Thursday, July 3, 2008
Paris Hilton: Is She the New Madonna?
The answer is no. But more importantly, you may ask, who is Paris Hilton? Well, she is the grand daughter of Conrad Hilton of the Hilton Hotel fame. She first saw public notoriety when a stolen sex video of her hit the internet a few years ago and she gained a reputation as " Paris the heiress." The word Paris Hilton is now the most searched name on the internet next to Britney Spears, Pamela Anderson, Angela Jolie, and you get the idea.
She is now 26 years old, making a living in Beverly Hills as a model and making over $250,000 a year.
She has her own line of perfume, designer clothing line, and her sister Nicky Hilton recently opened up her own chain of hotels. Her song " Stars are Blind" from her second cd is gaining popularity among some, although she is more of a model than a singer. She is scheduled to debut on MTV this fall and hasn't made
a movie yet due to anxiety attacks on the set. The reason that she is not quite famous in the public eye as of yet is not really clear. Her publicity team tends to sell her as an image of enigmatic mystery rather than a bonafide celebrity although she has made sporadic appearances on Elen Degener show and such.
For some of us who know her on myspace, she is some what brash and ego centric, surrounded by 200 copy cat sites made by her "fans" pretending to be Paris. This is somewhat contrary to her public image where she comes off as being some what shy and unknowing about the common folks who make up her fan base. After listening to her songs one can almost assume that reggae and disco went out of style in the 80's and she really does not have classical training for a pop artist.
So the question once more is will Paris replace Madonna and Mariah Carey as a pop singer and will she become a movie star and more of a celebrity in the next few years? That is hard to say. My hunch is that
as her reputation in the public media becomes more defined, she may well become a house hold word in about 3 to 5 years, as much as it took Jackie Chan years to end up in a Pepsi commercial. By that time I will be too old to understand or appreciate the growing phenomena by that time, but then again. That's life. No, that's Paris.
Author Norman Dreamer has two websites. http://Wxyz.atspace.com
and http://Moneyetc.50webs.com.
5 Tips to Get More Exposure For Your Music Online
Here are some really simple ways to increase your traffic significantly. Remember, if you don't market yourself, you are really doing a disservice to yourself. You are like an artist performing in the middle of a desolate desert! Someone might find you by accident, but what you need to do is build roads to yourself.
1. Youtube.com
Posting samples of your music on Youtube.com can bring a lot of traffic to you. Pick an appropriate title for your video, and make sure you use lots of keywords so that people can find you. The people who find your videos will already be a part of your target audience, because they searched the words that brought up your video, or were watching similar videos. Always leave your page URL so that they may visit and listen to the rest of your music.
2. Post on Relevant Online Communities
You can get heard very easily by posting on music online communities, or forums. A lot of forums have sections dedicated to artist submissions and reviews. The reviews are usually blatantly honest as well, which is a plus because you can learn how to make your music better. Online communities are also a great way to build relationships with your clients and with other artists.
3. Free Giveaways
People are magnetized to free offerings. It might just be human nature - but use to your advantage! For example if you make hip hop or rap beats, and you occasionally give some out for free, people will come to your page and seize the opportunity. They may like your music and buy a track, or might just tell their friends to go check you out. You can also have a contest, for free apparel or gig tickets for example. The possibilities are endless.
4. Collaborate
Work with local artists or collaborate with someone online! Make sure they are good, and that they will showcase your work well. You can also extend this idea and play shows with similar bands or artists live (when you do perform, hand out something that has your website on so they can find you afterwards). Most serious artists are very happy to collaborate because of the mutual exposure.
5. Send Friend Requests to the Right People
Most applicable to MySpace - People get lazy, buy a friend blaster, and send requests to everyone!
Blind friend blasting is problematic because you may never find your target audience. You may also have thousands of bots added, which will spam all over your page! make sure you add wisely and add the right people. When you find your audience, they will find you. Another reason to make sure you are adding humans because humans are able to promote you by word of mouth!
I hope this article helps you promote your music pages!
The End
If you want to read similar articles, or learn how to use fruity loops, visit my site: Hip Hop tutorial FL Studio Tutorials
The New Mask of India
"....the idea is that no society is ever complete, neither are its needs exactly the same as those of other societies." -Idries Shah, The Way of the Sufi
Varun (or Victor for work purposes) declares: 'An air-conditioned sweat shop is still a sweatshop. In fact, it is worse because nobody sees the sweat. Nobody sees your brain getting rammed.'
