid. This is a funny story, you’ll like this part. Now I was told in original e-mail correspondence that I would be doing a ‘couple’ of articles. Couple, 2-3 right? So I went on a grand journey to figure out how much I should be paid. The end goal of being paid is always to make enough money for the time you put in. A couple of articles a week said to me that I should be able to work on these couple of articles, and at least make enough money in a week that it felt like I was actually working at minimum-wagetown. So I set my per-article price at something like forty dollars each. The reality? I was going to be working on around 20 articles a week. Making my original rate sound like I was trying to murder them debt. It was all worked out in the end though.

Not all of it, actually. I still only make minimum wage if I can finish each articles in about 20 minutes. If I take any longer, I’m being underpaid. I also still don’t know anything about the people paying me. Since they aren’t public, they didn’t want to give any details they didn’t have to. All I have is a name, and an e-mail address. I get paid through pay pal. I haven’t received a new assignment for a week and a half. It isn’t perfect, it wouldn’t even keep me off of the street if I didn’t have the support of my family. It is a start though, an extremely shady foot in a dark door.

Should I worry that I’m effectively making spam for someone who doesn’t want to be named? I’m more worried that days after I got my first paypal payments, I received an e-mail in Chinese that said my paypal account was going to be sending $300 dollars to some guy named Wong. I wish that was a joke.

So I’m just going to trust these people for now. They seem alright, and they have actually given me a chance, and paid me. That is more than I can say for Wal-Mart or Taco Bell. I’ve already learned from these people, my resume is growing, and I’m still not being sexually harassed. So it seems like everything is going great so far.

I’ll keep pushing forward.

Choosing the Right ERP System for Your Business

Posted: 20 Dec 2011 09:00 PM PST

Implementing an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system is one of the most complex and cost-intensive ventures for most organizations. We present here some golden rules for choosing the right ERP system for your business. These rules are aimed at helping you go through with the inevitable and thorough exercise of selecting the right ERP system, with a sense of direction.

How to Find a Good Business Partner

Posted: 20 Dec 2011 09:00 PM PST

Choosing a good business partner is extremely crucial for a successful business. So how to find the right business partner and what makes a good partnership? Let's find out.

interactions magazine | The Art of Editing: The New Old Skills for a Curated Life

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SEO Content Mistakes

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MediaShift . Writers Explain What It's Like Toiling on the Content Farm | PBS

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10 Ways To Use Recycled Content

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MediaShift . How Content Farms Train Their Writers to Write for the Web | PBS

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Online Content: The Power of Emotion | Social Media Today

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Why Journalists Need To Stop Resenting SEO

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The Ongoing Myth That Web Content Must Always Be Short

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Inverted Pyramids and Press Releases

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Writing Killer Content in 140 Characters or Less

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5 Marketing Lessons You Can Learn from a Weird “Real World” Business

Posted: 21 Dec 2011 03:00 AM PST

image of west highland terrierOne of the most useful skills in business is to be able to look at what someone else is doing in an unrelated topic, and bring it to your own online marketing.

You'll find fresh angles, new approaches, and compelling ways to deliver your message.

If you run a yoga studio, you can often learn more from an auto body shop or a roofing company than from your fellow yogis.

If you're in technology, take a look at what artists are doing. If you're a musician, borrow from accountants.

Allowing yourself to cross-pollinate will make your ideas stronger. And it gets you out of the tired "same old" marketing all of your competitors are doing.

If I were a betting woman, I'd put folding money that none of our readers is competing in the very weird niche I'm going to talk about today.

Chris Christensen owns a business that manufactures and sells high-end beauty products … for dogs.

Not just any dogs, mind you. Christensen pretty well owns the market for high-end beauty products used to style the winners (and the also-rans) for dog shows. He was featured recently in a fascinating article in Inc. magazine, and the lessons from his business practically jumped off the page at me.

So here they are: five lessons from the dog beauty product industry that you can steal today and start applying to your own marketing, no matter what product or service you offer.

1. Success comes at the intersections


Christensen started out as a rep in the more traditional beauty product business — the one for human beings.

There are billions of dollars to be had in that business — but there are also thousands of competitors.

Through a chance encounter (keep a sharp eye out for these), Christensen realized that he could take his considerable expertise and connections in the beauty business and translate them to this underserved market.

How you can apply it: If your market is too crowded, look for a profitable intersection. Know what you can do incredibly well, then look around for what types of customers might benefit from that in an unexpected way.

Which leads us directly to #2.

2. Go where the customers are

If Christensen had jumped into beauty products for reptiles, he probably wouldn't have seen the success he has.

