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Two Ways Of Earning Online Money

By: John

 

When it comes to producing an info-product, there are 2 types of methods to choose from. You can either be creative or innovative. Creative means, you look at the market and come up with a good solution. 

 

In effect, it is coming up with an info-product that will solve an existing need. Say for instance, you realize that people have a problem with writing articles, then you put up something like a rewriter software.

 

Or, if you realize that many people are trying to plan their joint venture's details, you can invent a joint venture profile software. Essentially, you'll be the first person to hit in the market. Make sense?

 

 

However if you want to minimize your risk of failing and earn cash fast, I'll opt to be an innovator. Observe the existing products available to fulfill the demand of a market. Look how good the sales volume is. Then, I'll be an innovator to provide better solution or tap on the existing opportunity.

 

Not sure what this means?

 

Let me explain ...

 

You may have realized that there are a lot of  sales letter generator in the market, this is because of the innovative marketers that are creating them. PayDotCom, a relatively new company, is an added example of an innovator market that gives the same service as Clickbank.com 

 

It was launched successfully after the creative company called Clickbank.com. Clickbank.com was the first site that provides credit card processing service with built-in affiliate tracking program for online marketers to use. Currently, there are new innovative marketers that have produced an affiliate tracking tool that can be included with other credit card processors like Paypal.com, 2checkout, authorize.net, etc.

 

Innovative marketing is not just about duplicating what is successful and trying to be superior, bigger or cheaper. That's a very narrow observation on how to make money which will eventually fail. {Just|Simply] by adding these 2 added ingredients in it, you'll change the whole profit model:

 

1. Looking for an angle 

 

Finding an angle means positioning yourself unique from those who made it first. For example, Clickbank.com is a success. However other affiliate tracking tools that did not have a built-in credit card processor were very successful as well by tying up with third party credit card company. PayDotCom is also another good example of this for they solve the core problem.

 

2. Complimenting with the pioneer

 

Offer an info-product that can ride on the existing successful market. For discussion purposes, let's take for instance Clickbank.com. There are a lot of new tools created to improve the ease of using Clickbank. 

 

 

Examples are: Software to handle your Clickbank.com affiliates; Software to extract your Clickbank sales report into a Microsoft Excel file; Software to make Clickbank.com search engine tool that is integrated with Clickbank ID;Video tutorials on how to setup Clickbank.com account; and so much more.

 

See what's happening on the internet.Make a decision if you want to become a creative or innovative marketer. Then, TAKE ACTION!

About the Author

John Siuda is the owner of the profit pulling site selling info-products

To find out more about how to make money online and to get limited time free video training, visit

internet marketing strategy

(ArticlesBase SC #2131175)

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/ - Two Ways Of Earning Online Money

