Archive for May, 2010

May 31 2010

How WebeServe Can Help You Make Money Online

Published by under Make money online

Are you new in this ‘make money online’ world? Or you already started a website or blog to generate online revenue?

If you are new, you must be looking for a money making opportunity or an online business model. If you already started on the Internet with a revenue-generating site, you are looking to promote your site for maximum exposure to make the most out of the Internet.

A great web based service called WebeServe is going to help you out in the above situations. WebeServe isn’t new on the Internet. It has been in business for a period of time. WebeServe is basically a freelance marketplace focusing only on the Internet marketing niche. People who need to outsource their Internet marketing works like article creation and distribution, forum marketing, link building, social media marketing, video marketing and many more can do so in WebeServe. As WebeServe specializes in only Internet marketing niche, they are able to provide quick and satisfying service to advertisers, marketers and web publishers.


How WebeServe can help you as a webmaster or blogger who wants to promote your site to get traffic and revenue?

Create a marketing campaign at your own budget

You start by signing up for an advertiser account to post your Internet marketing project. You will specify clearly what marketing works you want to outsource for promoting your business and website; and tell them the price you are willing to pay for each service.

Talented service providers will work for you

Once you have posted your project, Talented freelancer and worker will be assigned tocomplete your work. It is not one person works on your project, there will be several people assigned to help you out. So, you can expect quick service.

Pay only service is done

You pay only when your project is completed. The service of WebeServe has been designed to boost your website’s exposure and increase your backlinks. At the completion of your project, your online business will be benefited. More exposure and traffic for you business which will increase your income.

Increase your web traffic and make more money with WebeServe

How WebeServe can help you if you are new or haven’t run a site to make money?

WebeServe invite anyone to become their service provider. If you know these fields like article writing, submitting articles, directories submission, social bookmarking, writing review, blog commenting and other related works, you can join WebeServe to make money.

It is totally free to become a service provider and there are only a few steps to take to obtain job in WebeServe. Once you have joined, you can start browsing for the jobs that suite you. Each job has a price. If you accept the price, you can choose the job and start working. After you have successfully completed the job and the advertiser is satisfied with your work, earning will be credited to your account. You can request for payment when your earning reaches the minimum payout of $20.

Become a Service Provider Now and Make Money with Your Skill

from Make Money Online

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May 31 2010

Will the New Digg 4.0 Bring Back Bloggers?

Published by under General

Digg used to be one of the foremost ways to promote Web content, though after a series of changes in algorithm, many users who were bloggers, publishers, or SEOs fled. While it may not be used as much for content promotion as in the past, at least amongst my blogging and Web publishing colleagues, it still has some life in it yet. There’s a brand new version around the corner, Digg 4.0, and it has a number of new features, including several that tend to the social. But is it enough Will it bring back all the lost power users? Can it gain ground over the volume of content sharing done through social networks such as Facebook and Twitter? Or is it too late?

How Digg Used to Factor in Blog Content Promotion

As someone who used to write 3-5 anonymous linkbaits per week a few years ago, Digg was crucial to the success of my work; if my content didn’t get the home page, I’d be in less demand. As soon as people started gaming Digg, and Digg reacted to that by changing their algorithms, there was a domino effect. Many smaller publishers and bloggers felt that they were getting cheated while certain sites still got their content on the Digg homepage, even if a lesser known site had a better post on the same topic. Incidents of domain banning also seemed to go up.

In other words, things had just gotten worse for some bloggers and publishers. So why use Digg for promoting content, wasting time, money, effort? My own services became less and less in demand, at least at the rates that I used to get, because publishers were not willing to spend money on campaigns that might fail on Digg. That ushered in cheap linkbaits cranked out with little quality (though some still do well thanks to voting networks). I in turn stopped using Digg regularly, as did many of my colleagues. I’m not bitter; I just don’t use Digg all that much anymore unless someone asks me.

A typical approach a few years ago, to promote content, might be to use some combination of Digg, Reddit, Mixx, Propeller, Stumbleupon, Delicious and other social voting/ bookmarking sites, depending on the niche. Regardless of the combination and the sequence of submission, Digg was often a crucial part of the promotion for some publishers, and it wasn’t working for them anymore.

How Blog Content Gets Promoted Now

Meanwhile, those who discovered the power of Facebook and Twitter for content sharing went that route. These two social networks (yes, Twitter is one, not just a microblogging service) have potentially greater power for creating viral content than social voting and bookmarking sites. Why? Because of a number of reasons:

  1. Trust factor. With Facebook at least, your social network tends to be comprised of people who know you, even if only online. That isn’t always the case with a voting site, even if it allows for “friending,” because Facebook allows for conversation that helps you get to know someone better. Obviously, you’re more likely to re-share web content posted by someone you know than to vote up content submitted on Digg by someone you might know not very well, if at all. Digg did have limited interaction through their “shout” feature, though I think that was dropped a while back. But it wasn’t the same as conversation. The “conversation” is on Facebook, and to a lesser degree, on Twitter.
  2. Wider audience. With 400M+ users, Facebook has a broad range of users, and ultimately, we’re all much more connected than on voting sites. I’m definitely more connected to other users on Twitter than I ever was on Digg or other social voting and bookmarking sites.
  3. Ease of sharing. It’s easy to share content from a range of topics and have someone re-share it, on both Twitter and Facebook. Facebook even gives you a nice little snapshot of what to expect. That means more people are likely to share interesting content.With voting sites, before voting buttons were available for placing on blogs, if you wanted votes, you had to convince someone to sign up for one or more social voting/ bookmarking sites. The probability of success was low then and I’m not even sure it’s that great now, even with the availability of voting buttons. Now, even if friends did sign up, getting them to spend time daily checking on Digg to see if you needed a vote or ten was an uphill battle. If you voted too fast as a group, or if the same people voted en masse, or if you frowned at Digg the wrong way, Digg might punish you — unless you were one of maybe 10-15 sites that seemed untouchable.
  4. Better viral infrastructure. Facebook doesn’t the restrictions Digg imposed, when it comes to sharing content, nor does Twitter. As such, interesting content can go viral sooner, and having the shortest viral loop is crucial for content to become viral. Even just a half-dozen retweets in short order of shared content can help bring in Web traffic and thus be a more valuable approach than using a voting site full of rules. If you cross-promote on Twitter and Facebook, without managing to p*ss off your friends/ followers, the potential for the success of Web content is even higher.

