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10 New Tips for Better Meetings links of your website since the time it has come online. You click a link that says say ‘April 12, 1999’, and pronto you get to see what your website looked then. I felt pretty nostalgic while recently checking my painting website. Like seeing my childhood pictures in half-pants, eh! To download Alexa toolbar, click here [http://download.alexa.com/index.cgi].1) Ask everyone to arrive five to ten minutes early. This gives everyone time to socialize, obtain coffee, or organize materials before the meeting. It also ensures that everyone is present at the scheduled starting time. Make this part of the agenda.2) Discuss sensitive issues with the key participants before the meeting. Use this as an opportunity to listen and gather information on the issues. From this you will understand the different views, needs, and histories. This information can help you prepare the agenda and conduct the meeting. In addition, you may be able to facilitate solutions or strategies for solutions before the meeting. In either case, the result will be a more efficient meeting.3) Plan small meetings that focus on a single issue. People work more effectively over short periods of time (such as 45 minutes). This also allows you to match experts with issues for more productive meetings.4) Send copies of the minutes to everyone who could have been invited Not for Firefox Well then, an Alexa toolbar does indeed make web-life easier. There is though a major drawback. Firefox does not allow Alexa toolbar, and so Firefox users will remain bereft of Alexa’s advantages. However Firefox does permit using Quirk’s SearchStatus [http://www.quirk.biz/searchstatus/], which is quite a useful tool. SearchStatus is basically a toolbar extension for Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox users. The advantage with SearchStatus is that it shows (if chosen) both Alexa Ranking and Google PageRank for a webpage in a remarkably unobtrusive manner. Locate it at the bottom corner of browser or on menubar at top, you may not even notice it is there. Authored by Craig Raw, SearchStatus is very cool in the sense that it offers nearly all that Alexa toolbar offers, plus you get to see some features of Google toolbar as well, including the all-important PageRank. Do you need more? The answer is a qualified ‘yes’. You may also need Google toolbar to make your web-life more complete. Let me explain. If you are a Using A Free Keyword Tool To Find Money-Making Internet Market Niches For many of us, life on the web is not complete without referring time and again to one or more toolbars. Near to 60% of all web-users I’ve visited thus far have their browsers sporting trendy toolbars, most commonly Google toolbar. As ubiquitous as they may be, we all have personal choice of toolbars like branded items, though it seems only a handful are more popular over a wide cross-section of surfers.Yahoo has a great, free tool that can help smart marketers find new market niches. It's called the Yahoo Keyword Selector Tool.To use this tool, to go http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/.All you'll find on the page is the title Keyword SelectorTool, a couple of short paragraphs of text, and a search box labeled Get Suggestions for.Now, comes the neat part. Just type in a word or phrase, for example, “pet supplies,” and click on the arrow to the right of the box. After a few seconds (or minutes), you will see a list of keywords related to “pet supplies.” The number to the left of the term is the number of times people searched on that phrase in the past month. In the case of “pet supplies,” you will see that the phrase most often search on is “pet supply,” with 322,491 searches. Below this, you will most likely see something like the following: 151,580 pet store supply 41,938 discount pet supply 38, But, what is a toolbar? Most often a toolbar is like a main menu-bar residing alongside in popular browsers, usually Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. Like browser’s menu-bar, a toolbar too provides many options to viewers, the main aim being bringing focus to surfing on the net. Various hues of toolbars are available, majority of them being free of cost, but one feature that is common in nearly all of them is the ability to easily browse for relevant information from respective search engine. A second feature found in most toolbars is blocking pop-up and pop-under ad, which of late has proved to be more of an irritant than help. How does toolbar fit in? For people who frequently surf the net for information, a toolbar is of great help. The world-wide-web contains wealth of information ready to be tapped for use. Yet, for many, getting precise information is more often than not a frustrating experience. If you happen to refer to this book, titled "Google Power: Unleash the Full Potential of