Monday, February 8, 2010

The good news in the job market is temporary -- as in temporary work. Employment for contingent workers has increased 23% since July, according to the American Staffing Association. Close to 166,000 temp jobs have been added to the payrolls since last summer, reports the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
That’s typical of the job market as the economy emerges from recession. For managers, contracting with temporary workers seems a more prudent choice than taking on full-time staff -- especially with talk of persistent economic woes still in the air.
What’s different about this recovery is that companies, many of which cut staffs to the quick, seem committed to staying flexible in the long term by using contingent workers to manage everything from special projects to whole departments. Moreover, instead of the typists and factory workers who have traditionally populated the ranks of temps, these days you’re likely to be working alongside an engineer, accountant, doctor, lawyer or technology guru.
Companies now spend $425 billion annually on contingent labor, which accounts for about 11% of the workforce, or 14 million people. “We’re seeing much stronger demand for professional skills,” says Joanie Ruge, senior vice-president of Adecco Group North America, a giant temp-staffing agency. “We have 1,500 openings across the U.S. for contract accounting and finance positions.”
Littler Mendelson, a worldwide law firm specializing in labor law, is firmly convinced of the coming contingent-worker revolution. Littler predicts that half of the new workers added in 2010 will be contingent -- enough that soon 25% to 35% of employees in the U.S. will be on finite stints, working project to project or under contract. The possibility that health insurance will become more affordable to those outside traditional employment arrangements could be a big impetus.
It’s getting easier to maintain an upward career trajectory as a contingent worker. Professional connections are easy to make and maintain via electronic networks, such as Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter, and via plain old e-mail. Varied assignments that expose you to different companies stretch your skills. And in addition to the services of traditional staffing agencies, such as Adecco or Manpower Inc., a host of other businesses, such as MBO Partners and BOTH, have sprung up to help people committed to the free-agent lifestyle. These firms provide back-office work such as billing, bookkeeping and tax services; they may also offer group insurance and retirement plans and facilitate collaboration with peers.
For now, though, most people who take on temp work still hope for a permanent offer -- and 20% to 30% of them will likely get one. But a recent survey by the American Staffing Association showed that 25% of temps preferred the autonomy and flexibility of a contingent career, where success depends on your skills and the demand for them instead of on the fortunes of a single company or even an entire industry. Says ASA president Richard Wahlquist: “It’s a different kind of job security.”
A contingent of small firms with expertise in class actions and products liability litigation are behind a legal onslaught against Toyota Motor Sales USA Inc. following reports of sudden acceleration in many of its most popular vehicle models.
As of Friday, Toyota had attracted more than a dozen class actions filed on behalf of consumers who allege that Toyota's failure to adequately disclose problems with its accelerator pedals amounted to fraud. At least three other suits were filed on behalf of people injured, or whose family members were killed, when their Toyota accelerated without warning. Additional firms planned shareholder suits against Toyota, whose stock value has dropped beneath the weight of the negative publicity.
"This is not a human carnage, this is economic disassembling," said Tim Howard, a professor at Northeastern University in Boston who as a plaintiffs attorney specializes in consumer and products liability litigation. "But Toyota will experience some pain from this process. And it's our job to inflict it."
Despite the rising litigation, the consumer claims face a number of obstacles, according to some law professors and defense attorneys. Consumers will have to prove actual economic damages and assert individual claims that are consistent enough to merit class certification by federal courts -- both feats that were difficult for plaintiffs' firms in earlier consumer class actions alleging economic harm due to a defective product.
"These kinds of lawsuits will have a rough time in court," said James A. Henderson Jr., a professor at Cornell Law School who specializes in torts and products liability. "Courts will dismiss them. And in the long run, not very much will come of it."
ASSESSING THE DAMAGES
Toyota announced on Jan. 26 that it would stop selling eight models because of accelerator pedals that can stick in the depressed position, causing the cars to speed up out of control. The company has recalled 2.3 million vehicles with that problem. Earlier, Toyota recalled another 4.2 million vehicles, blaming a problem with floor mats.
On Feb. 1, Toyota announced a plan to fix the accelerators. Since then, Congress has scheduled hearings and the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) has begun considering fines on the ground that Toyota may have delayed the recalls.