Not every niche market is a profitable one.

Instead, he sells to the people who compete in dog shows. And show dog breeders are motivated by three factors that often point to excellent, high-profit markets.

First, winning dog shows boosts the status of the winners. (The human ones, not the canines. I don't think the dogs care all that much who wins the ribbons, they have their own concerns.)

Status is a superb motivator if you're trying to sell a product or service. Boost the status of your customers and your business will probably thrive.

Second, winning dog shows boosts customers' financial well-being. If you're a dog breeder, winning shows is good for business.

Help your customers make more money and your business will probably thrive.

And finally, dog people are crazy about their dogs. People who buy the cheapest generic shampoo for themselves will spend top dollar on special shampoo for their "babies."

Cater to the intense desire some humans have to pamper pooches and your business will probably thrive.

So by landing on the dog show market, Christensen won a trifecta … a market driven by three ultra-powerful motivators.

How you can apply it: You don't have to have that many factors to find your own delightfully profitable niche.

But you do want at least one powerful motivator in your market … whether it's status, sex, love, wealth, or a passionate hobby that makes people temporarily suspend any tightwad tendencies.

Golf, weight loss, professional education, dating, and dogs are juicy markets where there's a lot of profit to be made.

Frugality, recycling, house cleaning, the Occupy movement, and naked mole rats tend to be a lot less profitable — even though there are people who are quite passionate about those topics.

3. Focus on where you can deliver exceptional results

Christensen wasn't just some guy selling shampoo — he really knew the beauty business. He knew the products, and he knew the chemists who manufactured products.

Anyone probably could have achieved some success by pouring cheap drugstore shampoos and hairsprays into bottles and saying those products were specialized for dogs. (See Lesson #4.)

But Christensen knew that to create a lasting business, he'd have to get obsessive about creating quality products — products that got his customers the results they craved.

Products that made those dogs look fantastic.

Now over 70, Christensen still goes to dog shows all over the country to watch and listen. He's grown his line of products by observing what his customers need, then creating it for them.

The growth of his product line, incidentally, is one of the many reasons his business hasn't even blinked at the recession. Once he had found a great market, he kept going back to them again and again to see how he could deliver additional value.

How you can apply it: Start with a strong product that delivers the results your customers crave. Perfect that product, until it's so magnificent that you're creating legions of raving fans.

Then, if you're satisfied you have a strong, solid market of buyers, start watching and listening.

What else do they need? What other problems can you solve for them? Are there sub-niches within your niche that need an even more specialized product?

4. Labels matter

Dog shows don't allow the breeders to use hair spray to style the dogs.

So Christensen doesn't sell hair spray. He sells "texturizing bodifier."

Are the ingredients in texturizing bodifier nearly identical to those in regular old hair spray? I have no idea. Maybe. But the label matters, so he labels his product in ways that work for his customers.

How you can apply it: Too many businesses get stuck trying to sell customers what they need instead of what they want.

If you're a copywriter and your customers think branding is a luxury that's just for huge businesses, don't try to sell them something called branding, even if that's what will help. Come up with a label that works for your customers, even if it's not how you would refer to it. Whenever you can, use the language they use.

Label your products and services in a way that makes it easier for your customers to buy.

5. Offer a premium version

Christensen recently unveiled a new product — ultra-high end handmade Damascus steel shears.

There's a lot more competition for shears than there is for "texturizing bodifier." But Christensen knew that he had created so much good will with customers that they would be interested in seeing what he came up with.

He used his obsession for quality to develop a $500 pair of shears, tweaking the design until they were perfect.

And they sold. But much more importantly, sales of his $200 shears immediately jumped — because now those were "mid-range" shears, rather than the most expensive shears he offered.

How you can apply it: There's some segment of your customer base — maybe it's 2% of your buyers, maybe it's 15 or even 20% — who want the "platinum" version of what you offer.

Create something that fulfills that craving. Add real value — with more valuable materials, with increased access to you or your staff — any way you can think of, as long as it matters to your customers.

Don't look for how you can control costs on this one — look for how you can create an incredible result for your customers.

Then put that product where customers will see it. Even if you never sold one of your "platinum" products (although you almost certainly will), the fact that it exists will improve the perception of the rest of your line.

Try hard to make your platinum product something you really love to deliver. Make it a celebration, for both you and your customer.

How about you?

Ever find a great marketing idea in an industry totally outside your own?

Let us know about it in the comments.

About the Author: Sonia Simone is co-founder and CMO of Copyblogger Media. Follow her on twitter for more thoughts on weird businesses.

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