-Chetan Bhagat, One Night @ The Call Centre
Unless we recognize the present low state of our society as contrasted with our ancient progressive civilization, and unless we soon introduce such reforms into our social institutions as are calculated to bring about our regeneration, there will be no salvation for us, the Hindus, as a race. We should try and remove all causes of our degeneration. Whatever encrustations have gathered themselves in the lapse of time round our social fabric, we should carefully scrape them away.
-A. Mahadeva Sastri, The Vedic Law of Marriage
On September 15th, 2006 C. Mann, a representative of the Voices NGO, delivered a lecture at Global College's South Asia Center about how communities throughout India are seemingly benefited by their ability to access the newfound global communications infrastructure. He pressed the idea that traditional India is strengthened through its inclusion into the "global" culture and economy and that the Indian people are empowered through this new system of commerce and, subsequently, thought. It is my assertion that this single "globalized" pattern of living, business, and philosophy, in essence, forms the foundations of a faith in commerce that cannot fit within the cultural bounds of all societies congruously and without drastic social consequence.
It is my understanding that the main theme of C.Mann's lecture was that, in this "modernized" world, all people are drawn into one collective spear of commerce and, by extension, culture. In lieu of this fact, he seemed to heavily imply that all people of the world need to be "wired-in" to global information technologies in order to continue making a living. He went on to assert with confidence that, with this new technological ability, small-scale subsistence farmers will not only be able to sell to places that they have never sold to before but they can also watch Hollywood movies, American sitcoms and professional wrestling on the TV. His position went on to directly state that the adaptation and, in many instances, appropriation of local customs into the common milieu gave strength to the communities from which these traditions arose. His delivery was curt, well-groomed, and with the fervor of someone who had something to sell. But I could not buy it.
Globalization can be defined as a practice of ideology that envelopes all the people of the world into a single frame of economics, consumption, and thought which finds its beacon in the model set forth by the multi-national corporation. The people of the world are now grouped together in two lump sums- the haves and the have-nots- while such inconveniences such as national and cultural lines are disintegrated. What is left is a dominant global mono-culture which revolves around the tidings of capitalistic consumption, exploitation, and expansion. In his summation of C.T. Kurian's work on the subject, Dr. Sakhi Athyal asserts that, ". . . this globe has been integrated by capitalist practices and ideology and has largely removed ideological polarization." The dilution of cultural distinction and polarization is of absolute necessity, as the ideal of this system is the complete restructuring of societies for the construction of commercially fertile ground. The blemishes of cultural variation have no place in the "modernizing" structure, as the formation of the 'two class one culture' system is universally implemented globally. Athyal continues, ". . . in summary India has embraced a market economy, and as a result it has lead to unequal distribution of income and wealth which in turn leads to unequal distribution of power and hence to the exploitation of those with economic power over those who lack sufficient economic power." Globalization is not a process of cultural hegemony but is, conversely, the institution of a world- wide social system that grinds out any pre-standing cultural congruency's in the pursuit of profit. In the words of the famous economist, Milton Friedman, "the corporation cannot be ethical; its only responsibility is to turn a profit." Globalization is the culture of the corporation.
The particular manner of inter-cultural communion that is the hallmark of the globalization process is much less a blending of varying cultures than the imposition of one single cultural frame- the culture of commerce. This particular social order is created and maintained through a belief in monetary acquisition that is tantamount to a faith. In such a system, people, animals, and the environment are degraded to their barest essentials, and are given value judgments base upon how much monetary "worth" they contain. Things of beauty are not appreciated solely as such, but are qualified with remarks of their approximate value. To observe someone going through the rituals of recreational shopping is very similar to that of an individual in the mist of religious rigmarole. Under this commercial belief system, money represents time and time represents life; to make a purchase is to recognize an equivalent portion of your life as related to the object's projected value. To purchase is to sacrifice the life/time that it took to earn the money that was paid for the object. To purchase is to worship life itself. This capitalistic way of viewing the world permeates into all strata of the social fabric and, consequently, into the very psyches of all involved members. Capitalism is not simply an attribute of a society that can be easily separated from the mainstay of the culture; as capitalism is the culture itself. The South Asian Voice asserts that:
India has been lulled by the mantra of "liberalization" and "privatization". This mantra has delivered home appliances and electronic gadgets galore. But it is also time we realize what this mantra has not delivered. It has not delivered a modern infrastructure that keeps pace with growing demands and consumption of a still rapidly growing population. India is now able to satisfy the demand for items of individual consumption. But it seems completely unable to satisfy the demand for items of collective consumption - such as clean air or clean water or a smooth transportation network.
