Many people are puzzled by how fast I can add contents to my sites. When I tell them that it is easy as 123 and they also can create a blog and start making money with the content they write, they look at me with their eyes wide open and are wondering how.
Now with The Blog Action Plan Report - A Step By Step Guide On How To Make Money With WordPress And Blogging, my friends can now know:
• How to setup your first Wordpress blog
• How to Download Free Themes
• How to Optimize Your WordPress Blog
• How to Use Plugins to Optimize Wordpress
• About Making Money Opportunities By Blogging
• The Traffic Generation Techniques
• The Details About Acquiring Backlinks
• Some Of The Common Blogging Mistakes
• The Benefits Of Blog Commenting
• All About Outsourcing Options
• Quick Start Strategies to create their first blog
• How to stay motivated when Blogging.
Blogging is a very popular way of making money on the internet and with so many different ways to make money it’s important to figure out which ones are worth your trouble. There are tons of ads online which all say that you can get rich quick but as far as I’m concerned the only way to make a killing on the internet is through blogging or writing content. Making money blogging is actually easier than you may think. It doesn’t require too much knowledge and you should be able to get started almost straight away.
By far the most popular way to make money online is by using Google Adsense ads on your blog. Google Adsense is a free program which you can sign up for through Google. You place targeted ads on your blog and when people click these ads you get paid a percentage. The price per click varies from niche to niche but there are some pretty good ones out there which sometimes get up to $10 per click which is pretty incredible really. Depending on the niche you’re targeting you can make quite a bit of money using Google Adsense and I’d highly recommend it to newbies because it’s easy and fast to set up and has the most
likely chance of success.
Download The Report and Join the Blogging World
In the big ol’ world of Internet marketing, you can be a product owner or an affiliate. There are good reasons to consider both options. We’ve discussed a few of the pros and cons of affiliate marketing recently and I thought this would be a perfect time to cover a few of the advantages of going the “it’s my product” route.
Initially, being your own product owner/creator gives you a chance to bring your unique vision and ideas into the world. There’s nothing quite like seeing “your baby” succeed in the marketplace. That’s a kind of personal fulfillment that you can’t quite replicate as an affiliate.
Personal fulfillment, however, doesn’t pay the bills. Most of us involved in IM are just as interested in making money and that’s another great reason to consider owning your own product. Instead of being one of many affiliates for someone else, you can be the person who has a collection of affiliates working on his or her behalf. Think of how many sales a good affiliate could make. Now, start multiplying it. When your on the top of the food chain, those multiplied earnings flow in your direction.
There’s a lot of work involved in product creation. There’s work involved in managing affiliates. Successfully launching a new product requires some effort and know-how, too. Being the product owner/creator isn’t necessarily the easiest thing in the world. It is, however, the best way to put yourself in a position to maximize your profits.
On the surface, you’d expect email to be one of the biggest productivity-boosters to ever be invented. After all, email can easily replace most faxing, rambling phone calls where much of the information is quickly forgotten after the call, and the dreadfully slow postal mail.
I’ll concede the point: Used the right way, email can boost your productivity. But here’s the thing – most people don’t use email the right away. In fact, many people choose email as their main communication method, even when another method would be more suitable to the situation. And that wastes time and money.
The next time you’re tempted to fire off an email, ask yourself these questions:
* Will I fritter away hours sending emails back and forth? If you need to confirm something with a colleague or perhaps ask a simple yes or no question (that doesn’t require an immediate answer), then email may be a good choice.
On the flip side, if you’re attempting to have a “conversation” by email, then you’ll likely waste entirely too much time typing emails back and forth. If you can pick up the phone and be done with the conversation in a minute or two, choose to call instead of email.
* Can I close my email client/window after I send this email? Do you need a reply to your email right away? And what will happen if the recipient isn’t sitting at his computer… does that mean you’ll spend the next two hours checking your email every few minutes?
If so, you’re wasting time.
If you’re constantly stopping the task you’re working on to check email, then you’ll lose a few precious minutes every time, since when you get back to work you need to refocus. It’s a productivity killer – and often, we’re not as good at multi-tasking as we’d like to believe.
If you need an immediate answer, pick up the phone. If email is the preferred method of communication, then hire an assistant to download and sort your email… and he or she can alert you when an important email comes in.
Whether email is a productivity booster or time-waster for you depends on how you use it. If you have the discipline to check it at set times during the day and then close your email client, it can very likely be a good tool for you to use. But if you have a compulsive need to check your email incessantly all through the day, it may be time for you to reconsider how you use this tool.











