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    Audio Streaming Benefits - How Does It Benefit Your Web Site?
    An audio message on your web site can certainly make a difference in terms of traffic as well as sales. Audio streaming makes a visit to your website seem more personal while it explains your product or service. Most importantly audio streaming sets your web site apart from the other sites on the net. Adding this feature to your website can be one of the simplest things that you can do to convert hits to sales. There are a variety of places you can go to get inexpensive or even free audio features for your web site. But is it really worth it? Let us take a look.It Makes it PersonalAdding audio streaming to your website creates a personal connection and bond between you and your customer. If you create a personal message directed specifically at your visitors, they will tend to feel more comfortable and at ease with your site, your business and with you.It Explains Your Product or ServiceYou can use audio streaming to explain your product or service and even your selling terms and return policy. Sometimes it is just a lot easier to explain what you sell or what you do as opposed to writing a lengthy description that may be passed over because it overwhelms your customers.<
    rocer orders 5,000 boxes of cereal because a major kids fair is coming to town. The fair is canceled and the grocer is left holding far more cereal than she can handle. She gets out a big sign that says: "Cereal 50% off, while supplies last, hurry in for the big savings."

    Will that grocer spend the next three days crying over the cereal disaster? Nope, it's never going to enter her mind, she will just look at it as a cost of doing business. She knows that it is far better to sell the cereal at a small loss, so she can use her money and shelf space for the production of income. If she were to hang on to the cereal, refusing to sell at a loss. She could end up losing customers because they are getting old, spoiled products. Not to mention, she can't buy other supplies because she has too much money into the cereal. Eventually she could be faced with an even bigger loss when she has to dispose of spoiled products that no one wants to buy.

    There is nothing wrong with selling groceries at a loss, if that is what it takes to move the product, providing it does not happen too many times. Even if you take a loss, it is better get out. Just like the grocer, you still have your capital left for other products (plays), which will bring you profits in the future. And you can always make a profit by getting back into the stock as it provides you with another window of opportunity. If you get out of a play because a stock moves the w

    Chitika Trends Point to You Making More Money
    The need for an AdSense alternative continues to grow. Soon Yahoo will be releasing their YPN to the general publishing world, and word is MSN also has something in the works. Until recently, there hasn't really been a decent alternative to AdSense.Onto the stage rushes Chitika - a great looking PPC advertising opportunity that delivers small pictures and a nice tabbed ad, delivering 4 or five times the information that one AdSense ad delivers. This content can be keyword targeted, giving you even greater control over your ads.Recently Chitika started offering alternate ads, which allow you to show whatever ad you want to someone on your site that is not approved in the Chitika system to click. This means that if someone from a third-world country visits your site, and they are not on Chitika's authorized country list, they won't see your ads. This is good because, if they saw and clicked your ad, you wouldn't get paid for it anyway. So it's better to just put an alternative ad, such as an ad from Commission Junction or something that has the potential to still pay you.As Chitika continues to grow, and their userbase steadily increases, the need for quick information grows as w
    LESSON 1. AVOID THE COMMON THIEF I have noticed that some people display a common error in judgment that can be devastating. It's kind of like letting a thief into your home and saying, "please turn out the lights when you leave." The next morning you wake up and the house is empty, the safe is open, and all your deeds are missing. A few days later you get a call from your pension plan coordinator who bears heart-wrenching news "there is nothing left in you account, do you still plan on using our services?"

    What is this thief? What could people do that would cause them to lose nearly everything before they wake up? The answer is: Many people will start out slow and each time they make a mistake they try to solve it with larger amounts of cash. Over time they can drain their bank accounts, brokerage accounts, pension funds, and every other source of money. Only then do they stop and say, "Oops, I guess my trading methods are not working."

    Do you mind if I make a suggestion? When you decide to invest in the stock market, it's best to use only a portion of your money for "High Risk Investments." What is a high-risk investment? Anything that you personally control that can lose value if you make a mistake! Let's say you have $30,000 of available funds, don't dive right in with the whole thing, how about starting out with 10%. That means you would start with $3,000. Then you ask yourself a few questions:

    "Is it OK if I place this money at risk?" "Can I handle the possibility that I may lose this entire amount?" "Can I accept that risk without losing my mind and self?"
    If you can answer each question with a YES, it is indeed risk money that you will be able to use and you will be able to handle the ups and downs of the market. If the money is too important, you will end up making all the wrong decisions because your choices will be made because of fear and worry, not logic and informed choices.

