Posts Tagged ‘Information’


I discuss how evolution adds new information to a genome, thus refuting the common creationist myth. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

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Lord Monckton of Brenchley joins The Corbett Report once again to discuss the report that he has filed jointly with Professor Fred Singer against the scientists connected to the ongoing climategate scandal. We discuss the basis of the report, what is likely to happen from this point, a timeframe for the possible criminal investigation stemming from this report and how people can stay up to date with this issue. For more information, please visit the homepage of Science and Public Policy at …

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Shot and edited by Gabrielle Bouliane www.youtube.com/user/multimediagrl Buddy’s piece “The Information Man” featured at the Individual World Championship Slam 2006, in Charlotte, North Carolina. www.buddywakefield.com PS I had nothing to do with the making of this video. I’m just a fan who found on the web and thought it deserved to be seen by as many people as possible.

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*Ben has just uploaded a new video*

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Once upon a time, there was a kingdom ruled by five cool kings who reigned in peace and harmony. The kings, whose names are Salutation, Presentation, Consummation, Perseverance, and Enticement, live in a wilderness filled with wanderers, each one seeking the proverbial pot of gold.

The role of the kings is to guide these wanderers in their quest, because as the visitors get rich, so does the kingdom. The twist is that these monarchs do not live in a fairy-tale, but in a fact-based new book that shows current and would-be information marketers how to launch lucrative businesses on the Internet. So what’s the deal?

The kings’ story, says Robert Skrob, co-author with Bob Regnerus of “The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing on the Internet,” is a parable. “The kingdom is actually a website, and the surrounding wilderness is the cyberspace,” Skrob says. “Every wanderer who passes by is a potential customer, and the kings represent the five steps of the marketing process. Just as they have to work together without getting in each other’s way, an info-marketer has to include all five steps in the marketing campaign, and follow these steps in proper order.”

Thus, King Salutation is the first to greet and welcome visitors to the kingdom. His job description, Skrob explains, is “to make people feel comfortable, and not frighten them away by asking too many questions. And, he doesn’t force the visitors to listen to the kingdom’s entire history, but, rather, describes it with a few choice words.”

Once the visitors ascertain that they have entered the kingdom that is right for them, Salutation helps them over the border and leaves them in the capable hands of his co-king, Presentation, the kingdom’s official tour guide. “He is a masterful speaker, capturing the imagination of his visitors,” Skrob explains.

“He also knows how to point uncertain visitors in the right direction, convincing them they can achieve all their get-rich goals right there in the kingdom. And, he can even motivate the visitors to remain in the kingdom with small gifts and other incentives.” The visitor is then passed on to Consummation, who shows them how to exchange their gold for the objects they seek. He keeps the eager travelers - those who went through two previous kings, as well as those who impatiently scaled the wall to get directly to him - on the right track. “His job is to provide all the information the visitors need to successfully complete their journeys,”

Skrob notes. Perseverance’s job is more laid-back, but very important nonetheless: to follow the visitors who depart from the kingdom without leaving any of their gold behind, making sure they know they’re always welcome back. He keeps in touch with them with frequent messages and “knows how to be persistent without being a nuisance,” Skrob says. The fifth king, Enticement, has the most difficult job of all: he roams the wilderness looking for the specific kind of visitors who are most likely to be lured into the kingdom.

“These people may not know of the kingdom’s existence, so they wander aimlessly looking for someone to show them the way,” Skrob says. “So Enticement hires agents who search for wanderers the king wouldn’t be able to find by himself. These agents send the lost visitors back to the realm of five kings.” This parable, which highlights the importance of a well-structured and focused website that attracts, rather than repels, visitors is featured in the book, released in September 2008 as a sequel to last year’s

“The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing.” “Both books feature profiles of people who became extraordinarily successful on the Internet,” says Skrob, president of the Tallahassee, FL-based Information Marketing Association. “When you use a website to market your product, you can make sales anywhere, at any time, without lifting a finger. There’s no question that, for any info-marketer, Internet is a great way to make lots of money.” And, once info-marketers follow the five kings, they will all live happily ever after.

Learn more about Bill Glazer, business Information, how to grow online business on the Internet. Please visit www.internetinformationmarketing.com for further detail.

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Beth Davis may not have the whole world in her hand, but she holds a key to a very lucrative career. And yes, the key to her success really does lie in the palm of a hand.

That is because Beth cleverly morphed what started out as a mere hobby – hand reading – into a profitable Internet- based information marketing business.

Beth is featured, along with other successful, self-employed entrepreneurs, in a new book, “The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing on the Internet” by Robert Skrob and Bob Regnerus. The book, out in September 2008, is the sequel to last year’s “The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing.”

Like many successful info-marketers, Beth was driven by a professional setback. She started out in the corporate world of marketing, but became disillusioned with the lack of long-term prospects for growth. “One day, my boss told me I’d be lucky to make $40,000 a year in five years,” Beth says. “That was all the motivation I needed to start my own business.”

Though Beth was at first skeptical about palm reading, a friend convinced her to give it a try. What followed was a revelation. “This woman read my hands and predicted I would be a successful business owner who inspires the masses,” Beth recalls.

Inspired by the hand reading, Beth began teaching hand analysis by phone in 2002. Money started to roll in, and a number of people Beth coached went on to become professional hand analysts themselves.

