Posts Tagged ‘ child

Attention Students & Parents! Search Contests & Programs that Pay Off 09 March 2010 at 5:35 pm by admin

In the Internet marketing industry, we’re all constantly pushing ourselves to learn more and grow what we know. It’s not unlike what you want for your own children — education and opportunities that build a foundation for future success.

Turns out the search community is interested in sharing just such opportunities with students, a.k.a. the future of the world. Right now Google, Bing and the White House are all running contests and programs for children and young adults that promote learning and education in fun and creative ways. If you think your child might be interested in taking pictures, developing software or code, or hearing the President deliver the high school commencement address, check out the following opportunities.

Earth Day Photo Contest — Open to Students of All Ages

Bing Earth Day photo contest

Contest: Youth ages 5 and older are invited to submit their original photos which celebrate Earth Day. Entries will be divided among four age groups: 5-10, 11-13, 14-17, 18+.

Prizes: The grand-prize winning photo will be displayed on the Bing home page on Earth Day, April 22. The winner of each age group will get to go to the Microsoft Campus and attend a Bing editorial team meeting. Also, first, second and third place winners will all receive an HP Pavilion desktop and monitor and a digital photo software package for their school.

And there’s more! Each day during the voting period, Bing will donate $5.00 for DonorsChoose.org to the first 20,000 people who vote. And voters get to designate what classroom projects will benefit from the donation. Everyone truly wins!

Entry Period: March 29-April 11

Voting Period: April 13-19

Web Site: http://earthdayphotocontest.com/

Juicy Ideas Competition — Open to College Students

Juicy Ideas competition logo

Contest: Eligible college students are invited to answer the question “How can you use data to help your community?” by developing a software application. This contest is open to college and university students within a 50 km radius of Google offices and datacenters. Teams must consist of three to five students.

Prize: The grand-prize winners will receive an Android-powered phone and an all-expenses-paid trip to Google’s Mountain View headquarters.

Entry Period: March 29-April 11

Web Site: http://juicyideascompetition.appspot.com/

Summer of Code — Accepting Applications from Mentor Orgs Now

Google Summer of Code 2010 logo

Program: Every year Google funds a three-month student mentoring program, pairing students with organizations to work on a coding project together. Student developers partner with a group running an active open-source software project.

Who Wins: Everyone involved! Students gain exposure to real-world software development situations and a resume-worthy experience in their field of pursued interest. The mentor organization gets to bring in and identify new developers. And more open source code is released for anyone to use.

Application Period: Mentor organizations may apply by March 12. The student application period opens March 29.

Web Site: http://code.google.com/soc/

Race to the Top High School Commencement Challenge — Open to Public High School Students

logo of White House Race to the Top

Contest: Okay, so this one’s got nothing to do with search, but it’s definitely a student contest. And the White House’s marketing efforts are worth learning from. Public high schools are invited to submit an application of four essay questions focused on personal responsibility, academic excellence and college readiness. To supplement the application, a school can also submit a two-minute or shorter video as well as data on attendance, graduation rates, and other key indicators.

Prize: President Obama will deliver the commencement address to the winning school’s graduating class.

Entry Period: February 19-March 15

Voting Period: TBA – The White House and Department of Education will select the six finalists. The public will then be invited to vote for their top three choices on the White House Web site.

Web Site: http://www.whitehouse.gov/Commencement

Attention Students & Parents! Search Contests & Programs that Pay Off was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO tools provider.

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Attention Students & Parents! Search Contests & Programs that Pay Off

+ No The TSA Really Didn’t Take Your Baby By admin 19 October 2009 at 1:57 am and have No Comments

Post image for No The TSA Really Didn’t Take Your Baby

Late last week as we where all recovering from balloon boy, another minor kefuffle percolated to the top involving a mother and her child being separated during a TSA checkpoint screening. This story provides some interesting insight from a reputation management and social media perspective, so I’d like to delve a little deeper.So last week a post went viral titled “TSA Agents Took My Son” it was an emotion filled post that culminated with this gut wrenching moment:

The male TSA agent repeated, “I’m going to have to pick him up to inspect him.”
I handed him my son.
I handed him my son and he walked away with my child.
My eyes welled up with tears, I stood up from my chair and I asked the female TSA agent, “Where is he going? Where is he taking my child? Why is he leaving?”
Jackson, while being whisked away looked at the male TSA agent awkwardly and repeated “no no no no.”
I started crying.
The female TSA agent did not answer me.
Panic set in. My hands began to shake. My body was sweating. My breath was short and my heart was racing.
They had taken my child and not told me.
Jackson was out of my eye sight.
I could not see my son.