That's not all. On Thursday, NHTSA launched a formal investigation into a faulty braking system on the 2010 Toyota Prius hybrid. Toyota blamed a software glitch but hadn't ordered a recall as of Friday, and no lawsuits had been filed regarding the Prius.
Brian Lyons, a spokesman for Toyota Motor Sales USA Inc., declined comment on the litigation. The company is based in Torrance, Calif.
Most of the suits are class actions filed on behalf of consumers alleging economic harm, not actual physical injuries -- essentially, the case is that a defective car isn't worth as much as the quality car that buyers thought they were paying for. In most cases, the lead plaintiffs have experienced some type of unintended acceleration. The suits, which in most cases involve a potential class of consumers in the states in which they were filed, have been brought by small firms across the country, including Lambert and Nelson, a products liability firm in New Orleans specializing in maritime and aviation torts; Lewis & Babcock, a civil litigation and toxic tort firm in Columbia, S.C.; Morgan & Morgan, a personal injury firm based in Orlando, Fla.; Hilliard Muñoz Guerra, a personal injury and class action firm in Corpus Christi, Texas; McCuneWright, a firm in Redlands, Calif., that specializes in consumer class actions and defective products, particularly involving automobiles; and Kirtland & Packard, a firm in Los Angeles. Two larger firms, Houston's Susman Godfrey and Baron & Budd of Dallas, brought class actions in California.
The firms filed in federal court, in general, alleging state claims of consumer fraud, breach of implied contract, negligence, breach of implied warranty and unjust enrichment.
"There are damages among consumers because, no matter what happens here, the cars that people bought will be worth less, whether there's a quick fix or a long fix," said Howard, one of the lawyers behind an action filed on Jan. 29 in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida. That suit seeks $1 billion in damages on behalf of a nationwide class of consumers.
Some 15 law firms have been working as a team in that case, including Jacksonville, Fla.-based Wilner Hartley & Metcalf, whose name partner, Norwood "Woody" Wilner, is well known for bringing successful claims against the tobacco industry. Howard said that individual lawyers on the team plan to file another three dozen suits within the next week or two in at least 25 states. Eventually, he said, the suits will be coordinated as multidistrict litigation.
One of the team's members, Stephen A. Sheller of Sheller P.C. in Philadelphia, said that he planned to file consumer class actions in Pennsylvania and New Jersey in the coming days. Sheller has obtained billions of dollars in recoveries from tobacco companies and, most recently, from Pfizer Inc. and Eli Lilly and Co.
Robert Steinberg, a partner at Cincinnati's Waite, Schneider, Bayless & Chesley, cautioned that federal actions on behalf of a national class could be difficult to sustain, given that consumer fraud statutes vary from state to state. His firm filed a class action on behalf of Ohio consumers, alleging that Toyota failed to inform an Ohio couple of the unintended acceleration dangers associated with a 2010 Toyota Camry they leased in November. The car already had a repaired floor mat, according to the suit.
"It's still an Ohio class action suit based on Ohio law, so there's not going to be a problem in our view in certifying the class," he said. "The conduct is consistent to the class."
Observers warned that consumer class actions could face trouble no matter where they are filed. The legal battle will center on whether the consumers can prove damages, said Jeffrey Judd, a partner in the San Francisco office of Howrey. Judd represented Ford Motor Co. in rollover cases allegedly tied to recalled Firestone tires.
Toyota, he said, likely will assert a defense that says: "Those people who bought their vehicles, we repaired any defects and they haven't been harmed. So where's the harm? Show us how people have been hurt."
It's been more than a decade since "Amy," as she's known in court papers, was first sexually abused by her uncle. The abuse ended long ago and he's in prison, but the pictures he made when she was 8 or 9 are among the most widely circulated child pornography images online.
Now the 20-year-old woman is taking aim at anyone who would view those images and asking for restitution in hundreds of criminal cases around the country.
Her requests and those filed by other victims of child pornography are forcing federal judges nationwide to grapple with tough legal questions: Is someone who possesses an abusive image responsible for the harm suffered by a particular child? And how much should that person have to pay?
"It is hard to describe what it feels like to know that at any moment, anywhere, someone is looking at pictures of me as a little girl being abused by my uncle and is getting some kind of sick enjoyment from it. It's like I am being abused over and over again," Amy wrote in court papers.
"I want it all erased. I want it all stopped. But I am powerless to stop it just like I was powerless to stop my uncle," she wrote.
