Showing posts with label Writting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writting. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

SEO is the key to Success


SEO is of two types: On-site SEO & Off-site SEO. There are certain factors which measures the peak of your SEO:  articles

1) TITLE: Make sure you give proper and complete title to your article. The title should clearly express the body of your article. You should include important keywords (i.e. topics included in your article) in the title of your article so that search engines get better idea of what is inside your
article. 

1) QUALITY: By quality, we simply mean writing a good piece of article with no room for grammar, spelling and formatting errors. Your article should clearly talks of the topic it has been written about i.e. it should smartly match up with the TITLE of your article. And your article should be longer enough to accommodate all the information concerned with that topic. It is necessary that you highlight important keywords/phrases/terms/queries in the body of your article so that search
engines could lay more emphasizes on those terms. Make sure that your articles are free of grammar and spelling mistakes as search engines usually demote poorly written articles.

SEO--The key to the success of the network business ?????-??????

3) BACKLINKS: Above two points comes under on-site SEO. Now we will talk about off-site SEO. Backlinking is the best method for doing off-site SEO. Backlinking simply means linking articles from other related websites. It is one of the highly stressed factors in order to boost search engine rankings for any article. So whenever you publish a article with us, always try to backlink it from other websites thereafter. 

Friday, 28 December 2012

The best poems of 2012 composed by Benter Adede

Helium came down, but not to worry; I still have my poetry at http://poems-forlife.blogspot.com/

A list of my Favourite Poems by my Favourite Poet.

Poetry: I feel used http://www.helium.com/items/2371335-i-feel-used
Poetry: Dear Lord http://www.helium.com/items/2355355-dear-lord
Poetry: I'm not crazy http://www.helium.com/items/2330863-im-not-crazy
Poetry: I've been holding on http://www.helium.com/items/2350703-poetry-ive-been-holding-on
Poetry: In this life http://www.helium.com/items/2332869-youre-my-all-in-this-life
Poetry: A teardrop on a rose http://www.helium.com/items/2325763-teardrop-on-a-rose
Poetry: You're a distraction http://www.helium.com/items/2326330-youre-a-distraction
Poetry: A good-hearted woman http://www.helium.com/items/2324748-a-good-hearted-woman
Poetry: Summer holidays http://www.helium.com/items/2328972-this-summer-camping
Poetry: You're the one http://www.helium.com/items/2321588-youre-the-one
Poetry: Vows http://www.helium.com/items/2326822-marriage-vows
Poetry: Just for you http://www.helium.com/items/2326778-just-for-you
Poetry: Friends http://www.helium.com/items/2344470-my-forever-friend
Poetry: Disappear http://www.helium.com/items/2336213-now-you-see-it-now-you-dont
Poetry: Crime doesn't pay http://www.helium.com/items/2326373-crime-doesnt-pay
Poetry: Complete and total shock http://www.helium.com/items/2326331-complete-and-total-shock
Poetry: I feel used http://www.helium.com/items/2371335-i-feel-used
Poetry: The most beautiful woman http://www.helium.com/items/2325038-the-most-beautiful-woman
Poetry: True story http://www.helium.com/knowledge/670831-poetry-true-story
 Poetry: The world is just awesome http://www.helium.com/knowledge/670826-poetry-the-world-is-just-awesome
Poetry: Surprisingly human http://www.helium.com/knowledge/670834-poetry-surprisingly-human
Poetry: Start at home http://www.helium.com/knowledge/670832-poetry-start-at-home
Poetry: Play every day http://www.helium.com/knowledge/670827-poetry-play-every-day
 Poetry: Can you hear me now? http://www.helium.com/knowledge/681509-poetry-can-you-hear-me-now

Hope you enjoy reading it as much as I did .

Thursday, 19 April 2012

Business Planning- Writing an Exit Plan


The final portion of your business plan outlines your exit strategy. It may seem odd to develop a strategy this soon to leave your business, but potential investors will want to know your long-term plans. Your exit plans need to be clear in your own mind because they will dictate how you operate the company. For example, if you plan to get listed on the stock market, you’ll want to follow certain accounting regulations from day one. If you plan to pass the business to your children, you’ll need to start training them at a certain point.

Here’s a look at some of the available strategies for entrepreneurs:

Exit Strategies for Long-Term Involvement
·         Let it run dry: This can work especially well in small businesses like sole proprietorships. In the years before you plan to exit, increase your personal salary and pay yourself bonuses

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

How to Find, Rather Than Make, Writing Time | WritersDigest.com

I love articles about being more productive. I always come to them with a hopeful expectation that some gem inside will hold the power to transform my writing time. And usually I’m left feeling disappointed—more than disappointed, actually. Guilty. Because while these articles are great at pointing out things that can be seen as a waste of time, they forget to take into account one important thing: People (yes, even writers!) need downtime. We don’t need to fill every moment with something that’s quantifiably productive. Plus, for writers, the happy truth is that downtime can be productive in all sorts of ways.

Don’t feel pressured to give up things you enjoy—however mundane—to make time to write.