Google" [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0072257873/] by Chris Sherman, you would know that to get right information would rather require practiced skill so as to formulate your query perfectly. That is to say, if you’re not pretty skilled to do your searches, you may in all probability need to fine-tune your searches again and again. And this is where the toolbars come as great help. Toolbars do not eliminate pain of searching. It instead assists in pruning your browsing time so that you can devote more time to do what you want to with the information collected. A subtle difference can be made out in the working of various toolbars. Thus, while search toolbars allow searching in your favorite search engines directly, meta search utilities are for searching multiple search engines simultaneously. Alexa toolbar – how it helps? One of my favorites is Alexa Toolbar. The variety of information that can be culled from Alexa toolbar about any webpage (and of course a website) is truly amazing. Alexa owes it to millions of users of its toolbar, for 2 of the most important toolbar information (Related Links and Traffic rankings) are basically aggregated culminations of what its toolbar users do while surfing the net. But first, let us go through Alexa toolbar’s main features and how they’re helpful to web-surfers like you and me. Traffic rank at-a-glance The most impressive is perhaps the unique at-a-glance traffic ranking of any website. The figure displayed denotes the traffic rank of a particular website. Remember this is not the actual traffic rank. This figure is just a reflection of where a particular website is positioned in the long queue of those websites that are visited by users of Alexa toolbar. Now, if you feel this ranking is flawed, so it is. No doubt there. Yet, many people rely on this figure for the simple reason that in absence of any other similar data, Alexa toolbar users do form a good sample (even if insignificant compared to total web population) to provide some basic unbiased information. Links to similar websites The second very useful information that can be had from Alexa toolbar are links to some more websites that are similar to the one being presently viewed. A great help that. Why? Suppose you are looking for information on, say mosquito repellent. You start by searching the term on your favorite search engine, which then throws up a list of urls’ closely matching your search term in the SERP (search engine result page). As you select a url from the list and browse the related website that deals on the subject of your search term, you will simultaneously be shown links on the toolbar of similar other websites. If you feel the current webpage or website is not up to your expectation or if you are inclined to explore more options, you may simply click on the link of a similar other website shown on the toolbar. When you follow one of those links and visit the new site, 2 things happen. One is of course that you are able to view a similar website without much of an effort. Second is that you will get to see a new set of related links on the toolbar that may be partially or fully same or different from the earlier ones. You will thus have multiple options of websites while you roam from one site to another looking for required information without the hassle of repeatedly referring to search engines. This feature allows you to save time you would have otherwise spent for searching afresh. Isn’t that a topper? You bet. What else? Quite a lot. For example, you will know ‘reach’ of your website per million toolbar users, which other sites link to yours (pretty common feature), search in various platforms (like stocks, news, dictionary and thesaurus, default search being in Google), email a webpage to your friend, be quickly taken to Amazon (Alexa is an Amazon company) for shopping and so on. But what perhaps takes the cake is the feature provided in collaboration with WayBackMachine [http://www.archive.org/web/web.php], said to be the largest internet archive online. When you click the link (toward the right end of the toolbar, the ‘page history’) you will be taken to WayBackMachine’s search result page that details year-wise links of your website since the time it has come online. You click a link that says say ‘April 12, 1999’, and pronto you get to see what your website looked then. I felt pretty nostalgic while recently checking my painting website. Like seeing my childhood pictures in half-pants, eh! To download Alexa toolbar, click here [http://download.alexa.com/index.cgi]. Not for Firefox Well then, an Alexa toolbar does indeed make web-life easier. There is though a major drawback. Firefox does not allow Alexa toolbar, and so Firefox users will remain bereft of Alexa’s advantages. However Firefox does permit using Quirk’s SearchStatus [http://www.quirk.biz/searchstatus/], which is quite a useful tool. SearchStatus is basically a toolbar