Anyone who is a parent has a tremendous amount of empathy for this woman and her situation, and anyone with even the slightest level of humanity can say that’s not an ideal set of circumstances. Years of the discovery channel and animal planet have taught us coming between a mother and her cub is never going to have happy ending.

Here’s where the story takes a turn and gets interesting, the TSA used their blog as tool to become involved in the situation. They even went to extraordinary measures, and edited together the video’s from different closed circuit surveillance camera’s of this woman’s entire interaction with the TSA.

I’ve watched the video twice and I don’t see a TSA agent taking her son out of her sight, in fact I don’t really see her son leaving her side. He may have been in the stroller and was farther away than she had a comfort level for, but no he didn’t really leave her side.

What are the take aways here:

  • If the TSA didn’t have a blog or other social media outlet, participating in the conversation would have been much more difficult.
  • Choosing to remain mute, in a time of crisis isn’t always a good idea, as you can’t provide balance to the story, and lose by default
  • Have a small team of key players, who can get involved, react, and solve problems like this when they involve
  • React as soon as possible when you have all the facts, and try to do it within 24 hours, even on holiday weekends unless you want a motrin mom moment on Monday morning
  • If you can’t get traction on the organic side be prepared to go with PPC, thats why its important to have an adwords account already active and in place
  • Be as truthful and transparent as possible it almost always works to your advantage, especially in the long run

It doesn’t matter how conservative you are, and how much of a negative reputation you have, if you deal with the general public or a large portion of your customer base is participating in social media, you need to be there as well.

Advertisement: WordStream’s new Free Keyword Tool delivers thousands of niche keywords, fast. We index over a billion unique keywords to return more relevant suggestions at zero cost. Try it today for FREE!

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

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+ How To Start a Money Making Membership Site – Part 2 By admin 01 October 2009 at 4:00 am and have No Comments


Before we dive into the part two of this coaching series, read part 1 if you haven’t already done so.

Ready? Let’s talk about selecting a market for your membership site in this lesson. This is going to be a long lesson (up to 10 pages), so roll up your sleeves and dive…

Choosing Your Target Market

Choosing the right market is essential – and take it from someone who has launched a bundle of info-products of his own only to see them flop in the most embarrassing manner imaginable.

Effective market research is critical to the success of any product – and FTM sites especially so. As you will see in a moment, membership sites of this kind are a profoundly different marketing proposition from regular information products.

How to Find Potential Niches

Finding niches – profitable or not – is one of the biggest challenges of aspiring marketers. Go to any IM forum and you will find hundreds of posters all ranting about the profit potential of an untapped niche. But how do you actually find them?

Amazon – Personally, I always prefer to start with Amazon – for the simple reason that, if books are being published on this subject, then it’s probably because there’s demand for information. For example, head to Amazon and select Books -> Crafts & Hobbies. Here’s just a sample of topics that you will immediately find there:

  • Baskets
  • Candlemaking
  • Knitting
  • Origami
  • Scrapbooking

Zinio.com – An alternative way to discover potential niches is to take a look at magazine publications. These are, as you know, multimillion dollar businesses that rely primarily on advertising for their revenues. And where there’s advertising, there’s also an audience that’s able to buy and manufacturer’s willing to sell – in short, a potentially lucrative market.

The site I usually use for magazine research is www.Zinio.com – not only can you see all the major magazines there as well as the categories they belong to, but you can also buy digital versions of them for as little as $3.99! This makes niche research both cheaper and more convenient.

By the way – if you do buy a magazine this way, take a good hard look at all the advertisements you find inside. If you see an advertisement for, say, anti-wrinkle cream, then it usually means that there are millions of people out there all wondering how to get rid of wrinkles. A quick Google Keywords search reveals that 135,000 people a month search for “anti wrinkle” – how’s that for a market with high demand?

Lastly, when examining advertisements, be on the lookout for the unique selling proposition that the advertisers are trying to communicate (how they seek to differentiate themselves from the competition). Differentiation strategies are strong indicators of niches – for example, if an advertiser emphasizes organic anti-wrinkle creams, then it’s usually because there is a niche for natural wrinkle solutions.

