I remember seeing this site just like it was yesterday. I’m one of those internet junkies. I simply like surfing the web for the next “BIG” thing. When I stumbled upon the Maverick Cash Makers Club, I was glued to the information. I kept asking myself could this be the one program I’ve been looking for.
Here’s the deal. I had been looking at a further program that was similar to Mack Michaels Program. I kept reading over and over from various other site how you can make all of this cash on clickbank. There had to be some truth to it. It simply a topic of partnering up with the right mentor.
After reading Mack Michaels sales page a couple of times, and watching all the videos on the front page, I chose that I was going to join. The information enclosed is simply unreal. I knew this was the one I have been looking for. I join around 10pm at night. His training is provided to you by video tutorial in a step by step format.
The training is like having Mack Michael standing over your shoulder every step of the way. Let me tell you. I could hardly sleep for two days. All I was thinking about was waking up and getting on my computer so I can use a further one of Mack’s practice. I applied one of Mack’s practice on the video and I made two sales within 48 hours… Seriously!! The system works!!
Hopefully you found this article to helpful? If you did, then take a look at the step-by-step video tutorial here!
http://4u2bn.com/io42
Posts Tagged ‘Step’
How To Make $1000 To $5000 A Week Using Maverick Money Makers Step By Step Video Tutorial
Friday, July 2nd, 2010Focusing Like a Laser Beam on the RIGHT Target Market For Your CPA Practice: Marketing Step One
Thursday, June 10th, 2010Most CPAs don’t have a strong enough foundation on the subject of marketing. Even in college, we focus a lot on accounting theory and hardly learn anything about real world marketing, despite the fact that many CPAs will be, effectively, small business owners running their own practices. If you’re like most CPAs and haven’t spent much time thinking about marketing, let’s start with nitty-gritty.
I reckon of marketing as the 3 M’s:
1. Market
2. Message
3. Media
Market first, message second and media third. The order is very vital. Most folks get it incorrect. They choose how and when to make known based on which advertising rep solicits them, which means they are early at the incorrect end.
Market:
The first step in developing a marketing strategy is to identify your target market. Many CPA practices make the mistake of skipping this step, but if you truly want to grow your practice, you must start with a clear significance of your ultimate clientele. Identify a group of people or businesses that fulfill the following requirements:
? You would really delight in working with these clients.
? They will recognize that working with you is elemental.
? They can be easily identified and contacted.
? They will happily pay what you’re worth, without negotiating.
Resist the impulse to serve anyone and everyone. You’ve heard the ancient saying “You can’t be all things to all people”? Remember it every time you’re tempted to try to market yourself to everyone. When you target the mass populace (everybody) as the ultimate client base, you will have a hard time differentiating yourself from others in your field. In fact, it’s pretty much impossible to make a specific message to speak to everyone in a way that makes them want to work with you – and making too many marketing messages could be confusing for prospective clients.
Without a clearly certain target market, you’ll also find it hard to establish yourself as an expert in a particular area, type of client or situation (remember that experts make more cash, get more clients, are more sough after by the media, etc.)
One of the most vital secrets of marketing is knowing WHO your ultimate clients are (the ones who’ll recognize that working with you is crucial to solving their problems, pay you what you’re worth and tell others about you), figuring out WHAT their particular issues are, WHY they’re having them and HOW you solve them. You have to start by defining your real ultimate market:
EXAMPLE of markets or niches that my firm targets:
- Businesses with revenues of $1.0 to $10M, with up to 50 employees, within 10 miles from my office
- Dentists within 10 miles from my office
- Chiropractors within 10 miles from my office
- Service professionals within 10 miles from my office
- Business owners who be in the right place to your place of worship
Notice how far any one of these demographics is from “anyone who’s willing to pay my fees.” That’s not to say, of course, that you’re going to turn away potential clients who aren’t in your niche market. But you can’t start to effectively target those in your most desirable market until you’ve clearly identified who they are.
Remember, the order is vital; market first and foremost, followed by message and then media. Make sure you’ve taken the time to clearly indentify your market.