    Once you have arrived at the amount you want to work with, use that for a while. Then, as you experience positive results, you might reconsider. You could add a little, if it fits your plan. However, if you are having a difficult time and you feel like you need more money to help you "make up" your losses. STOP. Don't add another penny. I have seen so many people who are still confused about things; use hard earned cash to experiment in the market. When they have a few bad plays, they go back to their secure funds and get another cash infusion. They continue doing this until they have nearly exhausted everything. Then they finally decide that they need to go back to the basics and find out what's wrong.

    The common thief is thinking that you can solve investment problems by throwing more cash into the system. There is nothing wrong with starting out small and working with that money until it becomes a massive amount.

    Don't get me wrong; I am not trying to say that most people lose money when they start investing in the market. That's not realistic, I know people that have done great and others that have not done great. I have spent many years teaching people how to invest in the market. That exposure has given me the opportunity to talk with all kinds of people with just as many different experiences in the market.

    I realize that using the concepts presented in this series of reports works best when you have a little more than $2,000, but not too much more. I have worked with tons of people that started out investing in the market with $2,000 or less which grew to hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    How do you avoid the common thief? Be careful and go back to the basics if things are not working.

    LESSON 2. IF YOU'RE WRONG, EXIT QUICK AT A SMALL LOSS One of my favorite stock market instructors is Ryan Litchfield*. Ryan says something like this "IF YOU NEED TO EAT A TOAD, EAT IT FAST BEFORE IT GETS TOO BIG". The same applies to investing in the market - if a play is going bad or if you discover that your investment choice is wrong, get out ASAP. When a play goes bad take your loss immediately before you're small error becomes a big disaster.

    Let's say a stock has reached it's resistance and has started falling, you decide to short some stock or sell a call with plans to buy back at a profit when the stock falls far enough. To your dismay, the stock stops moving down shortly after you get filled on your sell order and then that stock starts moving like a rocket - IN THE WRONG DIRECTION costing you money. By the end of the day, the stock price has broken up through resistance. That night when you look at the charts, check the news you realize that the stock may continue to go up a lot, make the decision to get out fast. When the market opens the next day, wait a short while (at least until amateur hour is over) then if the stock has not moved back in the right direction - call your broker and close the play!

    The problem is people depend on hope too long. The stock shoots in the wrong direction and they keep holding on, hoping and praying for a miracle, until the play gets way out of control and it becomes a substantial loss potential. If you stay in a losing play too long, you will end up riding that nightmare all the way to the poor farm.

    If a play moves against you, get out while the cost is small. There is nothing wrong with taking a small loss by closing the play. It is impossible to be 100% correct, all of the time. The stock market has it's own mind and it will act the way it wants, regardless of our desires. Rather than looking at losses as a bad thing, think them as the cost of doing business. For example:

    A grocer orders 5,000 boxes of cereal because a major kids fair is coming to town. The fair is canceled and the grocer is left holding far more cereal than she can handle. She gets out a big sign that says: "Cereal 50% off, while supplies last, hurry in for the big savings."

    Will that grocer spend the next three days crying over the cereal disaster? Nope, it's never going to enter her mind, she will just look at it as a cost of doing business. She knows that it is far better to sell the cereal at a small loss, so she can use her money and shelf space for the production of income. If she were to hang on to the cereal, refusing to sell at a loss. She could end up losing customers because they are getting old, spoiled products. Not to mention, she can't buy other supplies because she has too much money into the cereal. Eventually she could be faced with an even bigger loss when she has to dispose of spoiled products that no one wants to buy.

