
dafsaliens Business Model Canvas Optimized for Lean Startup | Lean Canvas AdWords - Online Advertising by Google Keywords are what people search for on Google. Your ad appears beside relevant search results. You create your ads You create ads and choose keywords, which are words or phrases related to your business. Your ads appear on Google When people search on Google using one of your keywords, your ad may appear next to the search results. You attract customers People can simply click your ad to make a purchase or learn more about you. Previous topicNext topic Sign up now Expand your reach through the Display Network With hundreds of thousands of high-quality websites, news pages, and blogs that partner with Google to display AdWords ads, the Google Display Network can reach users all over the web to help you drive conversions. Target the right user in the right context Using your keywords, Google's contextual targeting technology can automatically match your ads to webpages in our Display Network that are most relevant to your business. Measure and optimize your results Concerned about costs?
ADVFN [hs 10y dta v-dtld, bt shw nly 5y/vw] 45 Kick-Ass Resources for Online Entrepreneurs | Productive Entrepreneur Few people talk about this great productivity tip… You will reach your goals faster and easier if you’re willing to learn from others. Using brilliant, well-crafted resources created specifically for online entrepreneurs improves your online productivity. Below I have a long list of resources, most of which I’ve used myself. Enjoy the list. I’ve arranged the resources from those helpful to beginners to those suited to more advanced entrepreneurs. The links to these resources are not affiliate links. Helpful from the word go… If you’re new to online business, you’ll find value in the following resources. 1. Before you can blog, collect email addresses or sell anything, you need a little piece of real estate on a reliable web server. 2. I’m hoping that no one laughs at this resource recommendation. 3. Today web design is easy. Productive Entrepreneur is running the Genesis framework and the Prose child theme. 4. 5. Copyblogger.com is where you learn about content marketing. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Camels and Rubber Duckies by Joel Spolsky Wednesday, December 15, 2004 You've just released your latest photo-organizing software. One of the biggest questions you're going to be asking now is, "How much should I charge for my software?" So if you like cotton uniforms you better get this right. The answer is really complicated. Now. Some Economic Theory Imagine, for the moment, that your software costs $199. Let me plot that: This little chart I made means that if you charge $199, 250 people will buy your software. What would happen if you raised the price to $249? Some of the people who might have been willing to pay $199 are going to think $249 is too much, so they'll drop out. Obviously, people who wouldn't even buy it for $199 are certainly not going to buy it at the higher price. If 250 people bought at $199, we must assume that less than 250 people would buy it at $249. What if we charged less? And so on and so forth: These numbers are not, of course, real. So how much should you charge? No no no. "O frabjous day!
Leahy-Smith America Invents Act The Leahy–Smith America Invents Act (AIA) is a United States federal statute that was passed by Congress and was signed into law by President Barack Obama on September 16, 2011. The law represents the most significant change to the U.S. patent system since 1952, and closely resembles previously proposed legislation in the Senate in its previous session (Patent Reform Act of 2009).[1] Provisions[edit] First to file and grace period[edit] U.S. patent Proceedings at the U.S. The AIA refers to the new regime as "First-Inventor-to-File (FITF)". Opposition procedures[edit] The Act revised and expanded post-grant opposition procedures. Additional changes[edit] The America Invents Act included the following changes:[10] Savings from small entity (prior to act, based on small entity fees & includes 15% surcharge), to micro entity (post act): % Net Savings for the new Micro Entity over Prior Small Entity Inventor = 42% USPTO practice changes[edit] Fee Setting Authority. Legislative history[edit]
Earnings: Which web site gives the previous 10 years earnings of a public company Intranet, Group Calendar, Small Business Organizer: Backpack The Exact Match Domain Playbook: A Guide and Best Practices for EMDs Exact match domains have always been the source of a lot of contention among SEOs. For quite some time, EMD’s have offered a competitive advantage for SEO’s who understood how to use them. In the early days of search when relevance algorithms were rather weak, many folks used “double dashed” domains because they were cheap to buy, and easy to rank. $6 to rank for a 3 word phrase. Sold. However, when you see best-online-seo-company.biz in your search result, you start to question the weighting of relevance factors. This is, in large part, how EMD’s got a bad rep to start with. Despite the debate and obvious abuse, EMD’s represent what SEO’s do best – Seize Every Opportunity! I’ve always been a pretty big fan of EMD’s, and I agree with Elliot Silver that EMD domains can be brands. Matt Cutts (esteemed Google engineer) has made this comment in the past (about 2 years ago): Types of EMD’s I think it’s important firstly to qualify the different types of EMD. Let’s start with dashed domains.
Jealous of PRISM? Use "Amazon 1 Button" Chrome extension to sniff all HTTPS websites! tldr: Insecure browser addons may leak all your encrypted SSL traffic, exploits included So, Snowden let the cat out of the bag. They're listening - the news are so big, that feds are no longer welcome at DEFCON. The real deal though is in the encrypted traffic. hacking the CAsocial engineering (install the certificate) relying on click-through syndrome for SSL warnings Too hard. The extension info Version: 3.2013.627.0 Updated: June 28, 2013 1,791,011 users (scary, becase the extension needs the following permissions): Amazon cares for your privacy...not First, a little info about how it abuses your privacy, in case you use it already (tldr; uninstall NOW!). It reports to Amazon every URL you visit, even HTTPS URLs. Unfortunately, this request goes over HTTPS, so only Amazon can know your URLs. It's against what they claim in their Privacy Policy: Well, request to Amazon XSS-es every website you visit Yes, not just URLs. Exploitation