| Work at home on
the Internet: internet marketing and affiliate program help.

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Issue 297 |
Nov 30th 2003
Letter from
Phil
Here's what's inside:
Concentrate
on what's important...
One of the smartest brains around...
Free Amazon Tools...
Beginners Bit...
Stuck for ideas what to build a site about?
As a follow on to the stuff higher up...
this is only my second letter in seven or eight
weeks. Sorry about that, but at first I had no Internet connection
when things went wrong with my satellite service (I'm now on wireless
broadband)
and then I developed a quite serious illness which I'm slowly getting
over.
If you want to, you can read more on my forum
I reckon you should go there anyway, it's a great community.
Incidentally the forum posts are being indexed
by Google, which makes it a good place to get links to your websites
- as long as you've got something useful/interesting to say that
is :)
Ok, I'll keep this relatively short because I'm
still not feeling too good. But I hope that normal "service"
has now resumed.

1. Concentrate on what's important...
First of all, it looks
like I'm missed seeing a lot of new products since I've been offline.
When I visited my forum I saw a number of programs/software
being talked about that I'd never even heard of.
And, do you know what? I didn't really care that
I'd missed the products being announced.
There's probably nothing wrong with them. They're
most likely useful. They're probably worth investigating.
But... remember this.
It's IMPORTANT to not get distracted with new
things all the time. You could spend all your limited web time learning
how to use
new tools, when really you should be focusing on improving your
sites and your skills and your own business.
I remember David Garfinkel and Mark Joyner saying
to me in Vegas that I should focus on what I'm good at (in my case
writing).
And that's what you should be doing too.
Play to your strengths.
Work out what you're good at/what your main interests are and give
them most of your attention and time.
Don't get sidetracked by everything new that comes along.
Write down your "online business" plan, even if it's only
on one piece of paper. And work out the steps you need to take to
achieve success with it. Doing this will help you focus on what
matters, and it will clear your head so that you know where you
should be spending your time.
Once you've mapped out your action steps you need to follow them.
Don't make a plan and then not stick to it. Don't let anyone or
anything put you off. Go for it.
Don't sign up for every crappy new scheme that comes along. Don't
buy every new piece of software or every ebook.
Do what works for YOU and use the tools that works for YOU.
And just go for it.

2. One of the smartest brains
around...
I'm not sure if you've heard of him, but James
Maduk is one of the smartest business brains around. He's been working
online since 1995, writes monthly articles for Entrepreneur Magazine,
and he's an expert at online selling.
Plus he's got more products on the market than
anyone I know, even beating the prolific Marlon Sanders.
So why he's not amazingly well known in this field
I'll never know.
I'm a big fan, especially of his member only site
If you'd like an introduction to his style and
knowledge have a look at one of his free
weekly webcasts, where he uses "internet whiteboard"
technology to get his messages across.
And when you've finished watching and listening
you might fancy signing up for his affiliate program which is looks
like turning into one of the best around.

3. Free Amazon Tools...
If you're promoting Amazon's affiliate program
here are a couple of useful sites which help you automate the process.
http://www.associatesshop.com/
and
http://www.addassociate.com/add_register.php
Associatesshop lets you add an Amazon store to
your site and sell products of your choice, while Addassociates
provides you with code which works much the same way as Google Adsense
-
meaning it "reads" the content of your webpage and displays
context related products.
Of the two I prefer Addassociate, but you can't
use it on pages where you're running Google Adsense ads.
Anyway, they're both free and could be a useful
addition to your sites.

4. Beginners Bit...
I get heaps of letters about how difficult it
is to build a good looking website. But I get even more letters
about the complexities of getting a webhost and uploading pages
to it.
One simple way around this is to use Site
Build It! (SBI) because it offers an all-in-one solution.
The mastermind behind SBI,
Ken Evoy, has been really busy with SBI
over the past few months, constantly adding new features and making
it easier to use. I've owned SBI
for a few years now and it's now a far, far better site building
tool than when I started using it. And it was good then.
One thing SBI
is ideal for is displaying Google
Adsense ads.
To really make big profits from Adsense
you need a lot of content pages. Using SBI
for these sites makes sense because once you've got over the learning
curve it leaves you totally free to
concentrate on providing that content. So you can quickly put out
a lot more pages.
Plus the in-built tools help you keep that content
on topic, which means that Adsense
can read that your pages correctly and display relevant ads.
In fact Ken has put together a very good info
site about using SBI
with Adsense.
You should spend a bit of time reading through it.
http://salesnow.sitesell.com/adsense/

5. Stuck for ideas what to
build a site about?
Try reading Michael Holland's Strike
it Niche.
It's a great place to begin.
Michael's done a great research job, giving you
ideas for 70 different sites, and explaining just what you need
to do to profit from each
of them. Reading this ebook should leave you dancing with enthusiasm.
6. As a follow on to
the stuff higher up...
Do you ever feel like you're drowning in
a sea of data?
Well you're not the only one.
I just checked out the online edition of The Guardian,
one of the best UK daily papers, and found this report:
"There's a lot of data on our hard disks,
and there's more accumulating by the day. The University of Berkeley
School of Information Management and Systems has just updated its
"How Much Information?" study. In 2002 we created over
five exabytes of data, in the form of video, print, magnetic and
optical media — an increase of over 30% a year since 1999.
That's equivalent to half a million new collections the size of
the US Library of Congress — 92% of which was on magnetic
media, and most of that was on hard disk."
You can read the rest here
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