Saturday, January 20, 2007

Wall of Money

I just read this.....I receive three different newsletters from Dan Kennedy this excerpt is from his Marketing to the Mass-Affluent.

NO BUSINESS should be run provincially anymore. EVERYBODY should think about the mass affluent, affluent and super-affluent markets GLOBALLY. We should focus on export/import; export what we have, import their money.

There is a 'wall of money' coming from around the world. The biggest boom of Baby Boomer spending is yet to come.

Think Tsunami!


Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Friday, January 19, 2007

Everything is Nothing.....

I just read this from Dan Kennedy......This continues with my theme of ideas and direction to think and ponder about for the new year.

Everything is nothing without its successful marketing! Great marketing cures nearly all problems.....This tells you THE skill above all skills you MUST master in order to forever be master of your destiny and life without limits.



Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Goal Setting

I just read this.....by Anna Johnson http://www.successaccelerator.net/personal-goal-setting/people.htm


* GOAL SETTING *
“5 Words To Live By”
Yesterday, I was listening to an audio program by Lee Milteerwhen she said something that really resonated with me.
She said 5 words that I feel are THE words to live by when it comes to accomplishing anything that's important to you:
"Aim for EXCELLENCE, not perfection"
Perfection is often illusory... and perfectionism probably derails and strangles more projects and goals than it assists. Excellence, on the other hand, still gets things done, without sacrificing quality.
Alternatively, there's the "mantra" that: "It doesn't need to be perfect, it just has to be good enough"
But "good enough" isn't quite in the same league as "excellent" is it?
"Good enough" wins you the Gold medal, but "excellent" gets you the World record too!
You'll be hearing about Lee Milteer a bit more over the coming weeks. She's one of America's most esteemed and sought after speakers and productivity coaches... and I've secured the ability to give you a "sneak peak" into one of her life changing programs. More on that soon...



Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Selling used phone systems & used phones via the Web.
He lives in San Diego, CA Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/index.html

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Jimmy Brown

I sent this email to Jimmy Brown, If you are tired of going from the latest trend to the latest latest trend on the internet read my comments below or check out his site.http://listandtraffic2.com/go.php?4682

Hi Jimmy,

I did recently join, first, your a Christian giving back, my partner and Iare too. Your info on how to fail on the internet should be requiredreading for everyone even with a thought of entering the world of internetbusiness.We have a successful offline business ($3m in sales) and have been growingour business online to compliment our bricks and mortar. I am in charge ofmarketing and have been guilty of going from the newest product to thenewest newest product etc.I have prayed about helping me focus and your site came to me. It was aGOD thing.I just read your Blueprint for Success and am applying the focus youmention. I had already started the implementation of processes iearticles, unique landing pages, target emails etc. to gain more traffic toour sites. You have given me more ideas and now I am voraciously readingall your list building articles.Keep it coming....You really cut thru the noise out on the internet.

God Bless...Mark

PS Jimmy's site is below.

http://listandtraffic2.com/go.php?4682




Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Friday, January 12, 2007

Something New, Try Something Old

I just read this.....by Perry Marshall

Phil Alexander, has one of the largest collections of hard-to-find marketing and advertising books in the world. People routinely pay Phil hundreds of dollars to find exceedingly rare, out-of-print books.Phil observes: The people who are most interested in these hoary texts are virtually without exception the best, brightest and highest paid in any profession.

Phil and I recently attended a seminar in Orlando,and he had an old book from the 1920's. There were two people who walked by, picked up the book and studied it with great interest. They were John Carlton and Scott Haines - two of the most successful, and highest paid, advertising copywriters in the country.Coincidence? Not on your life. They're rabid consumers of everything they can get their hands on. They'll both tell you that the very best books on advertising were written nearly 100 years ago.Truly groundbreaking discoveries are incredibly rare. And their discoverers usually aren't coming up with new techniques - they're identifying previously unknown principles.

Take Claude Hopkins, author of "Scientific Advertising," written in 1918. Hopkins was the inventor of coupons, and he's one of the titans of advertising. And he's ignored by most people in the ad business today. But you can take that book and apply it to Internet advertising right now and you'll be standing on solid rock.

Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Thursday, January 11, 2007

I just read this.....Since it is January and want to get the new year off to a great start, I am focusing on articles I have read in the past that have helped me.