Getting Started On Twitter–A Five Step Guide
Friday, January 22nd, 2010Twitter is all the rage now; I wish I had a nickel for every time a client mentioned it. Succeeding in it is a further topic, though, and at first it can be hellishly confusing.When I first started, and was following dozens of people, I felt like I was in a busy sports bar during the Super Bowl. I remember thinking: I don’t know these people. I don’t know what they’re talking about. I must be in the incorrect place.It helps to know the rules and a small about the culture previous to you jump in. It’s not rocket science but it does take a small study and work.1) Plot: First, reckon about why you’re even on Twitter.Know what you want out of Twitter. Are you there for networking, building a brand, driving traffic to your blog? Determining this early will help guide your strategy and improve your odds.2) Package yourself: First you need to pick out a Twitter ID. Consider your name first (I use @markivey); on the other hand, you could use a further name with your company, role or skills (example: @mediaphyte). You want a touch that will build your brand and/or illustrate your expertise.And don’t skimp on your profile; make it sound engaging, and choose some nice wallpaper—this part is all about personal packaging (you can also customize your own wallpaper, using your company’s logo if you want). Study other Twitter examples because you need to get it right.3) Follow the right people: Twitter is about following and being followed (more on connecting/conversing later) You can use the basic Twitter search or, better, one of the tools I recently reviewed like Twellow in my blog (www.ioncorporation.com/blog, date: Feb 6). These search engines can make life much simpler for you by identifying the right people to follow.Start with the influencers and industry experts in your industry. Find people with common wellbeing and/or just people you want to footstep because they’re appealing. Check out some of the really huge names here. Look for appealing directories and specialized lists; for instance, here’s 10 journalists worth following. And don’t forget your colleagues–you may have people all over your company tweeting. As one example, here’s a partial list of employees tweeting at Cisco.4) Learn the lingo: Previous to you jump in and start tweeting, get up to speed on the lingo and abbreviations. Some common terms*:• “peep”: is a message.• @ ID : A message with the @ sign preceeding the Twitter ID is a comeback message; so if you want to send me a message, start with @markivey. (Note that your entire network can view this message).• DM ID: Putting a DM in front of a name’s ID is a confidential message (you can only send confidential messages to people who follow you).• RT: a retweet. If you find a post particularly appealing, you can copy and paste it and retweet it, as long as you give credit (tools like Tweetdeck have a RT button). (this is one of Twitter’s most appealing features, and how some Tweets go viral).5) Manage efficiently: The last task is to download a “client” to manage your tweets and traffic. Twitter.com is ok for starters but you’ll soon want to go on to a better platform. These include clients like Twhirl and TwitterFox, which have built in search features, URL shorteners (which you’ll need) and nice interfaces to view and respond to your Tweets. Twitterfox is a Firefox extension, while Whirl is a downloaded application.My favorite, though, is Tweetdeck.What I like about Tweetdeck is you can arrange the people you follow into separate, manageable categories. I currently have four categories: “social media” (people who follow social media); “individuals” (business contacts, other influencers in other areas); Favorites; and “all.”But you can set up categories for nearly anything–influencers in your industry; acquaintances/family/close contacts, sports/leisure activities; special lists, like journalists or even by twitterers in your geographical area. Just add a new “pane” for each group.You can also set up search features in separate categories to hunt for certain keywords, like your company name, personal ID or an issue or event (ex: Plates or World Series) . I have searches set up for “Twitter tools” and “Twitter tips.” The default search is search.twitter.com and Twitscoop, which reports on hot trends and keywords in Twitter.One warning: Tweetdeck is a memory hog. It can also be addictive. Plot to set aside designated times, say 20 min. 3 times a day, to check it or you may wind up sitting there watching it for hours.One way to become more well-organized is to integrate Twitter into Outlook with a tool like Outwit. You can update your Twitter status and follow your acquaintances without having to open any other applications.Outwit allows you to schedule your Tweets to be delivered every minute to an hour, and dump them into a separate folder. This way you can check them at your leisure. You can also easily categorize them by name and save them, a touch you can’t do with Tweetdeck. One downside: your email box can quickly get overloaded (as if you need more email).* Resources: there are hundreds of terms thrown around in the Twitter universe, some of the downright goofy. For instance, Twittish means “took skittish to twitter”. Check out this glossary for more.
note: you can follow me at http://twitter.com/markiveyNext: building a community with Twitter.