The issue of criminal restitution in child pornography possession cases emerged last February in Connecticut when a federal judge said he would order a man convicted of possessing and distributing child pornography to pay about $200,000 to Amy. The judge said it was the first criminal case in which someone convicted of possessing illegal images — but not creating them — would be required to pay restitution. (The case settled for $130,000 before the judge issued his final order.)
Since then, requests for restitution have picked up as more victims are identified — and as a couple of victims, including Amy, have hired attorneys, said Meg Garvin, executive director of the National Crime Victim Law Institute in Portland, Ore.
Hundreds of requests have been filed nationwide, most of them by Amy's attorney, James Marsh of New York. Marsh said that as recently as five years ago, restitution would have been impossible because victims wouldn't have known when someone was caught with an image of them. The Crime Victims Rights Act of 2004 set up a system for notifying the victims. Now, Marsh gets several notices a day on behalf of Amy.
Marsh, who declined to make Amy available for an interview, is seeking restitution for Amy in 350 cases nationwide. Each request is about $3.4 million. She won't get that amount in every case. But any sum collected would go toward that total to cover Amy's counseling, medical costs, future lost earnings and lawyer fees.
Courts have been divided on how to handle the requests. At least two courts in Florida ordered restitution of more than $3.2 million, but some others ordered nominal amounts. Several others denied it.
"Everyone is really grappling with this in good faith," said Marsh. "It's all over the place."
In Minnesota last month, a federal judge ordered prosecutors to explain why they didn't ask for restitution in a case involving images of Amy.
The court "will no longer accept silence from the government," wrote U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz.
In a response brief, Assistant U.S. Attorney Erika Mozangue wrote that prosecutors didn't get a restitution request until after a plea deal had been worked out, and added, "The determination of restitution in possession cases is an unsettled issue."
Some defense attorneys have argued that children are not victimized by mere possession of pornography or that their client had no direct connection to the victims. Others have argued it's impossible to fairly calculate how much harm one offender caused the victim.
After a federal judge in Florida found Arthur Weston Staples III, of Manassas, Va., jointly liable for $3.5 million in restitution for having an image of Amy, Staples' attorney, Jonathan Shapiro, argued on appeal that there was no connection between the two "other than the fact that he possessed her image on his computer approximately 10 years after that image had been manufactured by her uncle ... who caused her extreme damage."
Prosecutors should have to prove that Amy was a victim of Staples' particular act, and that she would not have been harmed if Staples hadn't had the image, Shapiro argued. The appeal is pending.
A federal appeals court recently upheld a Texas judge's decision to deny restitution because prosecutors didn't show how much harm the specific defendant caused. The ruling in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals drew a sharp dissent from Judge James Dennis.
"Her right to restitution is not barred merely because the precise amount she is owed (by this defendant) is difficult to determine," Dennis wrote.
Other defense lawyers have said restitution requests belong in civil court.
Bradford Colbert, a William Mitchell College of Law professor, agreed.
"It just isn't appropriate for criminal court to make those determinations," he said. "This is the type of thing that should be resolved in a civil lawsuit. You get convicted of a crime and you get sued by a victim, and there's a civil lawsuit where you pursue damages."
Marie Failinger, a Hamline Law School professor, said allowing restitution in criminal cases is important because many victims don't have the resources to pursue civil cases. She predicted it would take three to five years for courts to figure out a consistent way to handle requests for criminal restitution.
Meanwhile, victims' advocates see criminal restitution as one more tool for fighting child porn.
"The people who engage in this stuff need to be held accountable, even if they are not the person who is raping the child," said Ernie Allen, president of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. "People who are distributing this stuff, people who are downloading this stuff — when they do that, there's a victim, and there's a real harm."
The crackdown comes amid growing concern that China is a center for Internet crime and industrial espionage. Search giant Google said last month its e-mail accounts were hacked from China in an assault that also hit at least 20 other companies.
Police in Hubei province arrested three people suspected of running the hacker site known as the Black Hawk Safety Net that disseminated Web site hacking techniques and Trojan software, the China Daily newspaper said. Trojans, which can allow outside access to a computer when implanted, are used by hackers to illegally control computers. The report did not say exactly when the arrests took place.
