Secrets to High Profit Websites
Before you actually start creating your website, you need to decide what income streams you would like to take advantage of. What is an income stream? It is simply a way of generating money. And when it comes to websites, there is no limit to the number of income streams you can have. In fact, the more income streams you can make available on your site the better.
Secrets to High Profit Websites
Now that you have decided what income streams you’re going to be working with, you’re
ready to create your website. For this step there are several options available to you.
These options include: creating the website yourself, hiring a web designer to do it or
getting a ‘pre-made’ site.
Secrets to High Profit Websites
At this point you should have a completed website. But don’t think that even with
keyword-rich content that the process of making money with your income streams is
complete. Contrary to popular belief, just because a website is online doesn’t mean
traffic just automatically flows to it. You have to make traffic happen. This chapter will
explain how by evaluating free and paid forms of online marketing. You will also learn
about offline marketing methods.
As you are marketing your website, you will want to track your results to see which
campaigns are working and which ones aren’t. Depending on your affiliate program,
web hosting package or email marketing service you are using, tracking may already be
taken care of, though it is probably somewhat limited in exactly what is being tracked.
For example, most web hosting packages will only tracks how many hits your site gets in
general, not how many hits a specific affiliate URL might be getting. They also can’t tell
you where your traffic is coming from. Affiliate programs are better as they can track
which of your affiliate links within their network are getting hits. But they can’t tell you
where these hits are coming from, nor can they provide help with how much traffic your
website itself is getting. Then, there’s email marketing services. As you might have
guessed, they can only track hits related to your email campaign.
Guide to Mystery Shopping
Secret shoppers are people who visit businesses posing as customers, evaluate the service they receive, and complete an evaluation form. Business owners and managers use these reports to insure their employees are practicing good selling techniques and providing quality service to their customers. Then you get paid, simply for shopping, eating out, or staying at a hotel.
When I was first looking for a way to earn a few extra bucks after my son was born, I couldn't find anything. I was either not qualified, too young, or whatever other excuse they could come up with. I was at my wits end when I stumbled upon a mystery shopper job in my local newspaper. That job changed my life!
Unfortunately, these days to get a mystery shopper job you have to either know someone, or pay a go-between 30, 40, 50, even 10 bucks for a list of companies hiring and till no guarentee of employment!
I say the buck stops here. I'm offering the whole package. The secrets, the tools, the tips, the how-to's all of it for the cost of my bandwidth to keep this site online. The package that I paid over a hundred bucks for a few years ago has been added to, tested, and had a hiring company list included. It's yours for a few bucks.
Learn a Foreign Language
Spanish is one of the most spoken languages in the world. It belongs to the Italic
subfamily of the Indo-European language family, and is primarily spoken at the Iberian
Peninsula and Latin America of about 250 million people. It is also called Castilian,
which was derived from the dialect it came from. This language was brought and
introduced by the Spaniards in Canary Island, Antilles, the Philippines, the southern part
of North America, South America, and the coast of Africa.
The Standard Spanish language is being spoken at 43 countries, not including
Spain. Most of them consider it as their official language and use it for business,
education, industry, politics, and everyday conversation.
This shows how widely popular the Spanish language is and how it will continue
to be for many years to come. Foreign language courses are already being offered at
different colleges and universities. Spanish training is always included in them. Students
taking up such courses are continuously increasing in number. New books and training
materials are being published and sold.
Aside from the possibility of having to deal with so many Spanish speakers in business or education, another reason to learn Spanish is that it is regarded as a romantic language, both in literature and everyday conversations.
This is the reason why a lot of movies and television programs nowadays use the
language – to captivate and touch the hearts of millions of audiences. Imagine how many
friends and loved ones you can impress with lines like Te amo (I love you) or Te quiero (I
need you) and actually knowing how they came to be!
Whether you’re having a hard time coping up with Spanish in school, you’re dealing with many Spanish speakers in the office or business, or you simply like adding another entry on the “language spoken” part on your résumé, you have chosen the right report to help you learn the language by yourself.
With this report, you’ll be learning basic Spanish not within a whole year, not
during one term in school, not even a month! You can learn how to speak Spanish
confidently in just 12 days, or even less! Imagine that.
How to Prepare a Resume
Job seekers have always been obsessed about resumes. Who would not? There are so many things to do - functional chronological report, the objective statements (for and against), keywords, patterns, references, font size, whitespace, action verbs, gaps employment, placement and style of bullets, typos, and whether to include hobbies.
In fact, we often forget about the most important ingredient of a truly great interview-obtaining, new job-snagging resume: It must be written specifically for the job you are looking for.
Does that mean you have to do a new resume for every single post you ask? Of course yes, that's exactly what this means.
Do not worry, it's not as painful as it may seem. You do not have to do the same thing each time start from scratch. All you need to do is change - or redirect - your "master" resume synchronization with the position in question. How?
- First, you have to be careful, read and reread the job description. Study it. Ponder that. Identify words and phrases that the employer uses to describe the situation.
- Then, check out your work accomplishments, certifications, education and experience. You must be maintaining lists of all these things. These are the raw data that you draw on your craft resumes and letters, too.
- Then ask yourself what credentials you do have that can be described honestly using the same words and phrases that the employer uses in the job description.
- Finally, take these words and phrases and use them to describe yourself. From this point, all you have to do is plug the info from your master resume. See, this is not a complete rewrite. In fact, most of it will remain the same. You'll find that customizing your resume gets easier every time you do.
Is that all? No, here are a few more thoughts to consider:
- at the top of the page, If you use a career objective it should include the exact job title of the position you want.