KMST 1.2.275 ~ Skill Updates: Boomerang Step & Assaulter
Thursday, January 14th, 2010
Blog Post: spadow.wordpress.com spadow.wordpress.com spadow.wordpress.com The return of the Adventurers! ??? ??? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ?? ??? ????? ?? ???????. Cool time of Boomerang Step has been decreased and can now be used regardless of platform shape. ???? ???? ? ???? ???????. The attack range and hurt of Assaulter has been increased. ? Hurt increased from 450% ? 500% (Lv. 30) Video by ?? // insoya.com. ? blog :: spadow
Step by Step RSS Feeds for New Users
Friday, January 1st, 2010Okay, you have a website setup to promote your books, music, and other harvest you wish to sell. With a bit of Internet savoir-faire, you have produced an attractive design to catch the Internet user’s eyes, and with your expertise on the subject at hand you are able to provide thoughtful, provoking content. You are confident your site is optimized for excellent search results, with a excellent saturation of keywords in your content. Your site is simple to navigate, fun to read, and yet informative enough to be highly regarded by engines. You are ready for the world!
Yet, you feel as though what you are doing is not enough. Perhaps you delight in a steady increase in traffic through habitual online marketing means, occasional tweaking of metadata and e-mail advertising. Offline advertising is not in the budget right now, and you want to try other, cheaper alternative previous to delving into pay-per-click advertising. What else is there to do?
Have you considered making an RSS feed for your website? If you are in the business of promoting and selling many harvest and air force, having an RSS feed attached to your website may be beneficial in attracting new visitors to your website. RSS stands for Real Simple Syndication, and it is a specific format for aggregating news and information to other websites and Internet users who read news through special aggregators, or readers.
Reckon of RSS as a distant cousin of the news tickers you see on your favorite 24-hour news or sports network. As new information is made public, the wires pick up the tale and syndicate the content to interested third parties seeking information to distribute. An all-sports network, for example, would select only the most recent sports news from various syndicates to place on box. RSS works in a similar way.
Not sure how? Next time you log onto the Internet, take a look at your start up page, if you use My Yahoo or My MSN or anything similar. What do you see? Maybe you have updated news bytes from Associated Press or Reuters, daily comic strips, weather and horoscope, and so on. You know, of course, that such pages can be customized to show only what you want to see. If you’re interested only in entertainment news, you would exchange your page so you only receive movie gossip and reviews, and news from the top entertainment magazines, right? All of this information is syndicated, and your start up page acts as an aggregator, collecting only the relevant information you want it to collect and show.
Now, stay with me, because here’s the fun part: by making an RSS feed, you can become a syndicate! Say you are a romance author and place forward a series of passionate tales you know romance fans will like. You can make an RSS feed using news about your books and information related to writing, the romance genre, and the publishing industry to make usable content for aggregators. With proper promotion and distribution, users interested in romance novels can either add your feed to their confidential readers, or even their websites, so increasing your exposure. This in turn can increase traffic to your site, and account for more sales!
Sounds like a touch you want to do to further promote yourself on the Internet? If so, fantastic! But if you are new to the concept of RSS and are not sure how to start, don’t fret. Once you learn the basic of making and promoting an RSS feed, you will find it is as simple as making a website. Here follows a basic step by step for making a simple feed. Once you get the hang of RSS content and wish to work with a touch more advanced, a excellent education manual on Real Simple Syndication can help you achieve much more for your books, music, and harvest.
For now, though, let’s get the basics down pat.
1) Content
Previous to you even reckon about messing with RSS software or hand coding the proper markup language, you need to consider carefully the type of content you plot to use for your feed. Syndicated content in this context will differ from standard website content in that it needs to entice readers to click through to your website and buy your books or take advantage of your air force. If you give too small, readers may not be interested enough to stay your site. Give too much, and readers may be overwhelmed, or reckon they don’t have to click your links.
Study RSS feeds that typify what you plot to distribute. Especially if you are trying to promote a book, a CD, or other bits and pieces, you want to look at shopping RSS feeds in particular to see how they are executed. Reckon of your content as a 30-second commercial: depending upon the types of aggregators used to collect your feed data, users may see only a headline first, so reckon of one that grab attention. Use simple to know language in your content: sharp, peppy and to the point. Emphasize the buy links and any sales or discount incentives.
Some RSS aggregators accept code for images, so take advantage of that. Show your book or CD cover, a picture of your product, or your logo. For readers that don’t aggregate images, be sure to use the ALT option and describe the item.
Plot ahead for your feed. An RSS feed should be treated as a fixed newswire. So if you feel you do not have enough content to necessitate a fixed feed, consider supplemental information related to your site and map out when you plot to add new bits and pieces to your feed. Once you have a working schedule, now you can into the work of making your feed and having some real fun!