    There is nothing wrong with selling groceries at a loss, if that is what it takes to move the product, providing it does not happen too many times. Even if you take a loss, it is better get out. Just like the grocer, you still have your capital left for other products (plays), which will bring you profits in the future. And you can always make a profit by getting back into the stock as it provides you with another window of opportunity. If you get out of a play because a stock moves the wr

    Web Site Design - Setting the Wrong Backgrounds and Reducing Readability
    One of the most important tasks your Web site must accomplish is communicating your message to site visitors. Be sure the time, energy and funds you're spending produce design that assists in that communication.Can Your Site Be Read Easily by All Visitors?Readability is a fairly big topic and covers typefaces, capitalization, thickness of letters, colors and more. It is an important topic to keep in mind when designing your Web site. And it's not just about visually impaired visitors. The decisions you make regarding any of these factors can affect how readable your site is to anyone.Don't make it difficult for visitors to read text on pages by adding dark colors or busy illustrations in the background. Patterned and even solid color backgrounds can reduce readability and obscure content on your Web site because they can reduce the contrast needed for our eyes to discern letter forms.Stressing the ReaderNormally, when we read, we do so by recognizing words through the shapes made by letter combinations. When you reduce readability, you make readers work harder. They can't read as fast because they have to look at eac
    w questions:

    "Is it OK if I place this money at risk?" "Can I handle the possibility that I may lose this entire amount?" "Can I accept that risk without losing my mind and self?"
    If you can answer each question with a YES, it is indeed risk money that you will be able to use and you will be able to handle the ups and downs of the market. If the money is too important, you will end up making all the wrong decisions because your choices will be made because of fear and worry, not logic and informed choices.

    Once you have arrived at the amount you want to work with, use that for a while. Then, as you experience positive results, you might reconsider. You could add a little, if it fits your plan. However, if you are having a difficult time and you feel like you need more money to help you "make up" your losses. STOP. Don't add another penny. I have seen so many people who are still confused about things; use hard earned cash to experiment in the market. When they have a few bad plays, they go back to their secure funds and get another cash infusion. They continue doing this until they have nearly exhausted everything. Then they finally decide that they need to go back to the basics and find out what's wrong.

    The common thief is thinking that you can solve investment problems by throwing more cash into the system. There is nothing wrong with starting out small and working with that money until it becomes a massive amount.

    Don't get me wrong; I am not trying to say that most people lose money when they start investing in the market. That's not realistic, I know people that have done great and others that have not done great. I have spent many years teaching people how to invest in the market. That exposure has given me the opportunity to talk with all kinds of people with just as many different experiences in the market.

    I realize that using the concepts presented in this series of reports works best when you have a little more than $2,000, but not too much more. I have worked with tons of people that started out investing in the market with $2,000 or less which grew to hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    How do you avoid the common thief? Be careful and go back to the basics if things are not working.

    LESSON 2. IF YOU'RE WRONG, EXIT QUICK AT A SMALL LOSS One of my favorite stock market instructors is Ryan Litchfield*. Ryan says something like this "IF YOU NEED TO EAT A TOAD, EAT IT FAST BEFORE IT GETS TOO BIG". The same applies to investing in the market - if a play is going bad or if you discover that your investment choice is wrong, get out ASAP. When a play goes bad take your loss immediately before you're small error becomes a big disaster.

    Let's say a stock has reached it's resistance and has started falling, you decide to short some stock or sell a call with plans to buy back at a profit when the stock falls far enough. To your dismay, the stock stops moving down shortly after you get filled on your sell order and then that stock starts moving like a rocket - IN THE WRONG DIRECTION costing you money. By the end of the day, the stock price has broken up through resistance. That night when you look at the charts, check the news you realize that the stock may continue to go up a lot, make the decision to get out fast. When the market opens the next day, wait a short while (at least until amateur hour is over) then if the stock has not moved back in the right direction - call your broker and close the play!

    The problem is people depend on hope too long. The stock shoots in the wrong direction and they keep holding on, hoping and praying for a miracle, until the play gets way out of control and it becomes a substantial loss potential. If you stay in a losing play too long, you will end up riding that nightmare all the way to the poor farm.