But as Beth continued to grow her business, she realized there was one thing missing. That “thing” was a strong Internet presence. “I knew I had to take my website from a floating brochure to another revenue stream for my business,” Beth says.

That was the right decision, Skrob notes because “when businesspeople and consumers want information, they go to the Internet first.”

Beth began sending plain text emails to her list of 600 people. In return, she got registrations for her tele-classes, workshops and a coaching program, which she sold at the end of hand-reading sessions. “I never advertised it, but within six to eight months, I had a full practice.”

But not so full that there wasn’t any room for improvement. In 2005, Beth signed up for the “Online Success Blueprint Workshop,” by a very successful Internet info-marketer Alexandria Brown. “I pretty much implemented everything she told me to do,” Beth reports.

One of these “must-do’s” was a killer website, which, Skrob stresses, “is a basic requirement for an Internet marketer. A well-structured and focused website that attracts, rather than repels, visitors is very important.”

So Beth hired a web designer to build her new website, HandAnalyst.com, targeting women clients. Her first product was a $247 home study program called “5 Proven Steps to Bring More Health, Love and Money into Your Life,” which teaches people the benefits of analyzing their own hands. “The title encompasses all of the responses to the survey I had sent out to my list, to see what my customers were interested in most,” she says.

Beth’s Internet-based information marketing business is booming because she took an idea and built a great website to promote it, one that inspires the visitors to buy her products. “When your sales prospects opt in on your landing page, they become your sales leads,” Skrob notes. “The next step is the sales process. The Internet gives you more options for presenting your sales materials.”

The book outlines five specific tasks that every web-based sales presentation must accomplish – techniques that Beth has mastered, allowing her to rake in big bucks.

But the answer to a successful info-marketing venture is not just in the palm of your hand. Says Skrob: “If you’re ready to take advantage of the unique opportunities the Internet provides to information marketers, this book tells you everything you need to know.”

 

Learn more about online marketing, business Information, how to grow online business on the Internet. Please visit www.internetinformationmarketing.com for further detail.

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www.info-disco.com

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Melanie Benson Strick is not a doctor, but she specializes in treating a condition she calls the “Bright Shiny Object Syndrome.”

“When you are chasing a new, bright shiny object every day, you’re going to be overwhelmed,” Melanie explains. “When I tell people I have a formula to break free of that syndrome, they get curious and want to go the next step with me.”

And that is how Melanie morphed into an engineer of sorts – she identifies where her clients want to go, and she designs a process to get them there.

Melanie’s creative approach is featured in a new book, “The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing on the Internet” by Robert Skrob and Bob Regnerus, because she cleverly turned her Internet marketing savvy into a cash cow.

Melanie started out as a trade events organizer and later worked for Motorola, helping the company establish the 9-1-1 call centers. “But I began to look for ways to have more fun,” she recalls. “Lifestyle coaching seemed like an interesting field, where I could use my previous experiences.”

However, Melanie realized she couldn’t just plunge head-on into her new career. “I was pretty naïve to think I could just go out and become a coach because I didn’t know how to pull this together,” she says. “I had no clue how to recruit clients.”

That’s when Melanie turned for help to consultant Alexandria Brown, who has been very successful in her own information marketing business. Alexandria looked at Melanie’s website and offered this assessment: the site, though eye-pleasing, would not attract customers. “She said it was a waste of space on the Internet because it was not doing anything for me,” Melanie relates.

In fact, websites cluttered with too many graphics and too much useless information is counterproductive, Skrob notes. “The more choices you put in front of people, the longer it will take them to make a decision and the less likely they are to be happy with the choice they make. When the number of options gets really overwhelming, people often respond by making no decision at all. So when it comes to getting responses from your website visitors, ONE is the magic number. When you present your visitors with ONE yes-or-no decision at a time, you’re more likely to get the results you want.”

So Alexandria advised Melanie to restructure her website, adding a landing page that invited visitors to leave their e-mail addresses in exchange for a free report and an assessment of the potential client’s business. The report, which also included a CD and a subscription to an e-zine, helped Melanie connect with people who needed help building their own businesses.

With this new, focused website Melanie hit the jackpot. To attract more clients, she developed different levels at which people could access her information, ranging from a reasonably priced entry level to more elaborate packages. “This way I maximize my conversion of prospects into mentoring clients” she says.

It is no wonder that info-marketers like Melanie and numerous others profiled in the book, a sequel to last year’s “The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing,” became extraordinarily successful by packaging their expertise and selling it to others. “The development of the Internet has been good for every type of business,” notes Skrob, president of the Tallahassee FL-based Information Marketing Association. “And there has never been a better time to be in the Internet information marketing business because it is responsive to and fueled by the ever-increasing pressure on people’s time.”

The book, out in September 2008, “picks up where the last one ended,” Skrob adds. “The last book taught the big picture business plan; this book shows how to implement that plan on the Internet. If you have an information marketing business now, you can’t afford to miss out on what the Internet has to offer. And if you’re just getting started in information marketing, the Internet will help you make your first sale more quickly and with less risk – just as Melanie did.”

 

Learn more about online marketing, business Information, how to grow online business on the Internet. Please visit www.internetinformationmarketing.com for further detail.

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Is there more or less information included than in a paper return filing? I like the convenience of e-filing, but not if I am transmitting more information about my return than is legally required. I am concerned in general about privacy and not providing any more information to 3rd parties (yes, even if it is the US government). Thanks!

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