Thoughts on life as an Internet business owner and Internet marketing expert with the goal of self automation!
18 Dec
In my previous posts, I talked about IT is what it is. Basically the concept of everything that we know, that we are, stored on a computer and the implications of that reality. I am pleased to share this video with you that is proof that those mad neuro scientists have done the impossible. It is only time before the future of the human operating system nears.
18 Dec
I was sent this article from a friend and thought it was on point and helps those making goals for the new year make and set the right goal. I reflected back on decisions and goals I made in the past years and looking back at goals I have achieved and the ones that passed me by. The biggest difference in the goals I set and completed are the ones I wrote down and set correctly. Read this article and I hope it will help you like its helping me set goals correctly.
| Written by George Chingarande | |
| Thursday, 27 September 2007 | |
| In the battle for achievement and success, there is a message that all serious aspirants can not afford to ignore and there is an invitation that none can risk spurning.
This is so because this message is to achievement what breathing is to life-the core without which the centre cannot hold. And the invitation is an invitation to greatness. It is this message and this invitation that I bring you. Ignore it at your peril. Statistics reveal that:
Which group would you rather belong to? If democracy has trained us to believe that power belongs to the majority, these statistics tell us that wealth and real success are being enjoyed by an infinitesimally small fraction. Many aspire to win but in reality few are winning. Why is this so? Perhaps the most revealing exposition on the importance of goals comes form a Harvard study. A synopsis of the study that was conducted at Harvard Business School between 1979 and 1989 is presented below. In 1979 the graduates of the MBA program at Harvard were asked a simple question: “Have you set clear, written goals for your future and made plans to accomplish them?” The results were very interesting. 84% had no specific goals at all, 13% had goals but they were not committed to paper, and only 3% had clear goals and plans that were written down. In 1989, a good ten years after the first phase of the study, the interviewers again interviewed the graduates of that class. Their results were even more startling. The 13% that had goals but not written down were earning twice as much as the 84% that did not have any goals. An even more interesting statistic is that the 3% who had written down plans and goals were earning on average ten times more than the other 97%. Further more the mere act of writing a goal down on paper increased its chances of being accomplished by a staggering 90%. However, there is still another shocking and some what contradictory message from statistics. Most people who have New Year’s resolutions and who try to attain their goals fail dismally. This is particularly true of behaviorally anchored goals such as losing weight, quitting smoking, and procrastination cessation. It has been established that the majority of people who seriously embark on a weight loss program actually lose weight for a time, but after a year or so they balloon back to or even beyond their original weight. The same is true for those that try to quit smoking, the employee who sets the goal not to be late for work, the tight rope walker who determines not to fail, the subordinates who are told to reduce defects and mistakes. Those that try not to fall into wrong relationships, more often than not fall into wrong relationships. The same is true also for those that try not to be nervous or clumsy. We are goal seeking and pleasure seeking organisms. If you take a homing pigeon and blind-fold it and drive it or fly it in circles to any where in the world and then release it, it will fly straight home. It has an inborn home-seeking mechanism. Humans have an inborn goal seeking mechanism. The human mind works in pictures and not words. Once a goal statement is fed into it, the mind instantly converts it to a picture and then relentlessly seeks information and creates circumstances that will result in its fulfillment. Once you determine that you hate or like red cars, isn’t it strange that you start seeing them all over the place? The mind does not create a picture of the verb in the goal statement, in this case “like or hate” but of the object and its adverb (red car). What You Resist will Persist In setting goals losers focus on risks, but winners on benefits. The magic of achievement lies in positive goal setting. Below are examples: 1a) To lose weight (negative and wrong) b) To fit into a size 30 skate by 31 December 2008 (positive and correct) 2a) To reduce the number of late deliveries by 10% (negative) b) To deliver 90% of the orders on time This week I invite you to make positive goal setting a weapon in your armory. Ask not what if things go wrong; rather ask what if they go well. Ignore it at your peril. |
In July 2008, I had the opportunity to share my skills and knowledge with small businesses and internet marketers in Austin, Texas for the SEM for SMB event, hosted by SparkSight. Both Reza Sarmadi boarded a plan and flew from LA, not knowing what to expect, but of course we had no expectations, rather extreme optimism coupled with a strong manifestation for success.
My speech was title “Online Marketing Reporting and Analytics“. After this first speech I gave I felt my speech could of been better polished and refined. I asked the universe to grant me one more opportunity after this speech to try it again and give me one more shot even though my speech was booked for day 1 only.
I manifested that thought for about 4 hours. Sure enough, after I let it go I got a text from Chris Justice, the promoter of the event. The text went something like this. “Your speech was awesome, everyone loved it and it is in high demand. Can you do it again tomorrow”. I looked at ReZ with the biggest smile and said, the universe listens.
That night I spent hours practicing the speech, determined to do my part of the manifestation and “do what I said I would do”, which was prepare, practice and refine it. That next day, I gave the speech with the utmost confidence and I was praised my the many people who attend the speech that what my speech gave some great ideas and insight to reporting and analytics that really helped people better understand how to make the most out of stats.
The truth of the matter is and lesson learned is: never give up what you want and when you want something. You know what you need to do to achieve it. So you better do what you know you need to do, otherwise you will fall short of your manifest.
It took a while to get it online, but without further wait, here is the seminar. If you would like to download the slides to the event, click this link.
12 Dec
Disneyland must love me, or someone there did because they put my name all over the place. Check it out.
11 Dec
I had the privledge of serving on the blogger’s choice awards for Mashable. The votes are in and here are your winners.
Winner: Twitter
Runner-up: Facebook