2) Creation
If you are completely new to the thought of RSS and have only moderate skills where website development is concerned, you can still build an attractive, effectual feed for your site. Previous to you do, bear this one thing in mind:
An RSS feed is a file hosted on your server, identified by either a .rss or .xml suffix rather than the .html extension. Most updates to browsers will allow visitors to see the feed as it is supposed to look should a link to your feed be clicked. Don’t panic, but, if somebody clicks on your feed link and claims to see “gibberish.” They are likely seeing only the raw code.
Now that you are ready to make a feed, it is highly recommended to use software designed for this purpose. An Internet search for “RSS freeware” or “RSS software” will point you in the right management. I personally use RSS Builder to make my feeds. It is user friendly and simple to install. As you learn more about RSS, you may want to test a few programs previous to deciding on one to use evenly.
Choose a name for your feed that is indicative of your harvest or site. The romance author may want to use romancenovels.rss or romancebooks.rss, while a freelance consultant may want to try consultingnews.rss. There’s no guarantee having such a name will boost search referrals, but to have a relevant keyword in the filename may help readers in their search for content to aggregate.
Check your RSS program to see if there are options to input metadata, or your feed’s description. This is vital, as the metadata in a in print feed helps RSS spiders determine the relevancy of your feed against various searches. As the Internet grows, so does the ability for search engines to mine things like blogs and feeds for data, so you want to be thorough in this respect. If the metadata options question for a URL and an image logo, provide them.
Now, depending upon your program, you have the options to add and delete topics, set times for their publication, and to order them by appearance. This is the heart of the feed, where the information goes. If you approach this part of RSS creation as would with a weblog, you will find it remarkably simple.
Each topic is a new post. Depending upon the volume of news you wish to distribute, you can make new topics daily or several in a day. Don’t give away too much information in your posts. Enticing text should prompt readers to click through to your main site, where the action (and point of sale) is. Use keyword rich text to attract those spiders that mine data from RSS. As your catalog grows, as you write more books or take on new projects, you will have more material for your feed.
3) Distribution
Once you have a few entries in your feed, now you can upload your RSS file for readership and distribution. Depending upon the RSS building software you are using, you may be able to upload frankly to your site using the software. Otherwise you may need to use an FTP program to do this.
Make sure you know your ID and password for your website, and make sure the file for the feed is correctly named with the .rss or .xml extension. Once it’s live on your site, check the file in an RSS aggregator or in a web browser that reads RSS to make sure it is working to your satisfaction. If so, congratulations! You have just in print an RSS feed.
But, you are not finished yet. In order to help site visitors know that you have a feed you need to do things. First, you need to place links on your website indicating that you have a feed. You would do this the same way you would make a hyperlink to a further URL. In the HREF anchor tag, indicate the full URL of your feed with a note saying “Subscribe to our RSS feed.” You may also want to use a small graphic to bring attention to your feed. Many sites use a small, orange rectangle with RSS or XML in white letters, to direct visitors to feeds.
To direct RSS aggregators and spiders to your feed, you will need to place a LINK REL tag in the HEAD section of your HTML code. It will look like this (just places carats previous to and after the tag):
link rel=”alternate” type=”application/rss+xml” title=”RSS” onClick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”Your RSS URL goes here”
This lets the spider know there is RSS content available.
4) Promote
Once your feed is committed, you can actively promote it. A quick Internet search for “RSS Search Engines” will led you to many resources where you can submit your feed information. You would submit your feed the same way you would submit a website, just make sure to provide all necessary information.
In addition, you may want to consider some viral marketing of your feed. Include the feed URL in your e-mail signature, or contact other websites of relevant topics and let them know you have content for distribution in RSS. Websites similar to yours looking for material may wish to aggregate your feed and place the content on their sites. You, in turn, get free exposure and increase your chance for sales.
5) Ping
If you know where to look, there are websites and software available designed to say, or “ping,” RSS directories and search engines when a feed is updated. This is believed to expedite the updating process on their end. The sooner they know new information is available, the sooner they will mine your feed for data. A quick Internet search for “RSS pinger” will lead you information on how to evenly say users of updates to your feed. Some sources will let you say several engines at once, and it can be a helpful tool in your promotion.
From writing content to publicizing your harvest, using RSS feeds to enhance your website can be very helpful in increasing exposure to your books and music, air force and harvest. Syndicate your content and watch your site traffic, and sales, grow.