Forums and Online Communities

Forums are great for finding lucrative, laser-targeted niches, provided that you’re willing to invest some time into research. Once you have decided what broad market you want to work in (e.g., parenting), spend some time on relevant forums to see what questions users ask and what needs they seem to have.

Look for threads along the lines of:

  • “How do I…?”
  • “How can I…?”
  • “How to…?”

For example, sticking with the parenting example above, a quick scan of parenting forums reveals the following potential niches:

  • How to potty-train your child
  • How to help your 6-year old with social problems at kindergarten/early school
  • How to deal with bullying/reverse bullying

This list of potentially very profitable niches (remember, most parents are absolutely crazy about their kids and will happily spend as much money as needed on them) took me all 10 minutes to come up with, and that’s in a market I have absolutely no experience in.

Another way to use forums for niche research is to actually involve other forum members and get them to tell you what problems they have that need solving. For the parenting example above, you can simply make a post on the forum and ask people what the number one problem with their three-year old was. Before you know it, you will have hundreds of people all sharing stories, complaints and experiences – and even providing solutions!

Market Segmentation

Another great way to find lucrative niches is to segment your market. Professional marketers use this term to describe the process of breaking an otherwise big market down into smaller, manageable chunks.

For example, let’s say you want to release an FTM site in the dating market. As you know, this represents an enormous group of customers – in fact, every single adolescent and adult person in the world is a potential customer!

However, let’s see if we can segment the market somewhat by identifying groups of customers. The most obvious way to do it is by gender – after all, there’s a world of difference between dating advice for men and for women.

This leaves us with a market of approximately 3 billion customers, so let’s segment it further still. If we were to look at our potential male customers, how can we divide the group even further? The following criteria come to mind:

  • Age
  • Ethnicity
  • Sexual Orientation

Let’s apply the criteria above – dating advice for men would clearly be a market segment, and an enormous one at that. But what about dating advice for homosexual Asian men over 40? In just one fell swoop, we narrowed our target market from an unmanageable 6 billion to a small, niche segment.

Beating the Competition

This is by far the most challenging way of finding niches – simply because, while identifying one should be pretty easy, taking action and penetrating the market will be a downright nightmare.

If you really, really find yourself without any ideas on lucrative market niches, then sometimes it pays to look no further than your competition. Visit Clickbank and see what products are in high demand (they are usually the same products that hold leading marketplace positions).

The idea here is very simple – figure out what your competition is doing, and then do it better. Oftentimes, there’s no need to reinvent the wheel, since there’s usually always room for more than one contender in any given niche.

Niches and Markets

One of the biggest problems with online market research is the ongoing confusion of terminology. A lot of marketers claim to show you how to find profitable niches – when in reality what they’re pointing you towards are markets.

The difference between the two terms is profound – and important to grasp. A niche is a small subset of the market – one that oftentimes remains unclaimed by existing product manufacturers.

For example, “beauty care” is a market. “Pet care” is a market. Wrinkle treatments and dog training are still market segments, with tens of millions of customers and fierce competition.

In comparison, wrinkle treatments for women aged 50 and over is a niche. Dog training for naturally aggressive dogs is a niche. The difference, as you can see, is the extent to which you narrow down your target market, until you identify a small segment untapped by existing offerings and fellow marketers.

So next time someone tells you that they have an info product in the dating niche, feel free to laugh in their faces and tell them to study the fundamentals of marketing – dating is a market (and an enormous one at that), and not a niche.

Profitability Factors

As hinted earlier, FTM sites are a very different beast as compared to traditional information products. In fact, I’ll even go one step further and say that traditional indicators of a potentially profitable niche – such as a desperate audience – are not necessarily applicable to FTM sites.

Luckily, in this section I have compiled a list of 5 main factors that can help determine whether the niche you have in mind is suitable for an FTM site. Simply use this litmus test before you start developing your membership site, and you will never end up with a commercial flop on your hands!

Why a Desperate Audience Isn’t Necessary

If you’ve been around the block in Internet Marketing, then you’ve probably heard all about the concept of a desperate, hungry audience looking for an immediate solution to their problem. Such an audience is routinely described as the key element of any marketing campaign – if you find such prospective customers, then everything else will fall into place. After all, they have a burning need to solve a pressing problem, and you’re offering the solution. How could you go wrong?

This approach works almost every time – except for FTM sites. Of their nature, FTM sites spread the solution to the problem over a period of time – and it can be as long as 12 months.

