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kimd1
05-12-2009, 05:06 AM
love blogs and most of my websites now are blogs, my home business/mlm site is a blog

blogs are full of what search engines want and need thats keywords and content

content is king

a few years ago it was relatively easy to have an email newsletter as spam filters where a gleam in billy boys eye

now in email you cant use words like mlm income etc without your email getting perhaps filtered out

i still have email reports etc but everything is on a webpage

in past year i have just started with rss and atom feeds and have had a lot of luck and have just finished looking at a video from james maduk in his shhhhhh internet marketing site about rss feeds

and in it he says that he reckons that inawhile there will be so many rss and atom feeds that getting them read will be as hard as email is

so he has just started talking about direct marketing 2 desktop look at msn messanger thats what desktop marketing is

**

for thjose who dont think network marketing and mlm dont go together

how about mlm companies alerting us to new training sessions etc

you have a customer for your mlm and u download a desktop marketing avatar which gives him inffo on say a new edition of newsletter a new product

ways to use this are endless

taman
05-12-2009, 10:56 AM
Blogging is one of the best way to earn during recession. I started blog 2 yrs back and started concentrating on it. Getting good revenue from ma blog.
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belauk
06-19-2009, 08:30 AM
Fast forward to today, and one the most significant thing we see happening on the PC is with the “walled gardens” of social networks – each of which have become platforms for software development. These social networks have realized that the same network effects that grow with customer base can hold true for their platforms and their services as well. The value of a network increases if it becomes permeable to other networks.

Initially this manifests itself as the users needing to belong to both social networks, and allowing them to verify the connection between their two identies. E.g. This is my Facebook profile, this is my Flickr account and yes, you may speak to each other so that I might let my FB friends see my Flickr pics. Flickr becomes more valuable to me, and Facebook becomes more valuable to me and my friends.

But this first step is still kludgy, requiring an identity on both social networks. More recently, we are seeing some of these social networks becoming sources of trusted identity credentials. Note that I can now login to Dopplr by using OpenID. I can log in to FriendFeed using OpenID, GoogleID, or my Facebook credentials. Examples exist on the forefront of gaming too. For example, Metaplace allows login with six different identity providers.

To borrow an analogy from SXIP’s, Dick Hardt's Identity 2.0 presentation, this is analogous to the drivers license in the real world. When I go home to my native Montreal, I don’t have to have a Quebec driver’s license. If pulled over, say for turning right on a red, I can show my Oregon drivers license because the government of Quebec is implicitly stating “we trust Oregon as an issuer of credentials and will accept these credentials at face value for this transaction. Now here’s your ticket, ‘sti.”

If the promise of previous generations was “games that just work”, and the current that “games work with each other”, then the promise of the NEXT generation will be this: That true next-gen game platforms will comprise services that *just work* with one another.

Rob
06-20-2009, 04:26 AM
A system that allows one login for all? Great - losing track of all the logins I have!

kristy19
06-26-2009, 04:31 AM
hello.

Thank you for sharing.
blog covers a variety of topics, with a focus on such things as: blog resources, how to make money blogging, how to make money online, site reviews, technology, the Internetetc
follow this link for more information

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subhaika
07-06-2009, 03:49 PM
Yeah, it covers variety of topics and now blogging has become more popular way to earn money. If you know the pros and cons in it you can shine well in blogging.

Steyn
10-01-2009, 06:03 AM
Hi,

Blogging is one of the simplest but most effective ways to earn money online. If one is capable to write down a fines blogpost then there’s a chance of making lots of money. One has to create some well-designed sites along with Adsense as well as ensure that the blogposts shows what is presently searched in search engines and then nothing would be able to put an end to their income flow.

Bartholo
11-07-2009, 03:56 AM
Fast forward to today, and one the most significant thing we see happening on the PC is with the “walled gardens” of social networks – each of which have become platforms for software development. These social networks have realized that the same network effects that grow with customer base can hold true for their platforms and their services as well. The value of a network increases if it becomes permeable to other networks.

Initially this manifests itself as the users needing to belong to both social networks, and allowing them to verify the connection between their two identies. E.g. This is my Facebook profile, this is my Flickr account and yes, you may speak to each other so that I might let my FB friends see my Flickr pics. Flickr becomes more valuable to me, and Facebook becomes more valuable to me and my friends.

But this first step is still kludgy, requiring an identity on both social networks. More recently, we are seeing some of these social networks becoming sources of trusted identity credentials. Note that I can now login to Dopplr by using OpenID. I can log in to FriendFeed using OpenID, GoogleID, or my Facebook credentials. Examples exist on the forefront of gaming too. For example, Metaplace allows login with six different identity providers.

To borrow an analogy from SXIP’s, Dick Hardt's Identity 2.0 presentation, this is analogous to the drivers license in the real world. When I go home to my native Montreal, I don’t have to have a Quebec driver’s license. If pulled over, say for turning right on a red, I can show my Oregon drivers license because the government of Quebec is implicitly stating “we trust Oregon as an issuer of credentials and will accept these credentials at face value for this transaction. Now here’s your ticket, ‘sti.”

If the promise of previous generations was “games that just work”, and the current that “games work with each other”, then the promise of the NEXT generation will be this: That true next-gen game platforms will comprise services that *just work* with one another.

Thanks, Great informative site, a great read. Keep up the good work all, Will return shortly for your latest updates.

jamesken
11-08-2009, 04:12 AM
Hi...all. I can't add any to this information. After reading this discussion, I came to a conclusion that, I know the least about blogging. I collected lot of information from this post. Thanks for all for sharing with us.

Sinclair
01-22-2010, 10:57 PM
I think blogs are great for large companies as well. It lets your customers and clients get a better idea of who you and your company is. Blogs give personalities to businesses.

Rob
01-23-2010, 07:56 AM
I like your comment that blogging gives personalities to businesses - spot on.