    If a play moves against you, get out while the cost is small. There is nothing wrong with taking a small loss by closing the play. It is impossible to be 100% correct, all of the time. The stock market has it's own mind and it will act the way it wants, regardless of our desires. Rather than looking at losses as a bad thing, think them as the cost of doing business. For example:

    A grocer orders 5,000 boxes of cereal because a major kids fair is coming to town. The fair is canceled and the grocer is left holding far more cereal than she can handle. She gets out a big sign that says: "Cereal 50% off, while supplies last, hurry in for the big savings."

    Will that grocer spend the next three days crying over the cereal disaster? Nope, it's never going to enter her mind, she will just look at it as a cost of doing business. She knows that it is far better to sell the cereal at a small loss, so she can use her money and shelf space for the production of income. If she were to hang on to the cereal, refusing to sell at a loss. She could end up losing customers because they are getting old, spoiled products. Not to mention, she can't buy other supplies because she has too much money into the cereal. Eventually she could be faced with an even bigger loss when she has to dispose of spoiled products that no one wants to buy.

    There is nothing wrong with selling groceries at a loss, if that is what it takes to move the product, providing it does not happen too many times. Even if you take a loss, it is better get out. Just like the grocer, you still have your capital left for other products (plays), which will bring you profits in the future. And you can always make a profit by getting back into the stock as it provides you with another window of opportunity. If you get out of a play because a stock moves the w

    How To Buy and Sell at Top Liquidation Web Stes
    I became one of the top volume sellers at the major business liquidation website in 2003, having sold over $250,000 in auctions.The positive aspects of selling on large business auction portals are as follows:1. Their members are looking for products to resell. Your website audience is targeted correctly and you will receive many page views of your listings.2. It is a very effective way to sell large quantities of the exact same product.Example: If I had 100 DVD players,of the exact same make and model, it would not make sense to list them all at the same time on eBay. It would flood the market which lowers the pricing and bids.3. The sales price for each of the 100 DVD players sold in a single lot on LCOM is almost identical of the single DVD player being sold on eBay. (This allows you to move quantity shipments, which in turn allows the purchase of more product).4. Having an auction venue which allows a seller to move a large load of inventory quickly to cover the cost of the purchase also allows the seller to bid more aggressively from the wholesale sources.The negative aspects of selling on LCOM are:1. If a dispute arises for any reas
    and working with that money until it becomes a massive amount.

    Don't get me wrong; I am not trying to say that most people lose money when they start investing in the market. That's not realistic, I know people that have done great and others that have not done great. I have spent many years teaching people how to invest in the market. That exposure has given me the opportunity to talk with all kinds of people with just as many different experiences in the market.

    I realize that using the concepts presented in this series of reports works best when you have a little more than $2,000, but not too much more. I have worked with tons of people that started out investing in the market with $2,000 or less which grew to hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    How do you avoid the common thief? Be careful and go back to the basics if things are not working.

    LESSON 2. IF YOU'RE WRONG, EXIT QUICK AT A SMALL LOSS One of my favorite stock market instructors is Ryan Litchfield*. Ryan says something like this "IF YOU NEED TO EAT A TOAD, EAT IT FAST BEFORE IT GETS TOO BIG". The same applies to investing in the market - if a play is going bad or if you discover that your investment choice is wrong, get out ASAP. When a play goes bad take your loss immediately before you're small error becomes a big disaster.

    Let's say a stock has reached it's resistance and has started falling, you decide to short some stock or sell a call with plans to buy back at a profit when the stock falls far enough. To your dismay, the stock stops moving down shortly after you get filled on your sell order and then that stock starts moving like a rocket - IN THE WRONG DIRECTION costing you money. By the end of the day, the stock price has broken up through resistance. That night when you look at the charts, check the news you realize that the stock may continue to go up a lot, make the decision to get out fast. When the market opens the next day, wait a short while (at least until amateur hour is over) then if the stock has not moved back in the right direction - call your broker and close the play!

    The problem is people depend on hope too long. The stock shoots in the wrong direction and they keep holding on, hoping and praying for a miracle, until the play gets way out of control and it becomes a substantial loss potential. If you stay in a losing play too long, you will end up riding that nightmare all the way to the poor farm.