The pressures of this commercial culture upon foreign communities has had the effect of enacting a gross manner of cultural dilution, in which opposing inter-cultural ideas seem to simply cancel each other out or, at most, absorb each other; leaving a pale frame in the place of what was once vibrant color, dare I say- distinction. This is not a melting pot in which the riches of many cultures are joyously mixed together and kept intact, but rather a centrifuge in which a gyroscopic force serves to throw the beauty of cultural distinction out to the periphery, before dissolving it all together. What remains are cultures with no roots, communities without communication, and people with no direction. I am from the United States; I know this corporate culture intimately.
I come to India because it is traditionally a world apart from this commercial culture and I find vicarious substance from the ideal of her people, places, traditions, and cultural distinctions. It seems as if the essence of the traditional Indian social system lays in piety and family role, which appears to be qualities that should completely contradict the individualized, western perspective that breeds excess and consumption. But this seems to be changing due to the recent influx of western companies that must, due to the nature of their business, enact a policy of cultural indoctrination that seems to be ideal fodder for young Indians looking to stake out their own place in the social sphere. This is due to the simple fact that the type of businesses that are currently being brought to India are that which provide information services to people of predominantly western origin. In this particular dichotomy, Indian-ness is not encouraged and is, in fact, covered up with learned "western" forms of behavior and speaking that are pan-inclusively carried out in all aspects of the workplace. As the journalist George Monbiot wrote, "The most marketable skill in India today is the ability to abandon your identity and slip into someone else's." This particular brand of workplace indoctrination is no better exemplified than in the anthropologists Carol Upadhya and Sahana Udupa's documentary satire, "Fun @ Sun."
In this twenty minute video on the workplace environment of Sun Microsystems' Bangalore center, Upadhya and Udupa slyly show how a preparatory "neo-corporate" mind-set is created and maintained throughout all spheres of the workday. It showed scenes of "hunky-dory" celebrations in which employees all gather together in designated locations, laugh at designated prompts, and speak in designated tongues in the name of "fun," interdependence, and corporate trend. On this phenomenon, Makarand Paranjape, an English professor at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University says, ". . . [we are] seeing an attempt to eroticize the [IT] industry, an attempt to make it a culturally exciting place, hip and cool. Of course it's a bit of a fantasy: there is nothing glamorous about call centres; they are dehumanizing, decultured places." This system of deculturation seems to be enforced with a sort of gang mentality in which there is a set social line that is enforced by all involved members rather than a sole "boss" figure. This "same paging" seems to be a tactic of cultural subversion that is as subtle as the industrial revolution was direct; with an end result that is quite the same- programmed, acculturated employees.
The hallmark of this employee programming is found in the fact that there seems to be a set image and way of acting that is projected upon the employees within this new corporate work environment. During a visit to a Dell call center in Bangalore, I was able to make surface observations of this new work culture first hand. Whilst baking beneath bright florescent lights and sitting inside of cubicles, the young workers all wore western clothing, spoke intentionally neutral English (deficient of as much Indian accent as possible), and interacted with each other openly. The average age of an employee was around 22-25 years old, and there were a comparable number of women as men. The walls of the center were lined with posters showing parody scenes of Indians and westerners interacting and doing business together, complete with slogans of workplace solidarity and team work. The dress and disposition of the workers is this environment were very distinct from that of the average Indian and one could easily distinguish an IT/ BPO employee in the streets of an Indian city. I found out that the average salary of an employee in this sector is around $3,000 US a year; which enables them to live the rather extravagant, western-like, lifestyle that goes along with the profession's social image (while at the same time saving the company the cost of hiring westerners at ten times the cost). In an article on the cultural impacts of the IT industry, Amelia Gentleman describes the call center scene as a place where, "thousands of young male and female college graduates spend the night confined in close proximity (breaking down the traditional distance between the sexes), working to US-time in smart, modern offices, adopting alien American identities, performing mindless tasks but earning salaries larger than anything their parents could aspire to."
These particularities form the making of a new sub-culture that will have a great impact on subsequent generations. As an anonymous author put forth in the May 2001 issue of the "South Asian Voice:"
For the IT-literate, job opportunities have been plentiful, and there are also opportunities to live and earn abroad. For the English-speaking upper middle-class, this has come as a boon. With greater access to disposable income, the seduction of consumerism becomes hard to resist, and the demand for unrestricted globalization inevitably follows the attraction for new and ever more advanced consumer goods. This new and more prosperous class of Indian consumers associates India's progress with the availability of the latest automobile models and consumer goods. The local availability of imported European cosmetics and fashions, imported drinks and confectioneries - these have all become important to those who have sufficient disposable income to purchase such items.
