Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Ejemplo de utilizaci??n de una PDiP en un Aula Interactiva

Marketing: Defining Your Niche
Health improvements

En este v??deo puedes ver la motivaci??n de los alumnos de Primaria en una clase, utilizando la Pizarra Interactiva Port??til InterWrite
Author: manuelvuelta
0 comments on YouTube.com
Tags: interwrite pizarra interactiva t??ctil electromagn??tica educaci??n digital electr??nica tablet PC bluetooth pizarr??n
Distance Education Helps You Get Ahead.
Hard driven seniors spin profit

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10 Things You'll Learn While Working At Home

5 Ways to stop being late
Speaking improvements

(For the record, this is what you want to avoid turning in to when you work from home. And no, it’s not me, but thanks…) A lot of people have emailed me over the last 7 months about my working at home. Just so everyone knows, I did have a desk job…in fact I worked in offices for 12 years until this past October, when I gave notice at my job to go out on my own. So far it has been fantastic, as I make my own hours, spend some time at the beach, meet for coffee or lunch with friends (whom also work as freelancers) in the middle of the day, etc. That all being said…sometimes it is a little claustrophobic being in my house all the time with no one to talk to but the cat. Since receiving all these emails, I figured I would put a little list together about what I have learned since I started working from home.

10. There are a lot of other people not working at 9-5 jobs as well. In fact, about half the people in my building are home all day and all night, and I never see them working. Rather I see them sitting outside having tea and heading to the beach day after day. Go figure.

9. Some days it takes a lot of effort to shower and get dressed before noon. A lot of times I will get up at my normal time (between 8 - 8:30) and head into my office, fire up the computer, and get right down to business. When I look up, it is 12:00 and I am still sitting here in my sweats with a cold cup of coffee.

8. My wife is incredibly jealous of me. She gets up, goes to work, goes to school, and sometimes does not come home until about 9pm. I try to explain to her that I am not just sitting around watching TV all day, but she doesn’t buy it. But until I stop getting paid, I guess she has no choice but to believe me.

7. Our cat talks…a lot. I always wondered what they did all day, and really, it’s not all that exciting. Sleep, eat, run around, and talk. Rinse and repeat, over and over. He is half Siamese, so I know he talks a lot, but I did not know he does it all day long.

6. Working from home you do lose a certain sense of job security, even though working in an office does not provide “real” security, either. I guess it just feels more real because you are with other people. I had no more job security at my office than I do here, but it just feels strange. You can be laid off from any job at any time, so being in control of my own clients and workload is probably MORE secure, even if it doesn’t feel like it sometimes.

5. Handling your money becomes a bigger deal when you freelance. One major source of my monthly income does take out taxes, as I am on payroll with them. But my other clients do not, and I have to be sure to monitor my accounts all year to make sure I am putting aside enough money to pay the tax bill when it comes due. Also, you have to do your own investing, as their is no company sponsored 401K to pay into anymore.

4. Health insurance is really no more expensive on your own then it is with a company. Well, if you are healthy, I suppose. With group plans at an office, you have to be accepted into the program, no matter what conditions you may already have. Private insurance can reject you for previous conditions. Luckily, my wife and I are healthy and were accepted right away. I am paying LESS to cover us privately in a PPO with Blue Cross than I was for the same coverage at my office job. Of course, if you are lucky enough to have the company pay for it, then you are even better off, but I don’t have many friends with 100% paid for health insurance.

3. Working at home saves a LOT of money. I eat out less, I buy less junk food, sodas and juice, I don’t stop on the way home from work to pick up things that I could do without, etc. We sold a car (my community is 100% walkable), which saves money on gasoline, parking and insurance. I have no more expenses here at the house then I did before, except maybe the lights and computer are on more often.

2. There ain’t that much on television from about 10am until 4pm every day, unless you enjoy Oprah, sewing shows and soap operas. Thankfully, we have Tivo.

1. Working at home has opened my eyes to a lot of opportunities that I might not have seen before. I see things online that could be improved, I have more time to work on my various online ventures, I have learned new ways to make money, and I have more time to investigate things that interest me. I can take classes during the day, I play tennis twice a week before my “old” work day would have ended, and I have the freedom to take a few days off in a row if I want to and do all my work at night. I can work every other day, strange hours, or any combination in between. Honestly, if I do ever have to go back to working in an office with set hours, I do not know how I will do it. If you can work from home at all, I would figure out a way to do it. It is totally worth it. The main thing you have to do is to force yourself to find reasons to get out of your house occasionally, or you will go stir crazy. I did at first, but I think I have found my groove.