The Return of Digg?

But Digg has been reinvented. Founder Kevin Rose is at the helm again, and there are a slew of new features, many of which are “social.” I’m not going to get into all of them, but the relevant stuff is that you can import your social graphs from Facebook and Twitter. You can also log in with your Facebook profile, though I believe that was there before Digg 4.0’s release. You can also import contacts from GMail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail and AOL, though I don’t know when these features were added. The other features of Digg 4.0 (which by the way is not live yet) are described in a recent Techcrunch post, but as many people are saying, they seem to be copying some of the better features of Twitter and Facebook?

Will these features be enough to bring lost users, especially bloggers, to Digg? I’m willing to keep an open mind, though don’t have the time to invest again. But before completing this post, I thought I’d synchronize my original Digg account with my Facebook account, in preparation for Digg 4.0 going live. Unfortunately after going through three or four registration screens, I got a “Yikes, we just had an error.”

The voting/ bookmarking flavors of Social Media can still work, provided you follow some simple tips, but I’m not sure Digg will be in my arsenal anymore. Me, I’m sticking to Twitter, Facebook, Stumbleupon, Delicious and a few others. Still, if you ask me to Digg and I like the content, I probably will. You can add me on Facebook; just remember to make a mention of why you’re adding in the message area or I’ll ignore the add.



from Performancing.com – Helping Bloggers Succeed

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May 31 2010

Are you quitting Facebook today?

Published by under Technology

The D-day is finally here. Notwithstanding the frantic proclamations made last week by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to reassure its users of their data privacy, thousands of disappointed users are set to bid adieu to the site on May 31.

A website called Quit Facebook Day had set the last day of May as the day when everyone keen to leave the social network should finally take the plunge and hit the Delete key.

Read full report


from Malaysia Technology Blog

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May 31 2010

The Key to Solving Any Problem

Published by under Make money online



My father is a physicist, and whenever and I had some tough physics problem in my homework I would come to him for help. There is one advice he would give me that I can still remember. He would say: “sketch out the problem and understand what is going on before you try to solve it.”

The interesting thing is that this exercise will help you solve pretty much any problem in your life, be it a professional or a personal one.

Why? Because we almost never take the time to analyze and understand our problems before we try to solve them. We think we do, but we don’t.

For example, we all go through some kind of financial problem sooner or later. In order to solve it, however, we just “think” about it, maybe before going to sleep, maybe on the commute to work, and then we take a decision. Some of us might talk with other people asking for their opinions, but that is it.

How many of us actually sit down with pen and paper (and a calculator in this case), sketch out the parts involved in the problem and analyze what is going before trying to find best decision to take? I would guess not many.

Here is another example. Given that you read this blog I am pretty sure you want to make your blog or website popular. But have you ever sit down with per and paper to sketch out what factors make a blog popular, how they interact together, what kind of strategies you can use in your own case and so on? Again I would guess the vast majority haven’t done this.

And keep in mind that the sketching part is essential. When you draw and write things down you basically increase the processing power of your brain, because it becomes much easier to visually the elements involved, to understand how they are related, and to discover new aspects of the problem you hadn’t considered forehand.

So remember, whenever you are trying to solve a tough problem, sit down with pen and paper and sketch the parts involved, trying to understand what is going on before you choose the right solution.


Original Post: The Key to Solving Any Problem

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from Daily Blog Tips

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May 31 2010

Figures released under Google’s transparency policy

Published by under General

It seems that Google are now taking their bid to be more transparent very seriously, as they have recently announced their revenue shares for their AdSense network.

The figures released show that most of Google’s AdSense publishers are content providers and 68 per cent of the revenue share worldwide is earned by them. This means that 68 per cent of the money received by Google from advertisers is for their AdSense content ads.

And as Google are making more and more investment in AdSense, the remaining amount of revenue covers the costs of these investments being made in AdSense. Google have spent money on the development of technology and features that can help users earn even more money from the ads.

Another figure to be revealed under Google’s new transparency policy is that publishers keep 51 per cent on the search front. This covers the cost of research and development to improve and expand the search and AdWords technologies.

Google has recently been under scrutiny from the Federal Trade Commission for their AdMob acquisition. The commission has since closed the investigation after they discovered that the deal with AdMob is unlikely to affect competition in the mobile advertising space.

Victoria Jones
Content Writer

This SEO news has been brought to you by Just Search; Experts in internet marketing and PPC


from Just Search | Search Engine Optimisation & Internet Marketing Journal

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May 31 2010

Golden Guidelines on How to Make Money Online Working From Home

Published by under General,Technology

Learning the ways to make money online is realistically possible. Finding the right method that suits you is not essentially difficult to figure out. It doesn’t matter if you decided on working full time or on a part time basis in the internet. Surely, the opportunity of earning an income online is practically endless.
from Internet-and-Businesses-Online Articles from EzineArticles.com

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