So, for example, let’s take one of the hottest markets out there – acne. Every day, millions of acne suffers wake up to a terrible reflection in the mirror. There’s nothing they wouldn’t give for a magic solution that got rid of their acne in a week.

These people have a desperate problem – but would they be willing to spend a year’s worth of membership fees just to figure out how to get rid of acne? Clearly not – they want a solution, yes, but they also want it right now.

FTM sites do not easily lend themselves to solving immediate problems. Instead, when creating a FTM site, you’re better off focusing on areas of improvements. For example, a course showing you how to improve your copywriting skills and maybe even find your first few clients would be a great concept for a FTM site – simply because anyone who’s serious about copywriting knows that it is a learned skill that takes years to master. Similarly, a membership site showing how to improve your golf skills would be another example of a site that people would be happy to pay for – because any serious golfer knows that this kind of improvement just doesn’t happen overnight.

In this respect, then, FTM sites go against the conventional wisdom of Internet marketing. Instead of focusing on a burning problem that requires immediate solution, they concentrate on long-term opportunities for improvement.

Memberships as a Concept

Not all markets are equally accepting of membership sites as a concept. For example, if you have spent your entire online career solely in Internet marketing, then you’ve probably seen many membership sites come and go. In your mind, they’re nothing new – and you might not have a problem paying for one, so long as it continued to create value for you during the subscription period.

In contrast, a lot of people outside IM have never encountered a membership site, much less paid for one. This, in turn, makes selling memberships to them exceptionally difficult.

This, then, forms the second component of your market analysis – how likely is the target market to accept the concept of a membership site in the first place? One good way to do it is to identify such markets is to find problems that require a long process to resolve.

For example, consider weight loss – you clearly can’t lose weight overnight. To shed those extra pounds, you’ll need to embark on a long process that will take you six months at the very least. And, precisely because the solution to this problem is a process rather than a quick fix, you will find it much easier to explain to prospective customers why you’re offering a membership site rather than a one-off e-book.

Real Disposable Income

No matter how you slice it, membership sites are expensive. Even if you charge $9.95 a month – which is pretty cheap as far as memberships go – that still works out to an impressive $$119.40 a year.

In turn, this means that another important factor you need to keep in mind when deciding on the market for your site is whether your potential customers have sufficient real disposal income to afford your service in the first place. For instance, you’d be hard-pressed to sell a job-hunting site or a frugal living membership solution to the unemployed; but you could easily get away with a golf training membership site, simply because your target market is likely to be relatively upscale and affluent.

Personal Expertise

Do you have enough knowledge of the subject matter to keep producing valuable content month after month?

As any ghostwriter will tell you, you don’t need to be an expert to produce a winning, in-depth e-book that delivers value and solves your customers’ problems. All you have to do is spend a few weeks conductive exhaustive research – and soon you’ll have more material than you can shake a stick at.

Unlike e-books, however, membership sites aren’t one-off affairs. You don’t just have to create valuable content once – you have to keep churning it out week after week, month after month. And if you don’t know the first thing about the subject matter, then there’s only so much information you can provide to your subscribers before you run out of things to say (and, soon, out of subscribers as well, as the quality of content starts going downhill).

Keyword Research

How popular is your market? Are there enough people looking for information on this topic to justify developing a full-fledged FTM solution?

Keyword research is a great way to answer this question. As you know, there are many keyword research tools out there – some are paid, while others are free. While all have their own advantages and drawbacks, I personally am not a fan of paying for keyword research data that I can already get for free.

This is the reason why I always stick with the Google Keywords Tool. Of course, it’s not 100% accurate – no keyword tool is – but it enables you to pull data directly from the Big G, instead of relying on metacrawlers.

With this, we conclude the part-2 of this membership mastery coaching. Don’t sit back and forget what you have just read. Until you take action and narrow down the niche for your FTM site, the next week lesson won’t help you. You have full one week to research and come up with your niche.

If you require any help in determining the niche for your FTM site, then feel free to ask your question(s) by commenting below. Alternatively, you can ask your question(s) on my blog.

Next Week: Setting Up an FTM Site

If you’ve never put together a site before, then the prospect of assembling a membership website may sound daunting. Luckily, from the technical point of view, FTM sites are very easy to set up. And I will uncover every aspect of it in my next week’s lesson. I will even show you the exact scripts that you can use and a case study of a FTM site that charges $3400 a year. So stay tuned.

You can meet Deep Arora, read more of his tips & tricks and watch some of his free videos at www.SiteJerk.com.