"Focus On Your Strengths, Not Your Weaknesses"----------------------------------------------Anna JohnsonEditor, Success Acceleratorwww.successaccelerator.netpersonal-success@successaccelerator.net

How many times do "well-meaning" managers, colleagues, friendsand others advise you to "work on your weaknesses"?Well... in many cases, working on your weaknesses is the WORSTthing you can do!Now I'm not talking about acquiring certain skills or knowledgeyou currently lack. If you need certain skills or knowledge toachieve a particular goal, then by all means get that skill orknowledge.What I'm talking about is being consistently "bad" at something,or finding it difficult to master something... no matter howhard you try. Like math. Or writing. Or schmoozing. Or being neat!I know this isn't "politically correct" but the reality is:you're not good at everything and you NEVER will be.We're all unique - with unique talents and gifts - for a reason.So are you going to waste precious time and effort struggling toget just a tiny bit better at something that just doesn't - andwill never - come naturally... or are you going to build andcapitalize on your true God-given talents?Fact is, you'll derive far, far, far greater value - however youmeasure that term (money, results, accomplishments, whatever) -by improving your STRENGTHs. Not to mention enjoyment.And this isn't just my opinion - this is the principle ofleverage at work. But I won't bore you with a long explanation :) Just trust me on this: focus on your strengths, not yourweaknesses. You'll get much better results.



Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

I just found this in my data base...

Characteristics of a Professional



Professionals love problems:
Non-professionals whine and worry about problems rather than tackle them. Professionals can’t wait to get started on solving a problem. To the Pros, problems are like candy to a kid. They devour them. They solve them.

Professionals are on time:
To a professional, time is the scarcest of all commodities. Therefore, they respect the time of others by meeting all commitments on time. They resent those who fail to do the same.

Professionals complete and follow through:
Professionals get the job done because they avoid excuses, alibis, and passing the buck. They do what is necessary to complete a job even if tremendous obstacles get in the way. To the Pro, there is no such phrase as, “the computer can’t do it”. They simple figure out another way to accomplish the task at hand.

Professionals love numbers and details:
The undisciplined mind works in generalities and platitudes, the “professional” mind works in specifics and substance. The professional remembers facts and figures, hunts for ratios, analyzes detailed information, quotes resources, and substantiates all opinions with sound reasoning.

Professional assign priorities:
True pros do not stamp out ants if elephants are coming down the path. They do not hit tacks with sledgehammers. Rather they apply just the right amount of emphasis and effort that a job requires. Professionals can sift through a myriad of variables, get to the heart of the matter, and take decisive action speedily.

Professionals are organized:
A professional has a To Do list with him or her at all times. They also use a calendar and a notebook for recording thoughts and inspirational ideas as they occur. Professionals can find things. They never misplace a memo, lose a scrap of paper with an important phone number, or write the wrong date for important meetings.

Professionals read avidly:
Professionals have something to read at all times. If they have a spare moment, they read. They rate what they read in priority, i.e. articles, memos, the paper.

Professionals communicate well:
They know how to speak, listen and write. In most cases, good speakers are weak writers, and vice versa. Professionals, however, try to work on their shortcomings. They also demonstrate compassion and sensitivity. They watch and listen for little clues that help them understand their supervisors and subordinates.

Eternal optimists:
Professionals abhor negative thinking. If there is any way to get the job done, they will figure it out. Professionals also inspire others to be positive in attitude.

Professionals do not procrastinate:
The temptation to put things off is strong, even for a professional. The pros resist it with the “ready, aim, fire” philosophy. Get it done, get it done now.

Professionals compensate for their weaknesses:
God’s children are not equally talented. The professional is aware of personal weaknesses but does not allow them to detour progress. He or she compensates by seeking advice when necessary, trying to overcome flaws, and allotting extra time for unfamiliar difficulties.

Professionals always praise others:
Those who are most successful tend to credit others with their success. They do so continually and sincerely. Their praise comes fast by telephone call, thank you note, follow-up memo or recognition among peers. Since professionals understand the power of positive reinforcement, “stroking” is natural for them.

Professionals have a special look or manner:
About 90% of our first impression of a new acquaintance is based on visual cues. Professionals are very careful about making sure their visual image is appropriate. They are neatly groomed and tastefully attired. Professionals are neither flamboyant nor dull. They know what to wear and what to say on all occasions. When a professional enters a room, he or she sends signals of confidence, humility, and discipline. Charisma is not based on pretension or gimmickry, but upon long-time experiences with success.



Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Monday, January 08, 2007

Bridges

I just read this.....


"One of the hardest things in life to learn is which bridge to cross and which bridge to burn."





Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html

Copywriting Overstatement the Kiss of Death?

I just read this....by Perry Marshall

-The #1 disconnect is between the keyword itself and your basic message.
You'd be astonished how big the differences are between seemingly similar keywords, how different the visitors can be between, say "guinea pig" and "guinea pigs."