[Via - MyTwoDollars.Com]


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How To Find Out What Keywords Pay Best With AdSense

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Viral Marketing feature on 3Sat

How To Be A Better Animal Or Is Capitalism JUST A SCAM?
Parents save where you can - get $500 in Pampers or Huggies.

Report on Viral, Buzz and Word-of-mouth marketing on German television show nano, including statments from vm-people CEO Thomas Zorbach and Martin Oetting, consultant and researcher from ESCP-EAP
Author: Thomasz68
14 comments on YouTube.com
Tags: Viral Buzz Word of mouth marketing vm-people
Parents save where you can - get $500 in Pampers or Huggies.
Gen Y makes a mark and their imprint is entrepreneurship

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NEW Movie Trailer: Internet Marketing Nightmare

How A Good Copywriter Can Beat Corporation
A Story of Success and The Law of Attraction

New Movie Trailer: The Marketing Nightmare - Becoming The Most Watched Internet Marketing Video Showing The Horror Of IM And Making Money Online - 95% Of Online Internet Marketers Get Caught In The Marketing Nightmare Turning Their Work At Home Business Dream Into A Nightmare. "How To Avoid The Marketing Nightmare" Launches July 2007... Download Your FREE Report at http://www.themarketingnightm...
Author: marketingnightmare
7 comments on YouTube.com
Tags: new movie trailer TV most watched movies internet marketing horror film money making online niche home business popular
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Corn Socks

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Improving Shopping Cart Abandonment Rate

Nashville entrepreneur is invested in vinyl records
Desiring What Is

Shopping cart abandonment is a significant problem. In some market verticals between 65 and 75% of shoppers abandon their online shopping carts before completing the checkout process. Small business owners report rates as high as 82%. Here are 20 tips to help you reduce the number of shoppers on your site that abandon their online shopping carts.

  1. Check how many steps are in your checkout process. This is usually a prime "knee jerk" target for results, but it has been found that whether you have one step or seven steps in the checkout process is not all that critical (which goes against conventional advice by having as few steps as possible). We had one client with whom with whom we were able to bring the checkout process from six steps down to one, but there was no correlation in reduction of the abandonment rate to the number of steps. Note: In testing that I have done I also found this to be true. Once people find what they want, they are generally going to buy, regardless of the steps involved.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: Look at the steps you have in place currently. Have a group of independent people look at the process and give honest feedback. Look for consistency in complaint - or praise. If your checkout process is very lengthy, consider a reduction to make it as smooth and painless as possible. As that is just good customer service and that is something we all need to focus on.

  2. Include a "Progress Indicator" (e.g. "Step 2 of 5") on each checkout page if you have multiple pages. No matter how many steps you have in your checkout process keep shoppers oriented by letting them know exactly where they are in the checkout process by step number. Be sure to clearly label the task to be completed at each step. Always give them an opportunity to review what they did in the previous steps and a way to return to their current step if they do go back.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: This is only necessary if you have three or more steps in your checkout process.

  3. Provide a link back to the product. When an item is placed in the shopping cart, include a link back to the product page, so shoppers can easily jump back to make sure they have selected the right item. Your own experience probably parallels others. Recently, shopping for a CD/DVD printer, a shopper wanted to know how many and what color cartridges come with the printer. It wasn't obvious where they should click to review what came with the printer so they had to navigate using the back button until they were able to get their questions answered. Not all consumers are willing to take on this navigational challenge and choose to abandon their carts instead.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: According my testing, having a link BACK to the product page and then relying on the customer to know what to do to get BACK to the shopping cart is just a bad idea. They can do it, sure, but at what cost? In fact, only 4% of users who clicked on the product link were able to get back to the shopping cart without causing a system error or adding a duplicate item to the cart. Instead: use a pop-up system to allow users to see more detail on the product without leaving the page. You may want to instruct them to press Ctrl as they click to override pop-up blockers that they may have.

  4. Add Pictures inside the basket. Just adding a link back to the product details page inside the checkout process reduces abandonment, placing a thumbnail image of the product inside the basket can increase conversions by as much as 10%.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: If you are going to include a link back to the product details page, take some time and create a pop-up instead (as mentioned above), so the product details "hovers" over the shopping cart page so the customer can make the review and not get "lost". I tested the "link back" and it does not reduce abandonment.

[Via - StomperNet]


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Why Trying To Use The Same One Road To Get Everywhere Is Plain Stupid

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