Discover the SECRETS I’ve Learned to go from zero a month to over $40,000 a month from blogging. Download Make Money Online with John Chow dot Com for FREE!



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How To Start a Money Making Membership Site – Part 2

+ How to Stop Making Yourself Crazy with Self-Editing By admin 14 September 2009 at 7:35 am and have No Comments

stressed out man

Write. Edit. Write. Edit. Edit. Edit. Edit. Write.

Does this sound familiar? If it doesn’t then you’re probably from Mars, because most of us drive ourselves crazy with self-editing when we write.

And it’s not only when writing.

We self-edit when we’re walking. When you walk on gravel, you walk differently than when you walk on grass.

We self-edit when we’re talking. We choose different words and sentence structure, create different tones, and make different sounds depending on who we’re speaking to.

So self-editing is a very natural part of human behavior. There’s one difference when we self-edit as writers, though.

When we write, self-correction drives us bananas

Writing articles drives us crazy. Our natural tendency to self-edit gets out of hand. We can’t seem to put it on hold, even for a few minutes.

And the reason for that is our lack of competency.

Competency is a state of mind you reach when you’ve made enough mistakes that your brain can now move on.

That’s right. It’s not about getting things right in your brain — it’s about getting things wrong. The brain has to make hundreds, even thousands of mistakes — and overcome those mistakes — to be able to reach a level of competency.

Once it reaches competency, it self-edits on the fly

You can see this for yourself by spending time with a two-year-old.

Get the child to walk on grass, and then on gravel. He’ll struggle, and he may fall.

Get the child to say a sentence, and he’ll struggle to find the right words in the right order.

And yes, you may say that a child’s brain is not fully developed. But in fact, the brains of two-year-old children have more neural connections than at any other point in their lives. As they grow older, they lose many of those neural connections. Technically speaking at least, the child is in the best possible situation to learn — and learn quickly.

Yet they struggle

And that’s because the child hasn’t made enough mistakes yet. His brain is still working on finding and correcting them.

Once the brain makes enough mistakes — and corrects them — it now has a database of information that it can call upon at any time. Your brain has now reached its level of competency in that field, be it walking, talking or writing.

Your brain can now self-edit on the fly.

This is what great athletes do

And great writers.

And great singers.

And great speakers.

They’re still constantly self-editing, but they’ve reached such a high level of competency that they’ve moved into the realm of ‘fluency.’

Fluency is when self-editing happens so quickly that we can’t see it

It seems magical. And when things seem magical, we call it ‘talent.’

But what we call talent is just an advanced level of self-editing. Over and over and over again, until it’s second-nature.

Until your article writing looks like this:

Write. Write. Write. Edit. Write. Write. Write. Write. Edit.

P.S. I edited that article twice after drafting it in one sweep. My total writing time was less than 25 minutes from concept to final edit.

P.P.S. I started out writing fewer than 10 articles a year (if I was lucky). Each calendar year, I now write between 300-500 articles, write 2-3 books, and create huge amounts of original content for web sites. I’ve posted more than 15,000 posts in forums in the last five years. If you told me that I was going to do any of this back in the year 2002, I’d have called you a dreamer.

And yet, anyone can do it. Truly, anyone. It’s a matter of competency, then fluency.

Don’t forget to make thousands of mistakes along the way.

About the Author: Sean D’Souza offers a free report on ‘Why Headlines Fail’ when you subscribe to his Psychotactics Newsletter. Be sure to check out his blog, too.


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How to Stop Making Yourself Crazy with Self-Editing

+ Friday Recap - Sensation ‘Round the Nation Edition By admin 04 September 2009 at 2:43 pm and have No Comments

Happy Labor Day weekend! I’m sure everyone’s itching to start up the long weekend, so let’s do this weekly recap so you can go on your way and play!

Gmail had an outage on Tuesday. Users appreciated Google’s transparency about the source of the down time. Ironically it was caused by a server upgrade that took longer than expected and ended up knocking the server offline completely. Fun times had by all.

Gmail outages always cause a stir around the Web. Losing touch with your email is very stressful to some. And many people can’t afford to add any more strain to their pressure-filled routines. Forbes published their annual list of America’s most stressful cities. I know I’m a couple weeks behind on this, but if your city is on the list, make an extra special effort to relax this weekend.

happy bacons
CC BY-ND 2.0

Here’s an idea. Comfort food. Maybe something sweet and savory, warm and crispy melting in your mouth? Tomorrow is International Bacon Day! Whip up some toasty bacon, take a few mouth-watering photos, eat the bacon and let it warm your soul like sunshine in your tummy, and then submit your photos to the International Bacon Day photo contest from BBQ Addicts. Entries put you in the running for a bacon-themed goodie bag.

