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Seth Godin - Unleashing The IdeaVirus I have been a subscriber to Seth’s blog for a VERY long time and I have read all of his books, which are all fantastic. I really hope you will take the time to get his books and read them also especially...

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Awesome Tips On How To Target Gmail With Google Adwords... Here is a brief but awesome tutorial on how to target Gmail (mail.google.com) within AdWords. Whether you have seen success through your Placement Performance Report, or would just like to get your text...

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5 Killer SEO Tips On Getting Backlinks I came across this article today and loved the advice Steven gives here and thought you would all enjoy it as well. ~Enjoy Expert Article 5 Killer SEO Tips to Get Backlinks By Steven Clayton Anyone...

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Worth Reading-The Price of The Promise With the start of not only a new year but also a new decade, I believe it is very important to have the right mindset. In my opinion Mark Yarnell has summed it up perfectly in the following article. ...

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Using Social Media Platforms to Generate MLM Leads... Today more and more home business owners are looking to social media websites for generating their own business MLM leads. For anyone in business, getting targeted leads is the key to growth and success....

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Seth Godin – Unleashing The IdeaVirus

Category : Article Marketing, Internet Marketing, Marketing, PPC, SEO

I have been a subscriber to Seth’s blog for a VERY long time and I have read all of his books, which are all fantastic. I really hope you will take the time to get his books and read them also especially if you are hoping to dominate your niche online.  I read his post last week and it’s an honest assessment of the way things are online.  It’s time to get real on the Internet.  By the way, Seth’s book is available free as a download by clicking here ->-> “Unleashing The Idea Virus”.  Please take a moment and read this post — it’s excellent! The following is Seth’s post verbatim:

Seth Godin Unleashing The IdeaVirus

The net has spawned two new ways to create and consume culture.

The first is the wide-open door for amateurs to create. This is blogging and online art, wikipedia and the maker movement. These guys get a lot of press, and deservedly so, because they’re changing everything.

The second, though, is distracting and ultimately a waste. We’re creating a culture of clickers, stumblers and jaded spectators who decide in the space of a moment whether to watch and participate (or not).

Imagine if people went to the theatre or the movies and stood up and walked out after the first six seconds. Imagine if people went to the senior prom and bailed on their date three seconds after the car pulled away from the curb.

The majority of people who sign up for a new online service rarely or never use it. The majority of YouTube videos are watched for just a few seconds. Chatroulette institutionalizes the glance and click mentality. I’m guessing that more than half the people who started reading this post never finished it.

This is all easy to measure. And it drives people with something to accomplish crazy, because they want visits to go up, clicks to go up, eyeballs to go up.

Should I write blog posts that increase my traffic or that help change the way (a few) people think?

Should a charity focus on instant donations by texting from a million people or is it better to seek dedicated attention and support from a few who understand the mission and are there for the long haul?

More and more often, we’re seeing products and services coming to market designed to appeal to the momentary attention of the clickers. The Huffington Post has downgraded itself, pushing thoughtful stories down the page in exchange for linkbait and sensational celebrity riffs. This strategy gets page views, but does it generate thought or change?

If you create (or market) should you be chasing the people who click and leave? Or is it like trying to turn a cheetah into a house pet? Is manipulating the high-voltage attention stream of millions of caffeinated web surfers a viable long-term strategy?

Mass marketing used to be able to have it both ways. Money bought you audience. Now, all that buys you a mass market is wow and speed. Wow keeps getting harder and dives for the lowest common denominator at the same time.

Time magazine started manipulating the cover and then the contents in order to boost newsstand sales. They may have found a short-term solution, but the magazine is doomed precisely because the people they are pandering to don’t really pay attention and aren’t attractive to advertisers.

My fear is that the endless search for wow further coarsens our culture at the same time it encourages marketers to get ever more shallow. That’s where the first trend comes in… the artists, idea merchants and marketers that are having the most success are ignoring those that would rubberneck and drive on, focusing instead on cadres of fans that matter. Fans that will give permission, fans that will return tomorrow, fans that will spread the word to others that can also take action.

Culture has been getting faster and shallower for hundreds of years, and I’m not the first crusty pundit to decry the demise of thoughtful inquiry and deep experiences. The interesting question here, though, is not how fast is too fast, but what works? What works to change mindsets, to spread important ideas and to create an audience for work that matters? What’s worth your effort and investment as a marketer or creator?

The difference this time is that driveby culture is both fast and free. When there’s no commitment of money or time in the interaction, can change or commerce really happen? Just because you can measure eyeballs and pageviews doesn’t mean you should.

In the race between ‘who’ and ‘how many’, who usually wins–if action is your goal. Find the right people, those that are willing to listen to what you have to say, and ignore the masses that are just going to race on, unchanged.

5 Killer SEO Tips On Getting Backlinks

Category : SEO

I came across this article today and loved the advice Steven gives here and thought you would all enjoy it as well.

~Enjoy

Expert Article

5 Killer SEO Tips to Get Backlinks
By Steven Clayton

Anyone who pays attention to SEO techniques knows that getting high quality, “do follow,” and diverse backlinks is the key to search engine optimization. The challenge, of course, is where to find places to get powerful backlinks.

Most people build their link building strategies around blog and forum postings. This makes sense and is certainly part of our plans as well. However, it stands to reason that Google also knows that most marketers who are using SEO tactics to rank their sites are doing this, and it makes sense that they will be looking for a much more diverse backlink pattern to award the highest rankings to.

With that in mind, I’m going to share the top 5 non-forum/blog backlink sources.

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