    If a play moves against you, get out while the cost is small. There is nothing wrong with taking a small loss by closing the play. It is impossible to be 100% correct, all of the time. The stock market has it's own mind and it will act the way it wants, regardless of our desires. Rather than looking at losses as a bad thing, think them as the cost of doing business. For example:

    A grocer orders 5,000 boxes of cereal because a major kids fair is coming to town. The fair is canceled and the grocer is left holding far more cereal than she can handle. She gets out a big sign that says: "Cereal 50% off, while supplies last, hurry in for the big savings."

    Will that grocer spend the next three days crying over the cereal disaster? Nope, it's never going to enter her mind, she will just look at it as a cost of doing business. She knows that it is far better to sell the cereal at a small loss, so she can use her money and shelf space for the production of income. If she were to hang on to the cereal, refusing to sell at a loss. She could end up losing customers because they are getting old, spoiled products. Not to mention, she can't buy other supplies because she has too much money into the cereal. Eventually she could be faced with an even bigger loss when she has to dispose of spoiled products that no one wants to buy.

    There is nothing wrong with selling groceries at a loss, if that is what it takes to move the product, providing it does not happen too many times. Even if you take a loss, it is better get out. Just like the grocer, you still have your capital left for other products (plays), which will bring you profits in the future. And you can always make a profit by getting back into the stock as it provides you with another window of opportunity. If you get out of a play because a stock moves the w

    The Benefits Of Debt-Free Living
    Have you ever wondered what it would be like to live debt-free?Maybe now is the time to stop wondering about it and start doing something to make a debt-free life a reality. In his book the Creature From Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve, G. Edward Griffin talks of the banks long-range plans to control a heavily indebted world.That heavily indebted world would be made up of heavily indebted individuals, like you and me. And if you look around you, the plan is already largely completed. Families the world over are indebted to credit card companies, auto lenders, (sometimes predatory) mortgage lenders, pay day loan stores and many others.Sometimes there seems to be no escape from the incredible burden of debt. And if you aren't perfect - for instance, if you have been late on your credit card payments a few times - it can get much worse. The banks and credit card issuers always seem to think that the perfect solution for someone who is struggling to make a $100 a month payment is to turn it into a $125 a month payment.Raising interest rates on all of your credit cards through a trick called "universal default" is a method by which all of your lenders can profit
    to short some stock or sell a call with plans to buy back at a profit when the stock falls far enough. To your dismay, the stock stops moving down shortly after you get filled on your sell order and then that stock starts moving like a rocket - IN THE WRONG DIRECTION costing you money. By the end of the day, the stock price has broken up through resistance. That night when you look at the charts, check the news you realize that the stock may continue to go up a lot, make the decision to get out fast. When the market opens the next day, wait a short while (at least until amateur hour is over) then if the stock has not moved back in the right direction - call your broker and close the play!

    The problem is people depend on hope too long. The stock shoots in the wrong direction and they keep holding on, hoping and praying for a miracle, until the play gets way out of control and it becomes a substantial loss potential. If you stay in a losing play too long, you will end up riding that nightmare all the way to the poor farm.

    If a play moves against you, get out while the cost is small. There is nothing wrong with taking a small loss by closing the play. It is impossible to be 100% correct, all of the time. The stock market has it's own mind and it will act the way it wants, regardless of our desires. Rather than looking at losses as a bad thing, think them as the cost of doing business. For example:

    A grocer orders 5,000 boxes of cereal because a major kids fair is coming to town. The fair is canceled and the grocer is left holding far more cereal than she can handle. She gets out a big sign that says: "Cereal 50% off, while supplies last, hurry in for the big savings."

    Will that grocer spend the next three days crying over the cereal disaster? Nope, it's never going to enter her mind, she will just look at it as a cost of doing business. She knows that it is far better to sell the cereal at a small loss, so she can use her money and shelf space for the production of income. If she were to hang on to the cereal, refusing to sell at a loss. She could end up losing customers because they are getting old, spoiled products. Not to mention, she can't buy other supplies because she has too much money into the cereal. Eventually she could be faced with an even bigger loss when she has to dispose of spoiled products that no one wants to buy.