extension for Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox users. The advantage with SearchStatus is that it shows (if chosen) both Alexa Ranking and Google PageRank for a webpage in a remarkably unobtrusive manner. Locate it at the bottom corner of browser or on menubar at top, you may not even notice it is there. Authored by Craig Raw, SearchStatus is very cool in the sense that it offers nearly all that Alexa toolbar offers, plus you get to see some features of Google toolbar as well, including the all-important PageRank. Do you need more? The answer is a qualified ‘yes’. You may also need Google toolbar to make your web-life more complete. Let me explain. If you are an Google Contest - Nigritude Ultramarine tial of Google" [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0072257873/] by Chris Sherman, you would know that to get right information would rather require practiced skill so as to formulate your query perfectly. That is to say, if you’re not pretty skilled to do your searches, you may in all probability need to fine-tune your searches again and again. And this is where the toolbars come as great help. Toolbars do not eliminate pain of searching. It instead assists in pruning your browsing time so that you can devote more time to do what you want to with the information collected.Search engine optimization experts are having fun with Google. Experts, with DarkBlue.com at the helm, are holding a contest to determine how Google really works. Experts are competing, with the goal of optimizing a webpage for a non-sensical phrase: 'nigritude ultramarine'.On May 7th, the day the terms 'nigritude ultramarine' was announced, typing the phrase into Google generated no search listings. Search engine optimizers hoping to define themselves as industry leaders are all vying for the number one spot. Others see the contest as an opportunity to test theories and experiment without jeopardizing existing traffic. Some webmasters are leery at staking their professional reputation on a contest with an undefined number of participants.As an added incentive for search engine experts and webmasters to participate and work their magic, DarkBlue.com is giving away an Apple Mini iPod™ and a Sony Flat Screen Monitor to anyone who can t A subtle difference can be made out in the working of various toolbars. Thus, while search toolbars allow searching in your favorite search engines directly, meta search utilities are for searching multiple search engines simultaneously. Alexa toolbar – how it helps? One of my favorites is Alexa Toolbar. The variety of information that can be culled from Alexa toolbar about any webpage (and of course a website) is truly amazing. Alexa owes it to millions of users of its toolbar, for 2 of the most important toolbar information (Related Links and Traffic rankings) are basically aggregated culminations of what its toolbar users do while surfing the net. But first, let us go through Alexa toolbar’s main features and how they’re helpful to web-surfers like you and me. Traffic rank at-a-glance The most impressive is perhaps the unique at-a-glance traffic ranking of any website. The figure displayed denotes the traffic rank of a particular website. Remember this is not the actual traffic rank. This figure is just a reflection of where a particular website is positioned in the long queue of those websites that are visited by users of Alexa toolbar. Now, if you feel this ranking is flawed, so it is. No doubt there. Yet, many people rely on this figure for the simple reason that in absence of any other similar data, Alexa toolbar users do form a good sample (even if insignificant compared to total web population) to provide some basic unbiased information. Links to similar websites The second very useful information that can be had from Alexa toolbar are links to some more websites that are similar to the one being presently viewed. A great help that. Why? Suppose you are looking for information on, say mosquito repellent. You start by searching the term on your favorite search engine, which then throws up a list of urls’ closely matching your search term in the SERP (search engine result page). As you select a url from the list and browse the related website that deals on the subject of your search term, you will simultaneously be shown links on the toolbar of similar other websites. If you feel the current webpage or website is not up to your expectation or if you are inclined to explore more options, you may simply click on the link of a similar other website shown on the toolbar. When you follow one of those links and visit the new site, 2 things happen. One is of course that you are able to view a similar website without much of an effort. Second is that you will get to see a new set of related links on the toolbar that may be partially or fully same or different from the earlier ones. You will thus have multiple options of websites while