-Overstatement: Amateur copywriters think writing copy is all about bombast and drama. Exaggeration and yellow highlighter. They say stupid things like "Why you should crawl buck nekked on broken glass to get your hands on these hot new secrets" and the first thing the visitor thinks is "Oh no, not another one of those yo-yos" and quickly punches the BACK button. Throws it into reverse and he's outta there.I think one of the most powerful copywriting tools is *Understatement.*

Here's an example: When I was in Nairobi Kenya I met a 7 year old boy who was dying of AIDS for lack of a $1 bus ticket to get a free shot. (No joke.) A rookie copywriter might have gotten in-your-face about this unfortunate boy.

I said:I met another boy named Peter Githiri,7 years old, who is also HIV positive. Peteris not doing so well. A sponsor has not been found for him yet, and lacking medical attention, he is obviously very sick. "Not doing so well" got the point across. It left Peter's appearance to the readers' imagination. Hey, you're not dumb. You can fill in the blanks. Right?

-Treating all markets the same, or that all techniques work the same way with everyone. No siree Bob. I was talking to Tellman Knudson the other day, who sells products both to online marketers and to parents of ADHD children. He said, "What entrepreneurs respond to and what parents of children respond to are TOTALLY, ABSOLUTELY DIFFERENT."

My motto is: Talk to people the way they talk to each other and themselves.

-Know what you're going to sell them next. You know what's suicide for a Google AdWords campaign? Trying to sell one product in one shot, having no follow up before the sale and nothing to sell after the sale. You could get away with this 2-3 years ago, but you can't now.



Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
hthttp://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/
tp://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html

Sunday, January 07, 2007

10 Rarely Used Ways To Upgrade Your AdBy Cody Moya

1. Tell your potential customers special events yourbusiness has sponsored. It could be charities, fundraisers, charity auctions, etc.
2. Tell your potential customers about any mergersor joint ventures with other reputable organizationsor businesses they would recognize.
3. Tell your potential customers some valuable info.This will create rapport with them. It could be tips,a how-to excerpt, etc.
4. Tell your potential customers about reviews ofspecial events your business attended. It could betrade shows, seminars or conferences.
5. Tell your potential customers stories about yourcustomer service. It could be how you help a newcustomer, an award you won, etc.
6. Tell your potential customers stories about youremployees. It could be about why they like to workfor you, their personal profile, etc.
7. Tell your potential customers about milestonesand goals your business has achieved. It could bea sales goal, customers served goal, etc.
8. Tell your potential customers about innovationsyour business has discovered. It could be inventions,new technologies, patents, new products, etc.
9. Tell your potential customers the things you havedone to improve your product. It could be lighter,faster, heavier, slower, etc.10.

Tell your potential customers a little history or past information about your business. It could behow it started, how you got the product idea, etc.


Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/

Friday, January 05, 2007

One Degree Difference to Greatness

I just read this.....From Alex Mandossian. Take a look at the movie after you read this.


http://www.212movie.com/


The One Degree Difference to Greatness
It takes 211 degrees to heat water, but ONE EXTRA DEGREE to create boiling
water. At the “boiling point” comes steam which can power a locomotive!
That 1 degree difference, or the “tipping point” as author Malcolm Gladwell
calls it, is what most often separates mediocre performance from world-class
performance. And it brings to light why little things can make a BIG difference.
We call this the Marginal Difference to Greatness or “MDG.”
One Degree Difference Historical Facts
FACT #1: In four major golf tournaments (U.S. Open, British Open, PGA
Championship and The Masters), the margin of victory for the last 25 years in
all four majors combined was less than 3 strokes.
That’s 18 holes played over a four-day period (72 holes total in 25 years), the
MDG was 3. The winners took home 76% more in prize dollars than 2nd place!
FACT #2: The MDG principle applied in the 2004 Summer Olympic Games:
Olympic Event MDG
Men’s 200 meter Freestyle (swimming) 1.42 seconds
Women’s 200 meter Freestyle 0.59 seconds
Men’s 800 meter (running) 0.71 seconds
Women’s 800 meter 0.13 seconds
Men’s Long Jump 28 centimeters
Women’s Long Jump 11 centimeters
FACT #3: In horse racing the Triple Crown winner (Kentucky Derby, Preakness
and Belmont Stakes) is held by 11 horses in history.
The MDG between 1998 and 2002 over each of the Triple Crown races combined
(15 races in all) was less than 2.5 lengths. Six races were won by less than one
horse length!
FACT #4: The difference between being an “amateur” in business and attaining
“professional” status in your area of expertise is just $1.
So what’s your MDG? What’s your MDG in business? What’s your MDG as a parent,
as a spouse, as a leader, as a student or as any of the other roles in your life?
Where will you apply the power of the MDG principle next? Get started now…

Other articles on Marketing and Success--->http://www.simplyusedphones.com/articles.html




Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Worth Repeating

I posted this once before from Bob Parsons of Godaddy.com, new year, some rules to think about.