Winner:
Clearspring
Runner-up: Sprout

Winner: ShareThis
Runner-up: AddThis

Winner: Ping.fm
Runner-up: Twitterfeed

Winner: Delicious
Runner-up: StumbleUpon

Winner: Google
Runner-up: Scour

Winner: Gyminee
Runner-up: Oneseason

Winner: Flickr
Runner-up: Picasa

Winner: YouTube
Runner-up: Vimeo

Winner: iGoogle
Runner-up: Netvibes

Winner: Doodle
Runner-up: Eventbrite

Winner: TripIt
Runner-up: GeckoGo

Winner: Last.fm
Runner-up: Pandora

Winner: Wishpot
Runner-up(s): Tigerbow/Pikaba (tie)

Winner: Coolspotters
Runner-up: Gift Girl

Winner: Perez Hilton
Runner-up: Popvine

Winner: Evernote
Runner-up: Qik

Winner: SpeedDate
Runner-up: OKCupid

Winner: Wikipedia
Runner-up: PBWiki

Winner: Huffington Post
Runner-up: CreateDebate

Winner: eHow
Runner-up: Howcast

Winner: ThinkGreen
Runner-up: SocialVibe

Winner: SocialVibe
Runner-up: Kiva

Winner: Playfish
Runner-up: Kongregate
Internal linking is an essential strategy for any web designer, internet marketer, or anyone else looking to become involved with a website on any level. These tips are suggestions and observations of proven techniques to get the most out of your internal linking.
The best time to begin internal linking is during the planning stage of the website. Before you begin, you’ll want to include the following in your planning.
1.) The sitemap will be the most important resource for you when planning out your internal linking. Brainstorm and think of different pages on the site until you have every possible angle covered. Then begin building your sitemap.
2.) Defining the description and content of each page on your sitemap is very important. This gives your website focus, and will help any marketing campaign as well.
Page Types – These are Web Pages that should be included in the site map by default to help with internal linking
3.) Home page – Link to all of your main pages form the home page. These are known as category pages. These category pages should be the main sections of your website.
4.) Navigation Bar - Have a dynamic navigation versus a static navigation menu. Each category page could show the specific products or service pages on the navigation menu. This way, the navigation menu differs for each category page and is more valuable. A breadcrumb trail is also important, as it helps the user and also helps dynamically create keywords.
5.) Sitemap - For internal linking purposes, there should be more than one sitemap. A Google sitemap is a sitemap created specifically for Google indexing. A Google sitemap is a complete list of the pages. A general site map should also be included, to help visitors navigate more easily throughout the site. The most updated, highest content pages should be on the sitemap.
6.) Glossary Page – The site should include a glossary page. Be sure to link to this page as well, as it is high in content. The glossary page should be a static page, not a popup. This way it is more search engine friendly. Also, link to it, as it’s a high content page. Categorize the glossary, this way you have more detail. Feel free to link to other sources, whether it’s to Wikipedia, images and more. This increases relevancy.
7.) Link Directory – It’s important to have a link directory. This allows you to have data and content on different genres and categories. Add interactivity, and web 2.0 services, and related data on the site. Add tags, and tag clouds. Don’t make it too prominent, as it could annoy visitors. Perhaps offer the ability to comment on the directory site as well.
8.) Relevancy – Today the search engines are taking a large amount of the relevancy into account when indexing websites. Relevancy factors to consider include content, popularity and age.
9.) Link format – Home page links to the category pages, the main pages link to the detail pages. Add a description page that explains each product, another page that talks about the history of each product that is listed.
Specific Web Pages – These are internal linking techniques that can be applies to each specific product or service page on the site.
10.) Duplicate Content – Try to avoid duplicate content, but if duplicate content is necessary at least use the keywords that relate to that specific page. Avoid linking to old pages (stale content), the older URL’s are more valuable, but if it’s not updated don’t link there.
11.) Video for Specific Pages – Create a video tab for each of your specific pages. You can embed the video, or link to it directly.
12.) Links Page for Specific Pages - Have a page that links to other sites for each specific product page. Be careful to avoid over linking, however, as Google considers this spamming.
13.) Keyword clouds for the Specific Pages – Create a keyword cloud for each product page, but make sure it is out of the way and unobtrusive. Also, taking it a step further, turn the keywords that appear in the tag cloud into hyperlinks themselves.
Bonus Web Pages – These are pages to add to take internal linking to the next level and get an edge over the competition
14.) Recent and Top Search Terms – Create a static page filled with the most recent and most popular search terms, and a small description for each term.
15.) Referrer page – Create a static page that lists the sites your visitors are coming from.
These tips can help maximize internal linking within a website. The most important time to begin internal linking is before the website even goes live; proper planning can create an environment great for SEO, and make navigation of your site easy and logical.