Black Hawk Safety Net recruited more than 12,000 paying subscribers and collected more than 7 million yuan ($1 million) in membership fees, while another 170,000 people had signed up for free membership, the paper said.
The report said police seized nine servers, five computers and a car, and shut down all Web sites involved in the case. Authorities also froze 1.7 million yuan ($250,000) in assets.
The shutdown of the site followed an investigation involving 50 police officers in three other provinces, the local d iang Times newspaper said.
The case can be traced to a hacking attack in 2007 on an Internet cafe in Macheng city in Hubei that caused Web services for dozens to be disrupted for more than 60 hours, the paper said. A few of the suspects caught in April said they were members of the Black Hawk Safety Net.
Black Hawk's Web site 3800hk.com could not be accessed, but a notice purportedly from Black Hawk circulating on online forums said that a backup site had been set up. The notice also sought to reassure members of its continued operations and said its reputation was being smeared by some Internet users.
"At this time, there are Internet users with evil intentions who have deliberately destroyed Black Hawk's reputation, deceived our members and stole material," the notice addressed to members said. "We must join forces and attack these Web sites."
Police in central China have shut down a hacker training operation that openly recruited thousands of members online and provided them with cyberattack lessons and malicious software, state media said Monday.
The crackdown comes amid growing concern that China is a center for Internet crime and industrial espionage. Search giant Google said last month its e-mail accounts were hacked from China in an assault that also hit at least 20 other companies.
Police in Hubei province arrested three people suspected of running the hacker site known as the Black Hawk Safety Net that disseminated Web site hacking techniques and Trojan software, the China Daily newspaper said. Trojans, which can allow outside access to a computer when implanted, are used by hackers to illegally control computers. The report did not say exactly when the arrests took place.
Black Hawk Safety Net recruited more than 12,000 paying subscribers and collected more than 7 million yuan ($1 million) in membership fees, while another 170,000 people had signed up for free membership, the paper said.
The report said police seized nine servers, five computers and a car, and shut down all Web sites involved in the case. Authorities also froze 1.7 million yuan ($250,000) in assets.
The shutdown of the site followed an investigation involving 50 police officers in three other provinces, the local d iang Times newspaper said.
The case can be traced to a hacking attack in 2007 on an Internet cafe in Macheng city in Hubei that caused Web services for dozens to be disrupted for more than 60 hours, the paper said. A few of the suspects caught in April said they were members of the Black Hawk Safety Net.
Black Hawk's Web site 3800hk.com could not be accessed, but a notice purportedly from Black Hawk circulating on online forums said that a backup site had been set up. The notice also sought to reassure members of its continued operations and said its reputation was being smeared by some Internet users.
"At this time, there are Internet users with evil intentions who have deliberately destroyed Black Hawk's reputation, deceived our members and stole material," the notice addressed to members said. "We must join forces and attack these Web sites."
A customer service officer contacted by phone, who refused to give his name, said the backup site provides content for its paying members to download course material to allow them to continue their computer lessons — though not in hacking.
The Hubei government refused to comment Monday while officials at the provincial public security bureau did not respond to repeated requests for comment.
Google threatened last month to pull out of China unless the government relented on censorship, an ultimatum that came after the search giant said it had uncovered a computer attack that tried to plunder its software coding and the e-mail accounts of human rights activists protesting Chinese policies.
Government officials have defended China's online censorship and denied involvement in Internet attacks, saying the country is the biggest victim of Web attacks. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said hackers tampered with more than 42,000 Web sites last year.
Meanwhile, scrutiny of Chinese Internet security grows following a rash of attacks traced to China and aimed at a wide array of U.S. and European targets, including military contractors, banks and technology companies.
Security consultants say it is hard to know what proportion of hacking from China is the work of individuals and whether the government is involved. But some say the high skill level of some attacks suggests China's military or other agencies might have trained or directed the hackers.
"The scale, operation and logistics of conducting these attacks — against the government, commercial and private sectors — indicates that they're state-sponsored," security firm Mandiant Corp. said in a report last month. "The Chinese government may authorize this activity, but there's no way to determine the extent of its involvement."