Here are the 16 rules he tries to live by:

1. Get and stay out of your comfort zone. I believe that not much happens of any significance when we're in our comfort zone. I hear people say, "But I'm concerned about security." My response to that is simple: "Security is for cadavers."2. Never give up. Almost nothing works the first time it's attempted. Just because what you're doing does not seem to be working, doesn't mean it won't work. It just means that it might not work the way you're doing it. If it was easy, everyone would be doing it, and you wouldn't have an opportunity.3. When you're ready to quit, you're closer than you think. There's an old Chinese saying that I just love, and I believe it is so true. It goes like this: "The temptation to quit will be greatest just before you are about to succeed."4. With regard to whatever worries you, not only accept the worst thing that could happen, but make it a point to quantify what the worst thing could be. Very seldom will the worst consequence be anywhere near as bad as a cloud of "undefined consequences." My father would tell me early on, when I was struggling and losing my shirt trying to get Parsons Technology going, "Well, Robert, if it doesn't work, they can't eat you."5. Focus on what you want to have happen. Remember that old saying, "As you think, so shall you be."6. Take things a day at a time. No matter how difficult your situation is, you can get through it if you don't look too far into the future, and focus on the present moment. You can get through anything one day at a time.7. Always be moving forward. Never stop investing. Never stop improving. Never stop doing something new. The moment you stop improving your organization, it starts to die. Make it your goal to be better each and every day, in some small way. Remember the Japanese concept of Kaizen. Small daily improvements eventually result in huge advantages.8. Be quick to decide. Remember what General George S. Patton said: "A good plan violently executed today is far and away better than a perfect plan tomorrow."9. Measure everything of significance. I swear this is true. Anything that is measured and watched, improves.10. Anything that is not managed will deteriorate. If you want to uncover problems you don't know about, take a few moments and look closely at the areas you haven't examined for a while. I guarantee you problems will be there.11. Pay attention to your competitors, but pay more attention to what you're doing. When you look at your competitors, remember that everything looks perfect at a distance. Even the planet Earth, if you get far enough into space, looks like a peaceful place.12. Never let anybody push you around. In our society, with our laws and even playing field, you have just as much right to what you're doing as anyone else, provided that what you're doing is legal. 13. Never expect life to be fair. Life isn't fair. You make your own breaks. You'll be doing good if the only meaning fair has to you, is something that you pay when you get on a bus (i.e., fare).14. Solve your own problems. You'll find that by coming up with your own solutions, you'll develop a competitive edge. Masura Ibuka, the co-founder of SONY, said it best: "You never succeed in technology, business, or anything by following the others." There's also an old Asian saying that I remind myself of frequently. It goes like this: "A wise man keeps his own counsel."15. Don't take yourself too seriously. Lighten up. Often, at least half of what we accomplish is due to luck. None of us are in control as much as we like to think we are. 16. There's always a reason to smile. Find it. After all, you're really lucky just to be alive. Life is short. More and more, I agree with my little brother. He always reminds me: "We're not here for a long time; we're here for a good time."


Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Small Business Go Local

I just read this...

5 Tips to Catch the Local Search Wave
Learn the Basics: Before embarking on a local search engine marketing campaign spend sometime becoming familiar with search. There are many sites and books to learn more. Your new understanding will go a long way whether you do it yourself or hire a professional to handle your search marketing.
Master the Big Three: The big three search engine players; Google, Yahoo, and MSN command over 70% of the local search market. Visit the local search section of these sites and submit your businesses to the add a business area.
Use the Little Guy: With the big three as the best place to focus your local search engine marketing efforts, smaller local search players can be a viable alternative. If you're competing in a competitive keyword field, the small local search engines can provide better search ranking and lower costs per clicks. Smaller local providers include Local.com and Truelocal.com.
It's All Yellow: Local search is more than just search engines. During pre-Internet days, we heavily relied on the Yellow Pages directory. Although, print usage has declined, web-based yellow pages have seen an increase in use. Include in your local search marketing campaign the added listing to YellowPages.com and Superpages.com.
Be Address Friendly: When the search engines go scouting the Internet for local websites, they scan pages featuring local addresses. Beyond just adding an address to your contact page, include your business address in key areas throughout your website.
The Internet is an ever changing medium. Any local small business can't afford to be left behind. Make sure your small business is on the local search engine wave.


Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html

Is SEO Dead?

I just read this from Michael Campbell…..Is all this below about John Reese’s new site Income.com??

Is SEO Dead?
Here Lies SEO _RIP_ 1994-2006
SEO coaches and consultants are disappearing at analarming rate. Last week Leslie Rohde announced that hewas closing his consultancy and his private OptiSmartsblog. He quit the business.
He told us that… although he can teach us SEO, thatin and of itself, is not enough to have a successfulbusiness. I have to agree… not with the quitting part,but search engines alone will not make your businesssuccessful. They don’t buy anything… people do.
Then just the other day, I got a note saying that longtime SEO consultant Dan Thies was also retiring, closinghis coaching and consulting practice. Same deal as Leslie.He’s moving on to something else but wasn’t saying what.
Then Sherman Hu announced, that he was going to focushis energies on a new project this new year. There’s rumorsflying around, that several other gurus are poised to makesimilar announcements. Just what the heck is going on?
There’s a stirring in the force my friends. Why are allthese people closing up shop?
After a little investigative work, I found that there’s anew “University” opening soon. One where they’ll providenot just SEO, but complete business skills.
I’m talking PPC, keyword research, blogging, productcreation, copywriting, conversion, sales, marketing,affiliate programs, ecommerce and more. Everythingyou’ll need to succeed online.
All these larger than life gurus, each specialistsin their fields, are joining together to create theinternet’s first true higher learning institute. And I’mgoing to tell you how you can team up with them, onJanuary 4th 2007.
It will be one of the biggest announcements of the year.Never before has there been such a shake up and mergingof talent like we are about to see.
This is not an offer to join a waiting list. This is anexclusive invitation through the back door. It’s not opento the public. Only faculty, staff and advisors (such asmyself) are permitted to make this offer.
That’s right… if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. I’ve beenbrought in as an advisor. I was persuaded to come outof retirement, to help steer this big ship.
And when it relaunches, it will be a once in a lifetimeevent… and it’s only open for one day… ThursdayJanuary 4th 2007.
So what am I talking about? It’s the all new StomperNetNetwork! Think of it as StomperNet 2.0.
This is not the same old private membership. This notjust a continuation. It is a rebirth. A revelation in onlinetraining. It’s a convergence of talent and specialists likeLeslie Rohde, Dan Thies, Sherman Hu, Frank Kern, MikeLong, Andy Jenkins, Brad Fallon and myself.
This is it folks. The holy grail of learning. Slide ourknowledge into your brains. It is your chance to make achange in your life, that could make your business growby 10 or even 100 times this year.
So if your business is not where you’d like it to be. Ifyou would like to earn anywhere from 10K to 100K to 1million per month, then it doesn’t matter what skill levelyou are at. There are courses to suit your needs. Thereare faculty members ready to step in and teach you, trainyou and assist you, every step of the way.
But I’ve already said enough, and don’t want to get in hotwater, or give away any unauthorized secrets. Just keepyour eyes open for a special announcement from me onJanuary 4th. It will contain an exclusive offer, forreaders of this newsletter.
But do recall, this is a once in a lifetime event andit’s only open for one day… 24 hours… on ThursdayJanuary 4th 2007.
Until then… wishing you all the best for online success.
Michael Campbell
P.S.
Keep your eyes on the IMS Blog for any news andcomments regarding this major announcement. As thingsdevelop towards Thursday, I’ll keep you up to the minuteon any developments.
IMS Blog ==> http://homepage.mac.com/dmcorp/index.html
Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales. Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000. Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/articles.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html

Monday, January 01, 2007

Happy New Year!

Since we are starting a new year maybe a couple of my favorite quotes.....

I just read this.....

Time is thyat thing in nature which prevents everything from happening at once. Lately, it doesn't seem to be working....Anonymous

If you have everything under control, you are not moving fast enough....Mario Andretti

Money loves speed....Joe Vitale

80% of life is just showing life....Woody Allen



Mark is the Chief Sales Officer of SCT Product Sales.
Used phone systems & used phones. He lives in San Diego, CA.
We have been in business 15 years, online for 8 & a Power Seller
on eBay for 4 years with annual eBay sales of $1,000,000.
Email: myoung@socaltel.com.
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sellequip.html
http://www.simplyusedphones.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAcabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.LAphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.orangecountycabling.com/sitemap.html
http://www.ocphoneinstall.com/sitemap.html
http://www.sandiego-cabling.com/sitemap.html
http://SanDiegophoneinstall.com/