you roam from one site to another looking for required information without the hassle of repeatedly referring to search engines. This feature allows you to save time you would have otherwise spent for searching afresh. Isn’t that a topper? You bet. What else? Quite a lot. For example, you will know ‘reach’ of your website per million toolbar users, which other sites link to yours (pretty common feature), search in various platforms (like stocks, news, dictionary and thesaurus, default search being in Google), email a webpage to your friend, be quickly taken to Amazon (Alexa is an Amazon company) for shopping and so on. But what perhaps takes the cake is the feature provided in collaboration with WayBackMachine [http://www.archive.org/web/web.php], said to be the largest internet archive online. When you click the link (toward the right end of the toolbar, the ‘page history’) you will be taken to WayBackMachine’s search result page that details year-wise links of your website since the time it has come online. You click a link that says say ‘April 12, 1999’, and pronto you get to see what your website looked then. I felt pretty nostalgic while recently checking my painting website. Like seeing my childhood pictures in half-pants, eh! To download Alexa toolbar, click here [http://download.alexa.com/index.cgi]. Not for Firefox Well then, an Alexa toolbar does indeed make web-life easier. There is though a major drawback. Firefox does not allow Alexa toolbar, and so Firefox users will remain bereft of Alexa’s advantages. However Firefox does permit using Quirk’s SearchStatus [http://www.quirk.biz/searchstatus/], which is quite a useful tool. SearchStatus is basically a toolbar extension for Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox users. The advantage with SearchStatus is that it shows (if chosen) both Alexa Ranking and Google PageRank for a webpage in a remarkably unobtrusive manner. Locate it at the bottom corner of browser or on menubar at top, you may not even notice it is there. Authored by Craig Raw, SearchStatus is very cool in the sense that it offers nearly all that Alexa toolbar offers, plus you get to see some features of Google toolbar as well, including the all-important PageRank. Do you need more? The answer is a qualified ‘yes’. You may also need Google toolbar to make your web-life more complete. Let me explain. If you are a Direct Mail Marketing With Postcards: Got Stopping Power? sive is perhaps the unique at-a-glance traffic ranking of any website. The figure displayed denotes the traffic rank of a particular website. Remember this is not the actual traffic rank. This figure is just a reflection of where a particular website is positioned in the long queue of those websites that are visited by users of Alexa toolbar. Now, if you feel this ranking is flawed, so it is. No doubt there. Yet, many people rely on this figure for the simple reason that in absence of any other similar data, Alexa toolbar users do form a good sample (even if insignificant compared to total web population) to provide some basic unbiased information.Picture this...Tom arrives home from work, parks his car in his driveway, and walks to his mailbox. It’s cold out, so he hustles. He reaches inside, pulls out the day’s deliveries, and then hurries inside the house.After greeting his family, he begins to sort through the mail. Tom’s a busy guy and doesn’t like clutter, so he doesn’t need much of a reason to throw mail in the trash. In fact, without realizing it, Tom has developed an effective system for doing just that:1. Sort through the mail once.2. Throw away anything that’s not immediately important or worth keeping.3. Sort through the mail again.4. Begin opening whatever is left, in order of importance.Like many working Americans, Tom is "time-starved." He can never find enough hours in the day to do the things he wants to do. So why waste time on something like the mail?The Need for Stopping Power In direct mail marketing, this scenario represents one of your greatest cha Links to similar websites The second very useful information that can be had from Alexa toolbar are links to some more websites that are similar to the one being presently viewed. A great help that. Why? Suppose you are looking for information on, say mosquito repellent. You start by searching the term on your favorite search engine, which then throws up a list of urls’ closely matching your search term in the SERP (search engine result page). As you select a url from the list and browse the related website that deals on the subject of your search term, you will simultaneously be shown links on the toolbar of similar other websites. If you feel the current webpage or website is not up to your expectation or if you are inclined to explore more options, you may simply click on the link of a similar other website shown on the toolbar. When you follow one of those links and visit the new site, 2 