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Posts Tagged ‘Business and Econom’

Review of eBay PowerUser’s Bible (Paperback)

January 28th, 2010 No comments

eBay PowerUser's BibleOther books I’ve read were obviously published as PR pieces for eBay, but the eBay PowerUser’s Bible is the real deal! Whether you’re a new or experienced eBayer, buyer or seller, this book covers everything you’ll need to know. Since I’ve bought this book I’ve been able to earn some serious cash through eBay. The troubleshooting tips alone make this worth the purchase price.

Product Description
If you’ve always wanted your own business, here’s your chance

Now you can join the millions of eBay users who earn some or all of their income from eBay, with the in-depth instruction you’ll find in this comprehensive guide. The basics are all here-how to register, set up a PayPal account, create compelling listings, track income and expenses, report taxes-plus loads of ideas and strategies to help you grow your business and get profitable. Packed with illustrated instructions, valuable tips, and terrific techniques, this is the book you need to move from shopper to eBay PowerUser-and succeed.

  • Open a seller’s account and create listings that sell
  • Field questions, add new information, and drive the sale

  • Launch an eBay Store and build inventory

  • Find the best ways to receive payment and ship goods

  • Master Accounting 101 for eBay sellers

  • Market yourself and manage your business for growth

  • Learn sniping and other bidding strategies

  • Make business phone calls with Skype

  • Avoid licensing, legal, and other pitfalls

Use your blog as a door for customers to meet you

eBay sellers can link to their Web sites’ home pages

Check out the eBay Shipping Center for shipping services

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Review of From Suits To Sweats: How To Work At Home As A Virtual Assistant (Paperback)

January 25th, 2010 No comments

From Suits To Sweats: How To Work At Home As A Virtual AssistantI’m so glad I read this book before I got any farther with my own freelance part time business. I already have a full time job but recently was told to look into freelancing my skills on the side. When I found this book I thought I’d give it a try and I’m glad I did. This book started with an introduction to the skills typically used by a virtual assistant and covered all the necessary steps/information through landing my first client and marketing for expansion. I have no idea if I’ll ever expand but if I decide to, I know I have a good foundation and direction to go in.

Who should read this book? People who are new to the field of being a virtual assistant. People who have started venturing into this a little bit. People who have been doing it awhile but have some glitches to work out. This book covered basic information about things like setting up your office space, managing your day, common problems people have when working for themselves, and self-evaluation. It also had more detailed information about creating your own website and getting a website developer, how to arrange contracts with clients, and marketing considerations. There was a lot of information to think about and consider for myself, but I was happy that I understood it and have a direction to go on for the future.

Product Description
If you have ever considered working from home but aren’t sure where to start, this book details every step of the process. This book includes everything from picking a name and deciding on a niche area of specialization, to what equipment/software you will need. Other chapters include deciding on a business structure, creating your website, budgeting, and deciding on pricing. An entire section is devoted to explaining freelance sites, and walking you through the process of signing up, creating a profile and portfolio, bidding on projects, landing a client, completing the project, and collecting your payment. Whether you are wanting to work part-time from home to supplement your income or launch a full-time home-based business, this book will walk you through each step of creating and growing your business.

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Review of The Brand Gap: Expanded Edition (Paperback)

November 28th, 2009 No comments

The Brand Gap: Expanded EditionThis is an expanded edition of a book first published in 2003. In it, Neumeier develops in greater depth several basic ideas about how to bridge a gap between business strategy and design. My own experience suggests that on occasion, there may be a conflict or misalignment rather than a “gap.” Or the business strategy is inappropriate. Or the design concepts are wrong-headed. Or the execution fails. Whatever, Neumeier correctly notes that “A lot of people talk about it. Yet very few people understand it. Even fewer know how to manage it. Still, everyone wants it. What is it? Branding. of course — arguably the most powerful business tool since the spreadsheet.” What Neumeier offers is a “30,000-foot view of brand: what it is (and isn’t), why it works (and doesn’t), and most importantly, how to bridge the gap between logic and magic to build a sustainable competitive advantage.”Of course, that assumes that both logic and magic are present and combined…or at least within close proximity of each other.