The macrocosmic cultural impacts of this newly appropriated "corporateness" are multi-faceted and extend deep into the Indian social environment. It seems as if traditional values and roles are being severed in a single generation and the overlaying, trickle-through impacts are affecting all spheres of South Asian culture. I asked a BPO public relations official, who has made international sales and marketing his career, if he lived a life that was similar to that of his parents. He, of course, told me that he did and that the recent subterfuge of western companies has no great impact on Indian society. But he was paid to tell me this, and the fact that he was in his mid-40's and could not find a marriage partner, in a country where parents arrange their children's marriages at relatively young ages, due to his profession told me a very different story. There seems to be a deeply seeded identity crisis in which India is making believe to itself that it is still Indian while at the same time co-opting the apparent fruits of this neo-colonial mono-culture. How can a culture hold itself up in depth when it needs to adapt its very face to exist in the modern economy? I do not know the answer to this question, but the cultural impacts of this transformation have already made a running tear in the Indian social fabric.
The cultural changes that have resulted from this influx of western technology, employment, and ideals were not more apparent to me than on a visit to a nursing home just outside of India's IT capital, Bangalore. The thought of a nursing home in India is a completely foreign concept as, traditionally, the elderly are taken care of by their children and/ or relatives. But in "modernizing" India the dilution of family role seems to be part of the corporate package; as employees in the IT/BPO sector, due to work requirements and their 'western' acculturation, are oftentimes not able to provide adequate care for their elderly parents. I fell into fertile conversation with one woman whose son was an engineer at a German technology company. She told me that she had to come into the nursing home because her son's mindset did not allow any room for her traditional ways of home rearing. She told me that he was a modern man and attended to modern things and how he thought that his new western ways were superior to that of her time-honed Indian folk wisdom. Her elderly friends to her left and right eagerly agreed with what she was saying and shook their heads in disbelief about the predicament that they found themselves in. She spoke with distain when she said that, "People today make more money but they also spend more. They do not save. They do not listen to the lessons of the old. They have nothing." This seems to be the theme of the elderly everywhere, but this woman was heavily hit by the westernizing wreaking ball, and she knew that her traditional Indian values would not be carried into further generations. The chain of folk knowledge was broken at this juncture and the impacts of such are forever stretching. There is no going back; there can be no retrieval, as soon as the great line of generational knowledge is disrupted, thousands of years of tradition are, proverbially as well as literally, gone in the years.
We are all entering upon a pale, pale plastic world, and with each day new societies are eagerly embracing changes that ultimately dissolve their heritage. The mono-cultural blankness of the western corporation is taking hold everywhere and communities are losing their time-honed distinction and identity as a result. As the American folk musician Robert Blake sings, "Hollywood movies are cultural degradation." The popularizing of a traditional folk song in a Bollywood movie does nothing to preserve the culture from which it arose. Rather, all this accomplishes is the caricaturizing of a deep meaning folk song into a medium that is sellable. When this happens, the tradition is not enhanced but is lost altogether. To put something as pure and heartfelt as a folksong into a chintzy Bollywood jingle is to severe the song from its roots and leave an artificially packaged frame in its place.
There is something in this world more meaningful than price-tags, more solid than the numbers on currency, and more human than television. There is substance beyond the reach of corporations and a human spirit that is indomitable by neo-colonial indoctrination. I recently heard a professor rhetorically ask what the good is of tribal people making jewelry for themselves outside of the realm of commerce, and I must answer with a single word: 'everything.' The standardized corporate modal of commerce and living simply cannot be absorbed by every society of the world without the severe dilution of the attributes that make cultures distinctly themselves. To "modernize" is to leave a culture stripped of substance; to "globalize" is to impose a corporate derived mono-culture upon distinctly unique human societies. If this movement continues unabated we will find that a world paved in pale, blank, strip malls and people who know nothing other than that which is televised is all that will remain.