things happen. One is of course that you are able to view a similar website without much of an effort. Second is that you will get to see a new set of related links on the toolbar that may be partially or fully same or different from the earlier ones. You will thus have multiple options of websites while you roam from one site to another looking for required information without the hassle of repeatedly referring to search engines. This feature allows you to save time you would have otherwise spent for searching afresh. Isn’t that a topper? You bet. What else? Quite a lot. For example, you will know ‘reach’ of your website per million toolbar users, which other sites link to yours (pretty common feature), search in various platforms (like stocks, news, dictionary and thesaurus, default search being in Google), email a webpage to your friend, be quickly taken to Amazon (Alexa is an Amazon company) for shopping and so on. But what perhaps takes the cake is the feature provided in collaboration with WayBackMachine [http://www.archive.org/web/web.php], said to be the largest internet archive online. When you click the link (toward the right end of the toolbar, the ‘page history’) you will be taken to WayBackMachine’s search result page that details year-wise links of your website since the time it has come online. You click a link that says say ‘April 12, 1999’, and pronto you get to see what your website looked then. I felt pretty nostalgic while recently checking my painting website. Like seeing my childhood pictures in half-pants, eh! To download Alexa toolbar, click here [http://download.alexa.com/index.cgi]. Not for Firefox Well then, an Alexa toolbar does indeed make web-life easier. There is though a major drawback. Firefox does not allow Alexa toolbar, and so Firefox users will remain bereft of Alexa’s advantages. However Firefox does permit using Quirk’s SearchStatus [http://www.quirk.biz/searchstatus/], which is quite a useful tool. SearchStatus is basically a toolbar extension for Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox users. The advantage with SearchStatus is that it shows (if chosen) both Alexa Ranking and Google PageRank for a webpage in a remarkably unobtrusive manner. Locate it at the bottom corner of browser or on menubar at top, you may not even notice it is there. Authored by Craig Raw, SearchStatus is very cool in the sense that it offers nearly all that Alexa toolbar offers, plus you get to see some features of Google toolbar as well, including the all-important PageRank. Do you need more? The answer is a qualified ‘yes’. You may also need Google toolbar to make your web-life more complete. Let me explain. If you are a How to Use Subdomains Part I ay simply click on the link of a similar other website shown on the toolbar.Many people have heard of subdomains, but do not know how to use them and tend to pass them by as another website novelty. In fact, subdomains can be very powerful tools in internet marketing and many people cannot do without them. So what is a subdomain?When you buy some web space from a web host, you have to choose and register a domain name. This is the name that your website is known by, in the same way that you are known by your name. When you ‘buy’ a domain you are actually buying the exclusive rights to use that name, but never actually own it. In fact, do not buy it but lease it, and have to keep renewing it according to how many years use you pay for.If you check an internet address, or URL, such as http://www.mydomain.com/file.html then the domain part of that is ‘mydomain’ while file.html is a file in that domain. Part of the domain name is the Top Level Domain (TDL) such as .com, .net, etc.A subdomain is a directory of your main domain that acts li When you follow one of those links and visit the new site, 2 things happen. One is of course that you are able to view a similar website without much of an effort. Second is that you will get to see a new set of related links on the toolbar that may be partially or fully same or different from the earlier ones. You will thus have multiple options of websites while you roam from one site to another looking for required information without the hassle of repeatedly referring to search engines. This feature allows you to save time you would have otherwise spent for searching afresh. Isn’t that a topper? You bet. What else? Quite a lot. For example, you will know ‘reach’ of your website per million toolbar users, which other sites link to yours (pretty common feature), search in various platforms (like stocks, news, dictionary and thesaurus, default search being in Google), email a webpage to your friend, be quickly taken to Amazon (Alexa is an Amazon company) for shopping and so on. But what perhaps takes the cake is the feature provided in collaboration with WayBackMachine [http://www.archive.org/web/web.php], said to be the largest internet archive online. When