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Promises. We all make them, break them, and sometimes actually keep them. Except me. I never promise. Just deliver. Coz I am the DOC.
So when I drive down to my local Best Buy to pick up advertised gadgetry and marriage-saving appliances–like a dishwasher–I’d like to think that what the manufacturer says about their wares has more credibility than an online dating site power-user. But at some point, we’ve all taken that trip to the land of suck. You buy it, take it home, and before you know it, features quietly underwhelm or don’t work, or it simply breaks too soon, leaving you digging up the warranty card.
Savvy shopaholics avoid this scenario in a variety of ways, but in particular, look to third-party certifications such as Energy Star or endorsements, like CNET’s Editors’ Choice award. Such things could potentially derail a trip to post-purchase un-euphoria.
And for IT pros like you, such certifications for gear to equip your office can help you sleep better at night knowing that someone other than you also thinks where best to spend your company’s money.
There are many types of product certifications used in the IT industry; some are major institutions covering a lot of ground (ISO) and others more specific, like WHQL for Windows.
One that you should be familiar with is the Common Criteria certification; not to be confused with Creative Commons, which is completely unrelated, but maybe more common.
Common Criteria a key security standard that applies to products in all sorts of tech categories. Now for the good part, so bear with me. The role of Common Criteria is to, “provide assurance that the process of specification, implementation and evaluation of a computer security product has been conducted in a rigorous and standard manner.” It resolves the conceptual and technical differences between the standards from the European, US and Canadian criteria (ITSEC, TCSEC and CTCPEC respectively). Did you commit that quote to memory? Good.
You should know that products with the certification have undergone and passed a rigorous independent third-party testing, giving you assurance that the product meets the requirements for certification, kind of like your buddy giving you the scoop on a potential blind-date.
Note that vendors are quick to make news of any products that gain approval, so it’s a big deal.
So before you go Twitter, check out the Common Criteria portal for info you can use to impress your company’s purchase committee at the next budget meeting.
Printing now happens in many places and increasingly is done in-house on a network. That trend, coupled with the impact of the Web on the distribution of information, has taken a toll on Doc’s buddies in the commercial printing industry. That’s why an article by my friend and excellent writer Cary Sherburne at the Web site What They Think really caught my eye. It’s an interview with the Executive VP of Mergers and Acquisitions, Jim Cohen, at Consolidated Graphics (CGX), one of the largest commercial printers in the country.
The comments from Jim paint what I think is a pretty realistic picture of the state of the commercial printing industry in the United States. The outlook is both good and bad: Those printers who survive will do okay, but quite a few will continue to fail. The statistics are sobering.
WTT: Jim, how has CGX weathered the current economic storm, and what steps has the company taken to prepare for a different future?
JHC: We’ve been beaten up just like everyone else, but because of our strong balance sheet we are weathering the storm and will be well positioned when the economy begins to improve. On a relative basis, we are doing better than a lot of folks in the industry. For example, last quarter revenues were down 15% from the same quarter a year ago. But many of the companies I am looking at today have revenues that are down 25-50%. So on a relative basis, I shouldn’t complain too much. Our cash flow is still strong, but many of the companies in our industry today are experiencing negative cash flow. The environment out there is brutal.
WTT: What about the market as a whole?
JHC: If you looked at the number of traditional commercial print companies in 2001 before 9/11, not including companies printing phone books, newspapers or magazines, there were 50,000 printing companies. Then after 9/11, that whittled down to about 35,000 commercial printing companies by 2003. I am hearing that when this recession corrects itself, we will go down to about 20,000 companies. I am not sure where the data came from or whether it is right, but from what we see here, most of the companies we are looking at today probably won’t be around a year from now if we or someone else doesn’t buy them. The other interesting thing is the lag that exists in any recovery. What I mean by that is that we will see printing companies continue to fail even a few years after the recovery begins.

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