As others have already indicated, Neumeier provides a primer (”the least amount of information necessary”) rather than a textbook. His coverage is not definitive, nor intended to be. He has a crisp writing style, complemented by “the shorthand of the conference room” (i.e. illustrations, diagrams, and summaries). Some describe his book an “easy read” but I do not. When reading short and snappy books such as this one, I have learned that certain insights resemble depth charges or time capsules: they have a delayed but eventually significant impact. For example, Neumeier explains why “Three Little Questions” can bring a high-level marketing meeting to a screeching halt:

1. Who are you?
2. What do you do?
3. Why does it matter?

I also want to express my admiration of the book’s design features. They create an appropriate visual context within which Neumeier examines each of five “Disciplines”: differentiation, collaboration, innovation, validation, and cultivation. Expect no head-snapping revelations. For many of those who read this book, its greatest value will will be derived from reiteration of certain core concepts which Neumeier reviews with uncommon clarity and concision. Check out the “Take-Home Lessons” (pages 149-157) which include

“A brand is a person’s gut feeling about a product, service, or company. It’s not what you say it is. It’s what THEY say it is.”

“Differentiation has evolved from a focus on `what it is,’ to `what it does,’ to ‘how you’ll feel,’ to `who you are.’ While features, benefits, and price are still important to people, experiences and personal identity are even more important.”

“How do you know when an idea is innovative? When it scares the hell out of you.”

Readers having relatively less experience with the branding process will especially appreciate the provision of an expanded (220-word) “Brand Glossary.” Neumeier also includes a “Recommended Reading” section in which he briefly comments on each source. When reading business books, I much prefer annotated bibliographies such as Neumeier’s to mere lists. For whatever reasons, many provide neither.

Product Description
THE BRAND GAP is the first book to present a unified theory of brand-building. Whereas most books on branding are weighted toward either a strategic or creative approach, this book shows how both ways of thinking can unite to produce a “charismatic brand”-a brand that customers feel is essential to their lives. In an entertaining two-hour read you’ll learn:

• the new definition of brand
• the five essential disciplines of brand-building
• how branding is changing the dynamics of competition
• the three most powerful questions to ask about any brand
• why collaboration is the key to brand-building
• how design determines a customer’s experience
• how to test brand concepts quickly and cheaply
• the importance of managing brands from the inside
• 220-word brand glossary

From the back cover:
Not since McLuhan’s THE MEDIUM IS THE MESSAGE has a book compressed so many ideas into so few pages. Using the visual language of the boardroom, Neumeier presents the first unified theory of branding-a set of five disciplines to help companies bridge the gap between brand strategy and customer experience. Those with a grasp of branding will be inspired by the new perspectives they find here, and those who would like to understand it better will suddenly “get it.” This deceptively simple book offers everyone in the company access to “the most powerful business tool since the spreadsheet.”

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Review of Internet Marketing For Free: The Guide: Internet Marketing To Go! (Paperback)

September 17th, 2009 No comments

Internet Marketing For Free: The Guide: Internet Marketing To Go!This book was OK. It had the potential to be a great little book on Internet marketing. However, I just had too much trouble digesting it. I did not see any reason to split the content into three parts, 21 chapters, and an appendix. And there were typos – more than just a few. On top of that, I found the book to be incredibly wordy. And the journalistic style of writing is adequate for newspaper articles, but not for something sold as a book. There were many one-sentence paragraphs throughout. And the page formatting left me thinking I was reading a text file that had been converted to PDF.

If the author had organized the book into eight chapters as follows, and done a nice job of developing a theme in each chapter, then I suspect the book would deserve at least a 4-star rating.

1. Search Engine Optimization
2. Article writing & submission
3. Blogging
4. Posting on online directories
5. Posting press releases on PR directory sites
6. Posting on free classifieds sites
7. Social networking & forums
8. Affiliate programs & Joint ventures

Unfortunately, the book is not so neatly organized. And there are numerous “bonuses” refered to in the book. When I buy a book I expect everything in it to be something I paid for. I don’t need to be told I am getting a bonus here and a bonus there.

I was able to get through parts 1 and 2 of the book before I started just skimming the text. There really is a lot of good content in this little ebook masquarading as a POD special. The author qualifies as an infopreneur and she speaks from real world experience in much of what she talks about here. There are a ton of URLs that any infopreneur would probably like to get their hands on. Whether they will be good links in a year or two I don’t know. But the raw content in this little tome saves it for me. Otherwise I would have really tanked its star rating. 3 stars!

Product Description
Internet Marketing for Free: The GUIDE will teach you what you need to know about internet marketing.You’ll learn the latest internet marketing techniques:*Search engine optimization*Article Marketing*Blogging*Free Classifieds and Pay Per Clicks*Joint Ventures*Press Releases*Affiliate Program Management*ForumsThe best part is that each of these internet marketing techniques are completely free to do. All you need to do is spend a little time setting up your marketing campaigns. Apply these techniques consistently to your sites, and you’ll drive all the targeted traffic to your sites you need, and you’ll do it on a zero marketing budget.

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