you click the link (toward the right end of the toolbar, the ‘page history’) you will be taken to WayBackMachine’s search result page that details year-wise links of your website since the time it has come online. You click a link that says say ‘April 12, 1999’, and pronto you get to see what your website looked then. I felt pretty nostalgic while recently checking my painting website. Like seeing my childhood pictures in half-pants, eh! To download Alexa toolbar, click here [http://download.alexa.com/index.cgi]. Not for Firefox Well then, an Alexa toolbar does indeed make web-life easier. There is though a major drawback. Firefox does not allow Alexa toolbar, and so Firefox users will remain bereft of Alexa’s advantages. However Firefox does permit using Quirk’s SearchStatus [http://www.quirk.biz/searchstatus/], which is quite a useful tool. SearchStatus is basically a toolbar extension for Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox users. The advantage with SearchStatus is that it shows (if chosen) both Alexa Ranking and Google PageRank for a webpage in a remarkably unobtrusive manner. Locate it at the bottom corner of browser or on menubar at top, you may not even notice it is there. Authored by Craig Raw, SearchStatus is very cool in the sense that it offers nearly all that Alexa toolbar offers, plus you get to see some features of Google toolbar as well, including the all-important PageRank. Do you need more? The answer is a qualified ‘yes’. You may also need Google toolbar to make your web-life more complete. Let me explain. If you are a The Legalities of Running a Business in Your Home links of your website since the time it has come online. You click a link that says say ‘April 12, 1999’, and pronto you get to see what your website looked then. I felt pretty nostalgic while recently checking my painting website. Like seeing my childhood pictures in half-pants, eh! To download Alexa toolbar, click here [http://download.alexa.com/index.cgi].As a matter of fact, depending on the business you are running in your home, there are probably a number of rules and regulations you will need to follow.For example, if you are planning on opening a home day care business, you will need to have a license to operate. This will mean that a city inspector will come in and take a look at your residence to make sure it meets the safety codes and rules that your city and state has set forth for such home daycare centers. Additionally, you will need to permit occasional visits from the overseeing government agency to ensure you are still up to code.If you are living in a covenant controlled community, you will need to dig up the bylaws of your homeowners’ association and take a look about what it says with respect to home based businesses. Some associations do not permit businesses to be run out of homes within their vicinity, while others only limit the kinds of business you may engage in or the hours of operation.If you are not Not for Firefox Well then, an Alexa toolbar does indeed make web-life easier. There is though a major drawback. Firefox does not allow Alexa toolbar, and so Firefox users will remain bereft of Alexa’s advantages. However Firefox does permit using Quirk’s SearchStatus [http://www.quirk.biz/searchstatus/], which is quite a useful tool. SearchStatus is basically a toolbar extension for Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox users. The advantage with SearchStatus is that it shows (if chosen) both Alexa Ranking and Google PageRank for a webpage in a remarkably unobtrusive manner. Locate it at the bottom corner of browser or on menubar at top, you may not even notice it is there. Authored by Craig Raw, SearchStatus is very cool in the sense that it offers nearly all that Alexa toolbar offers, plus you get to see some features of Google toolbar as well, including the all-important PageRank. Do you need more? The answer is a qualified ‘yes’. You may also need Google toolbar to make your web-life more complete. Let me explain. If you are an IE user, you may certainly like to install Google toolbar, for how else would you automatically know the PageRank of a webpage! On the other hand, if you make do with Firefox, you may perhaps omit Google toolbar if you have installed Quirk’s SearchStatus. But then Google toolbar is so feature-rich that without it you will miss out on many advantages. I am not going to explain Google toolbar anew. Click here [http://www.google.com/support/toolbar/bin/static.py?page=features.html] to know all you need to. The bottomline therefore is if you are an active surfer, you will most certainly benefit from both Alexa toolbar (or its ‘derivative’ through SearchStatus) and Google toolbar. As they say if it is good to be informative, it is still better to know how to remain informative. To that extent, toolbars are a necessity on the web, if not must-have.
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