Winning stuff is awesome. But imagine finding a treasure worth more than $1 million in the $4 painting you bought at the antique mart. It’s a stretch, I know. But one lucky art collector discovered an original print of the Declaration of Independence, one of just 24 known copies, in just this way.

Sometimes there are treasures hiding right before my very eyes, and sometimes the important stuff remains under the hood and out of sight. Edward Lewis, aka pageoneresults, has compiled and analyzed the validation of prominent search industry sites and news sites. The SEO Website Validation Showdown will be regularly updated to reflect the sites’ validation of HTML, CSS and errors and warnings. The BCI blog has some work to do, but we fully intend to fill that red and yellow box with more green.

chaos of going back to school
CC BY 2.0

With Labor Day we welcome back the school year — “welcome” might not be the right word there, but you know. [Depends if you're the kid or the parent. For some it's the most wonderful time of the year. --Susan] When the fall semester starts, DePaul University in Chicago will offer a first-of-its-kind journalism course: Digital Editing: From Breaking News to Tweets. The class will look at how to confirm the validity of breaking news in tweets and how to use the Web to find story leads and context.

Looks like kids aren’t the only ones with homework to do. An online survey by Common Sense Media suggests that parents are out of touch with their children’s social network use. Fifty-one percent of children report visiting a social network every day but only twenty-three percent of parents believe this is the case for their child.

Another survey released last week shows that in July, the online video TV channel Hulu had more unique viewers than Time Warner Cable. Considering the scope of Hulu’s minimal market share when compared to highly-viewed properties like YouTube, these statistics suggest strong tendencies for online video viewing.

If you like statistics — who doesn’t? — you may get a kick out of an infographic that maps the prominence of the seven deadly sins across the country. Los Angeles seems to be a hotbed for greed, sloth and pride. That’s a triple threat that’ll get you far! Did your region make the map?

Things I learned from Boing Boing this week:

As a reminder, since Monday is a holiday, we’ll be closed and there will be no blog update. We’ll see you all on Tuesday. Have a great Labor Day weekend, everyone!

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Friday Recap - Sensation ‘Round the Nation Edition

+ Want to See My Two New Blogging Projects? By admin 24 June 2009 at 7:26 am and have No Comments

Over the last 24 hours I’ve launched two new projects - both are blogging related.

I’m not sure why they’ve both come at once - I wasn’t planning on doing either at all even 36 hours ago - but sometimes ideas hit me in groups. Here they are - I hope one or both interest you:

1. @ProBloggerDeals

problogger-deals.pngProBlogger Deals is a new Twitter account where I’ll be tweeting out deals for bloggers. I’ve written more about the ‘what’ and ‘why’ of it here - but in short it’s a place where I’ll be sharing promotions, deals, discounts, bonuses, coupon codes (and more) for bloggers.

I don’t think that this will be everyone’s cup of tea - but it’s an attempt to pass on more of the offers that come my way that I don’t pass on here on ProBlogger - simply because there are so many of them.

Two Launch Deals

  • The first ‘deal’ that we’ve got is an exclusive to ProBlogger readers - 30% off the Ninja Affiliate Plugin for WordPress - a very useful plugin that many ProBlogger readers use to help with their affiliate marketing.
  • The second deal is a $20 Discount on any of the licenses at WP Review Site - another great plugin that turns WordPress into a powerful review site engine.

In the coming days I’ll be releasing other ProBlogger Deals including discounts on blogging themes, training resources and more discounts and trial offers on paid tools and plugins.

darrenrowse.com.png

2. DarrenRowse.com

I’ve been planning to develop this URL for a while now but have never quite gotten around to it. However of late I’ve had many instances where I’ve wanted to write something a little more personal or reflective and didn’t think it was appropriate to do it here on ProBlogger or on one of my other blogs.

One example of this is my launch post on darrenrowse.com - Who Else Wants to Change a Child’s Life? It’s a post telling the story of a need that I came across through a friend - a class of children who have a total of 4 books between them and a request for people to consider a donation to help buy them some books - I hope you can help me with it.

I’m not sure where this new blog will end up - but I know it’ll be a more personal journey. You can read a little more about my thinking behind starting this new blog here.

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

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