*Written in the autumn of 2006 in Southern India
Wade P. Shepard is on year eight of his journey around the world. So far he has wandered into the outback of Mongolia, lived in a monastery in Tibet, ate a puppy in China, danced with mystics in India, thought he was a gardener in Ireland, and got really lost in Patagonia. He has now run aground in Morocco, where he is braving the magnificent souqs and wide open landscape. Throughout all of this, he has been working diligently on his travelogue Song of the Open Road and his homepage Vagabond Journey.com
Taking a Look at an Affordable Biofeedback System
People have been utilizing and hearing about biofeedback for over forty years. However, until recently, many people were not able to afford this type of alternative therapy because the cost of hiring a biofeedback therapist, with their expensive equipment, was just out of reach. But, in the last several years, a new type of biofeedback system has been introduced by a few companies, which has provided access at a dramatically reduced cost, making this type of therapy available to a much broader range of people.
There are a number of companies now that have taken advantage of the recent developments in technology to provide biofeedback machines at a much reduced cost and some might be surprised to learn that these companies have even made a "game out of it." For example, the Wild Divine biofeedback computer game engages a person's attention and draws them into the challenge of the diversion, just like any other video game.
Unlike an expensive, medical biofeedback system, the Wild Divine biofeedback gaming console has a distinct twist that will surprise most people. While it does include software that runs on your computer, the unique aspect to this computer game is that there is no joystick to control and you don't use your mouse or keyboard to interact while playing the game.
Instead, the Wild Divine software package includes a set of finger sensors that slip onto three of your fingers. These sensors are attached to a small biofeedback device which then plugs into the USB port on your computer. The game is not controlled by the motion of your fingers, but instead it reads the electrical impulses being sent through your fingers as a result of changes in your brainwave patterns, making this a true biofeedback game.
This game approach is quite unlike the kind of biofeedback system that you would find in a clinic, which you might visit to receive a neurofeedback therapy session. Traditional biofeedback machines show a series of charts, graphs, lights and other readouts and also often incorporate sounds, which is what displays the all-important feedback information.
But with the Wild Divine biofeedback game, the feedback that the user receives is all in terms of an adventure video game. By the use of thoughts to control brainwave function, the electrical impulses are changed, sent through the small biofeedback device attached, to your personal computer and the game responds accordingly. You are able to move through a variety of levels that present increasingly difficult challenges, which you must meet with improved control over your brainwave activity.
With the costs of neurotherapy being prohibitively high for so many people, even for those who are extremely interested in taking advantage of the benefits of this holistic treatment modality, the Wild Divine biofeedback gaming console has been quickly embraced. The Wild Divine system is quite inexpensive and the basic starter kit includes the software and all needed accessories to start making use of this unique form of a biofeedback system.
We offer a free biofeedback audio gift. Learn more about the biofeedback system at our portal, and drop us a note at our relaxation blog.
How Intelligent People Get Motivated to Make Money on the Internet
After you have interacted with the affairs of an online business for awhile, you might start to feel like the process is not as exciting as it used to be. The business will become stagnant and there will be little to no emotion involved with the regulation of its everyday tasks. When this type of complacency eventually sets in, you need to take immediate steps to become re-motivated so that you can make money on the Internet.
In many cases, intelligent people get motivated by using effective techniques that energizes their passion for regulating web sites and blogs. This passion can be reignited only if smart and effective steps are taken that will enhance and improve the way that a blog site is functioning.
Many people wonder how they can possibly get that passion and desire for blogging back again so that they can still increase their income from a successful blog site and maintain a great reputation. There are quite a few ways to reignite that motivation for an online business, but must be done soon so that you will still have the motivation to deal with your blog site on the Internet. This particular article lists a ways that will help you, as a blog owner, to get back the desire to blog.
Remember that it is usually by the small and minor aspects of life that a person can gain a great amount of success and popularity. As a blog owner, you should relish and be grateful for every bit of success that you obtain, no matter how small or how big that piece of success really is. The acquisition of a few more clients is a great accomplishment and you should feel good about any small thing that happens to your blog site.
Part of the problem for blog owners is that they do not set higher goals for themselves and their blog sites. After a couple of years, their blog site will become popular and their first primary objectives will have been achieved. In order to keep your desire to blog at a high level, you must also reset some new objectives that are much higher and that will push you to be better and even bigger than ever before.
Most online business owners set initial objectives that they work hard at and accomplish, but then they plateau afterwards and quickly lose their interest in blogging. The most effective blog owners keep creating new objectives to achieve and try to push themselves to the highest potential that is possible. Setting new and higher goals is a great way for anyone to maintain a great desire to blog.
Another way that intelligent people motivate themselves to make money with the Internet is by recognizing and targeting the stimuli of your highest emotions. You need to look at what specific tasks spark your emotions, and then plan on doing those tasks on a regular basis. Doing those things will constantly motivate you to regulate your blog business site and make money on the Internet.