- Get rid of experience / qualifications that have nothing to do with the job. You want to make it easy for employers to see the skills that they care about.
- Try to understand what skills or experience are of the utmost importance to the employer and put it first. Imagine yourself in the shoes of the employer and ask yourself, "What is my biggest need? What's more important to me in this job?" Talk to your mentor and contacts in the field. Try to find people who already do the job you want and ask, "What is the most important part of your job?"
- If your last job titles are ambiguous, too jargony, or are not clearly related to the job you are applying for a re-write in simple terms is needed - find a way that shows how these jobs qualify you for this new employment. (For example a stay at home mom would have skills in time management, taxi-driver, dispute settlement, etc.)
So what is the worst mistake you can make on your resume? Not customizing. It is an employer’s market out there at the moment. And what you need to do is show your employer that you're applying for this job, not just any job. Good Luck.
How to Prepare for a Work at Home Interview
Unless you’re looking for a local company, it is very likely that the interview will be conducted entirely online or by phone. When you work from home, you will get used to the idea of working independently, think of the interview as a test to determine if you are really ready or not.
If you have never been hired without face to face conversation, you can find out that process is nerve-wracking and impersonal. The best way to fight against these feelings is by preparing properly for the interview process and make the best of it, you have to offer from the beginning. It may seem common sense to most people, but you should make sure that your resume is completely waterproof. Go over it several times in a few days, send copies to trusted friends and family members and have a resume writer to revise it if possible. Just a few errors in grammar or spelling errors can make the difference between getting contacted at all, so it is easy to see why the best professional resume can make or break you.
You cannot dress the part, but you can ensure that responses are professional and have a powerful voice to speak. Think about all the questions you asked when interviewed in person, then a script to save your answers. inflection of voice, pauses, and your general tone of a healthy, natural and pleasant. Includes a list of skills, activities and experience, then the work is sold to those with the appropriate responses.
Gather Your Information
Unless you’re looking for a local company, it is very likely that the interview will be conducted entirely online or by phone. When you work from home, you will get used to the idea of working independently, think of the interview as a test to determine if you are really ready or not.
If you have never been hired without face to face conversation, you can find out that process is nerve-wracking and impersonal. The best way to fight against these feelings is by preparing properly for the interview process and make the best of it, you have to offer from the beginning. It may seem common sense to most people, but you should make sure that your resume is completely waterproof. Go over it several times in a few days, send copies to trusted friends and family members and have a resume writer to revise it if possible. Just a few errors in grammar or spelling errors can make the difference between getting contacted at all, so it is easy to see why the best professional resume can make or break you.
You cannot dress the part, but you can ensure that responses are professional and have a powerful voice to speak. Think about all the questions you asked when interviewed in person, then a script to save your answers. inflection of voice, pauses, and your general tone of a healthy, natural and pleasant. Includes a list of skills, activities and experience, then the work is sold to those with the appropriate responses.
It's time to find your marketable skills, and the achievments in your past that prove those skills. This data will help you to write a Résumé to knock their socks off.
Find your marketable skills
Answer these questions:
What do you do well?
What do you most enjoy doing?
Is it the job you’re doing now?
Your course work in school?
If not, what do you do well?
Is it a hobby? Volunteer work? Other?
Write your answers on a sheet of paper.
What do you enjoy doing?
What skills do you most enjoy using on the job or in school right now?
What skills would you use even if you weren’t paid?
Write out your answers.
If you enjoy doing something that you’ve already written down in answer to the first question, underline it this time.
Ideally, you’ll have several skills underlined at the end of this exercise. These are things you do well AND enjoy doing.
Now, list your 2-3 most marketable skills. From your list of underlined skills, choose the 2 or 3 you think will be most attractive to the person reading your résumé. These are your most marketable skills. You’ll use them later to write your résumé.
This is the most important step in the process of writing your Résumé. Why? Because if you know what your most marketable skills are, you can highlight your most relevant experience, which will help you find the job that’s best for you.
Prove your case with achievements
Now, what achievements prove the 2-3 most marketable skills you listed above? Write at least three things you did that you’re proud of and THEIR RESULTS.
What have you done to increase productivity, profits, efficiency, sales, etc.? Use facts, figures, years and be as specific as possible. Your achievements can be from paid or volunteer employment, school projects or even hobbies. As long as they’re relevant to the work you want to do, you may include them in your résumé.
What to leave out
Some things don’t belong in your résumé. Here’s a list of six things you should not include:
• Title at the top of the page, such as “Résumé of Qualifications,” “Confidential Résumé,” etc. If the reader needs to be told that he’s reading a résumé, he’s in no position to hire you.
• Months of employment. While you must include the years you were at each job, don’t include the months. This is perfectly acceptable and helps cover up any short gaps in employment. Your dates should look like this: (1997-1998).
• Reasons for leaving. This information is irrelevant and uses valuable space. You can always discuss these facts in a job interview. If you feel compelled to explain why you left a job after a few weeks or months, just leave it out of the résumé.
• Salary. Never discuss this until you have a job offer.
• References. Write these on a separate sheet and bring them to the interview. And don’t’ include the phrase: “References available upon request.” It’s understood that you have them. This line wastes space.
• Age, sex, religion or health. In the United States, it’s illegal to discriminate against you because of these. Don’t refer to them in your résumé.
If you’re in doubt about whether or not to include something in your résumé, ask yourself: “Will this make an employer more likely to call me?” If the answer is a definite “Yes,” include it. If the answer is “No,” consider leaving it out.
Check out the time saving tips, software, and other resources available to you to make this process as painless as possible.