    There is nothing wrong with selling groceries at a loss, if that is what it takes to move the product, providing it does not happen too many times. Even if you take a loss, it is better get out. Just like the grocer, you still have your capital left for other products (plays), which will bring you profits in the future. And you can always make a profit by getting back into the stock as it provides you with another window of opportunity. If you get out of a play because a stock moves the w

    New Bankruptcy Law - Where's the Consumer Protection?
    On April 20, 2005, President Bush signed into law the Bankruptcy Abuse and Consumer Protection Act, a piece of sweeping legislation that brought about the most sweeping changes in personal bankruptcy law in the last quarter century. This bill, which takes effect in October 2005, passed with the overwhelming support of both parties of congress, claims, through its very name, to offer “consumer protection.” Does it? How are consumers “protected” by this bill?The purpose of the new legislation, is to eliminate “bankruptcy of convenience”. Sponsors of the bill allege that most consumer bankruptcy cases involve irresponsible spenders who have shopped or gambled their money away and now do not wish to pay their creditors. They rightly point out that bankruptcy costs the credit card companies billions of dollars each year and that those costs are passed on to consumers in the form of higher interest rates. By making it harder for those with problem debt to file for bankruptcy, legislators say that more people will pay their bills, the credit card companies will save billions of dollars, and the resulting savings will be passed
    rocer orders 5,000 boxes of cereal because a major kids fair is coming to town. The fair is canceled and the grocer is left holding far more cereal than she can handle. She gets out a big sign that says: "Cereal 50% off, while supplies last, hurry in for the big savings."

    Will that grocer spend the next three days crying over the cereal disaster? Nope, it's never going to enter her mind, she will just look at it as a cost of doing business. She knows that it is far better to sell the cereal at a small loss, so she can use her money and shelf space for the production of income. If she were to hang on to the cereal, refusing to sell at a loss. She could end up losing customers because they are getting old, spoiled products. Not to mention, she can't buy other supplies because she has too much money into the cereal. Eventually she could be faced with an even bigger loss when she has to dispose of spoiled products that no one wants to buy.

    There is nothing wrong with selling groceries at a loss, if that is what it takes to move the product, providing it does not happen too many times. Even if you take a loss, it is better get out. Just like the grocer, you still have your capital left for other products (plays), which will bring you profits in the future. And you can always make a profit by getting back into the stock as it provides you with another window of opportunity. If you get out of a play because a stock moves the wrong way you will be happy that you got out early when you see that it kept moving the wrong way. Sure you had to get out at a loss but you rescued some of your money. You can take that rescued cash and do other plays without having to watch a loser play get worse day after day. Believe me - that's no fun!

    Everyone has a few bad plays, mixed in with their good plays. If you win seven out of ten times, you will be ahead of the game at the end of the month. If you are sure to keep the losses small, your account will go up 7 down 3 up 7 down 3 up 7 down 3. If you are not having enough successful plays, it's time to stop, go back to the basics, go back to class, do more practice trades, and get back on track.

    LESSON 3. EVERYONE PAYS FOR EDUCATION In life education always costs us something. We can learn by attending the school of hard knocks or getting a formal education. Either way we will invest time, money, and energy. The stock market is no different than any other profession or opportunity if you want to make a profit you have to learn how. There are no short cuts or easy tricks, if it was easy then everyone would be millionaires. I have seen people lose $10,000, $20,000, $50,000 and even more before they finally get the message - you have to know the rules before you play the stock market game.

    I teach many online free stock classes each week. These classes are intended to be introductions to stock market investment concepts. You can get enhanced education by attending one of my live classes. I have scheduled a few two day classes in April. Please look in this newsletter for the dates. I invite you to come spend two days with me. I promise to share two information packed days with you and other serious investors. Many students tell me that if they could start over again, they would have attended my live class when they were first invited, instead of "wasting months wandering in the dark guessing."

    When you attend my live workshop you will learn in two days what has taken me many years to discover. I am constantly updating the subject material and improving the tools so that I can be sure to teach you everything I can in two action packed days. Come join me, it's going to be an exhilarating experience.

    Happy Trading,

    Darlene Nelson

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