Court is an expert on how to make money on the internet and also provides internet marketing tips.
Powerful Product Funnel Creation - Latest 4 Phenomenal Steps to Improve Your Product Funnel Creation
If you want to better serve your customer base, you need to create series of products that will address their ever-changing needs and demands. And if you want to grow your ebusiness exponentially, you must launch a product funnel that will allow you not only to develop more products to your clients but also to boost your profits.
Here are the 4 phenomenal steps to improve your product funnel creation:
1. Define your audience. This is one of the most important elements in building and growing any type of business. You need to know your target market so you can easily identify their needs that you can address through your products and services. Determine their pressing issues, questions, age, gender, profession, areas of interest, educational background, and the various elements that put them in a position of needing your products. The more you know about these people, the better you will become in developing products that are highly targeted to their needs and demands.
2. Showcase your expertise online. When building an ebusiness, it is important to know that the people you are serving are generally reluctant to transact over the internet due to numerous scam and fraud cases. Thus, you need to find ways on how you can earn their trust clients so you can convince them to do business with you. You can do this by showing these people that you are trustworthy and you are very good on what you do. Share a slice of your expertise using content base marketing solutions like ezine publishing, article marketing, blogging, and forum posting.
3. Build your opt-in list. To continuously feed your potential clients with valuable information and to easily contact them when you are promoting your product and services through email marketing, you need to learn the ropes of list building. This is the process of obtaining the email address of your potential clients so you can easily build an open line of communication with them.
4. Create series of products. Once you earned the trust of your potential clients, you may offer them your products. Start with low-end products (inexpensive but offers high financial returns) like $30-ebooks. Then offer your middle-end and high-end products that are slightly more expensive compare to your first offering. Ensure satisfaction on every transaction so you can easily move your customers from level of your funnel to the next.
Do you want to discover the secret to generating over $180,356 per year online?
Download this: How to Make 6 Figures Online
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Sean Mize is an internet marketing strategist who teaches internet marketers how to increase their income by creating high ticket classes and coaching programs.
How Prioritizing Will Improve Your Online Business
A person who cannot prioritize gets stuck with more choices than he can handle. Without this skill, it can become excruciatingly difficult to make small steps and achieve a goal - any goal. This is especially true in online business, when the work load can be a killer and schedules can be grueling. To top it all, there are dozens of tasks that need to be completed, all at the same time. Learn how prioritizing will help improve your online business and increase your bottom line:
You Save Time - A Lot of Time
Time means money and a lot of it means a lot of cash going down the drain. An online business thrives in the light speed-fast world of the Internet, an industry where market tastes can be notoriously fickle and trends have the tendency to sport a short shelf life.
An online business owner who fails to spot and take advantage of these trends risks not being able to maximize his presence and resources. By prioritizing, you will be able to improve your online business by taking full control of your time. By doing so, you will have the capability to:
- allocate enough time and resources for completing urgent tasks
- avoid wasting time with non-productive activities
- have enough time to assess or evaluate the goals, needs and performance of your online business
- make the necessary changes in order to improve processes
- make better judgments about decisions pertaining to your business
There's No Need for Extra Manpower or Equipment
If you can prioritize, you will be able to improve the processes that are critical to your online business. As a result, you will be able to streamline your operations, eliminating the need to hire extra manpower or purchase additional equipment.
What does this mean to your bottom line? Simple: less expenditure. Extra manpower and more equipment mean taking money off your capital and profits. Every dollar your online business will earn will have to be shared with someone else. If you can prioritize, you can save on the extra expense and keep the profits all to yourself.
You Give More Attention to What is Important
Prioritizing will help you improve your online business by helping you complete important tasks on time. This helps you maintain a more fluid movement in your business - one that has no troubling bottlenecks and no frantic rushes just to meet a deadline.
If you can prioritize, you pay attention to what is most important, bring an order to things and yes, never forget anything.
To learn more ways to ensure your online business is in order, follow the link in my resource box now.
About the Author
Kevin Tyler Smith is an expert Internet network marketer. "Who Wants To Learn How To Profit In MLM Online In 24 Hours or Less Using A Secret Strategy To Pull Profits In MLM In Less Than A Day.... While Exploding Your Downline Growth? Not only is it fast, but it's lazy" Everything explained on the other side >>> http://www.EZWealthStrategy.com Aren't you just a little curious what business he's in? >>> http://www.perfectmlmblog.com