Take TV, for instance. Productivity experts jump straight to this topic almost without fail. Turn it off, they say. Think of all the other things you could be doing instead. Productive things.

They’re right, of course—in theory. Let’s talk about reality. What does yours look like? I, for example, am a working mom. I get up extra early to spend time with my son before we head off to day care and work. My lunch break, if I take one, is a visit to see how he’s doing. After work, we rush home to squeeze in as much time together as possible before, too soon, it’s time to put him to bed. And when he’s asleep and I sink onto the couch next to my husband for the first time all day, I’ve already been going nonstop (quite productively, mind you) for a full 15 hours.

There are lots of things I should do with the hour that follows—things I’ve been meaning and wanting to do, including making time to write. But you know what usually happens? We watch a little TV together. We laugh at a sitcom. We end up starting a conversation about something that happened that day and then realize we have no idea what happened on the show and have to start the DVR all over. We eat ice cream.


And you know what? I like it. We need downtime. Sure, we could be doing other productive things (or spending more “quality” time together), but the truth is (good or bad) that what we both want to do in that moment is something mindless. For some of us, at certain times of the day, that’s what it takes to unwind, and anything else would be forced. I don’t know about you, but that’s not the place my best writing comes from.


If you want to write more often, find the “write time” for you.

I’m a supporter of doing what you want to do. I have been ever since I was a kid. (Think back to what it was like to clench your fists and think, I can’t wait until I’m a grownup so I can do whatever I want to do! Conjure that feeling up—and then go have chocolate chip pancakes for dinner. You know you want to.)

My point is this: You don’t always have to give up things you enjoy—even mundane things, even things that you’re reluctant to admit you take enjoyment in—to make time to write. You don’t have to feel guilty about everything you do that isn’t writing. (And there might be other reasons you enjoy those things that you haven’t considered. You know what there’s lots of on TV? Good writing—dialogue, characters, plots, settings, themes, ideas …)


Does this mean I don’t get any writing done in the evenings? Actually, there’s a period later in the nights that I’m less fond of—when my husband falls asleep the instant his head hits the pillow and I lie there marveling at how he can do that. I often redirect that time to my laptop, even if only 20 or 30 minutes—and a great unintended side effect is that my work-in-progress stays in my mind as I drift off to sleep, so the “boys in the basement,” as Stephen King dubbed his creative subconscious, can work while I rest. And the work I’ve done in these periods is not at all negligible when working toward my weekly word quotas (see my previous post: Do You ReallyNeed to Write Every Day?).


How can you go about finding time to write?

I’m not saying this will also work for you. What I am saying is this: Try to notice time in your day, even if it’s only 15 minutes, when you are not doing something you enjoy or something you have to do. What time do you already have that you can reuse as writing time?

Focus also on what’s already working for you, and see how you can expand on your own best practices and employ them elsewhere.


What are the most effective ways you make time to write? Share your tips below!

Hint: This topic is on my mind because of a future issue we’re working on. I’d love to hear your ideas! Leave a comment below to keep the conversation going, and you might just see your response printed in WD. 

Jessica Strawser
Editor, Writer’s Digest


Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Freelance Writing

10 Reasons to Become a Writer

  1. You are welcome to join the friendly family of freelance writers at Academia-Research.com if:
  2. You want to become more productive in the pecuniary sense - to earn extra (and significant at that) sums of money — or in the sense of creating more text pieces that are in high demand;
  3. You want to receive new learning opportunities in order to enhance the professional knowledge level;
  4. You are equipped with the appropriate writing skills and want to test them at the actual battleground. In that case we can serve your tool for self-discovery;
  5. You want to become independent both economically and morally and to take total control of your life;
  6. You possess vast knowledge and numerous insights on some subjects and want to share them with someone except your diaries and notes;
  7. You are self-disciplined, work well independently and do not like direct and obtrusive supervision right behind your back in the office;
  8. You like written word and have a lot to tell people about: your personal emotions, deep thoughts and wise considerations;
  9. You have gained some important eye-opening experience that is a must for everyone to find out about;
  10. You are a teacher or a scientist who got tired of the narrow and boring limitations of the former occupations and want to start new life in the familiar academic surroundings;
  11. You are a romantic idealist and still think it is possible to change people and the world for better by the power of merely a written word.
Well, they are eleven!

Freelance Writing

Monday, 20 February 2012

How great writing inspires more great writing

4 writers share a proven technique for improving your work—reading the work of others
By Brandi-Ann Uyemura
Published: February 15, 2012
Brandi-Ann Uyemura
Brandi-Ann Uyemura
A beautifully composed sentence can leave readers in awe, but it can also have a motivating effect on other writers. In the 1997 movie As Good as It Gets, Jack Nicholson’s character says, “You make me want to be a better man.” Good writing can have that same effect—inspiring writers to be better.

Writer/editor Dina Santorelli, for example, finds inspiration in the beauty of a well-written sentence, whether it’s from watching the television series House or reading The Submission by Amy Waldman. She says good writing “inspires me to reach deep down into my own bag of tricks—or perhaps my soul—and try to touch someone else in the way I have been [moved].”

Becky Levine, author of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide, derives inspiration purely from