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Advanced Tips to Create More Money In Search Engine Optimization horizontally, through the use of headings and sub-headings.If you are interested in creating more money for your online business through search engine optimization, there are some productive search engine optimization tips that you need to understand, keep in mind and follow. Through this article, you are provided with an overview of some of the more important productive search engine optimization tips.First of all, in order to ensure productive search engine optimization and profits, you need to really target your intended audience. You need to understand the keywords and search terms that most likely will be utilized by people interested in finding the products or services you offer through your online operations.Second, you will want to constantly review your plan to make certain that you actually have a productive search engine optimization program in place. You need to understand and fully appreciate that the Internet constantly is involving and what is a viable and effective SEO plan today my be completely useless tomorrow … literally. Any Net based marketing plan that you employ, including one aimed at productive search engine optimization, needs to be adaptable and responsive in order ultimately to be successful.Finally, when it comes to a productive search engine optimization program, you will want to give serious consideration to obtaining the services and assistance of an SEO professional. In many, many instances, a Net based business enterprise is best serv 7. Fonts Select a font for all your headings and sub-headings (and stick to it). It's not necessary to have a different font for headings (just go up one size for headings, and then use bold on all headings and sub-headings). This way it's easy to recognise which is a heading (large and bold) and which is a sub-heading (same size but bold). The purpose is to make it easy for your visitors to glance at your page and make out what the key points are. If what they see interests them, they'll stay and keep reading. To draw attention to other important points, you can also highlight them by putting a whole sentence in bold or a different colour (or both). However, take care with the colours you select: some are quite difficult to read--even against a white background. 8. Navigation Navigation is one of the most critical aspects of any web site - arguably the most important. No matter how good a site looks, and no matter how much useful information it offers, without sensible navigation scheme, it will only manage to confuse visitors and chase them away. A simple, logical, understandable navigation scheme can increase your number of page impressions, boost return visits, and improve your "conversion rate" (the number of visitors who are "converted" into customers). It's a critical aspect of site design that has a direct effect on the bottom line. The core of any good navigational scheme is:
The Good Old DaysRemember the good old days? You'd purchase a domain name, set up your site (with a few swear words here and there), and place some banner ads (while crossing your fingers for the best banner ad click-through results). This all worked great--for a while; until people managed to avoid our banner ads like the plague. Life got more complex. What were us internet marketers to do? We had to become more savvy. Fortunately for us, the affiliate model was introduced.Ah, the affiliate marketing model. It never hurts to get a little help from your friends, right? Affiliate marketing networks offer a wide range of advantages to businesses. In short: it's a booming business with dollar signs all around it. Sure, affiliate marketing can be a profitable business, but it can also be very aggravating, time consuming, and antisocial. So here’s the big question: Why the heck do we keep putting ourselves through all of this pain? The answer, although seemingly complex, is quite simple: easy money.The Good, the Bad, and the UglyThe average person thinks of affiliate marketing as a “get rich quick” scheme for geeks and nerds. Actually, it’s the farthest thing from the truth. Nowadays, you’re just as likely to find a High School dropout behind an affiliate marketing operation; as you are to find a computer science major.Despite the revenue advantages, many successful affiliate managers are weary of transpare A successful web-site, evidently, is the one that is capable of attracting quality visitors and retain them. The core of this attractiveness is its content. However, only content is not enough - just as a good product needs good packaging a successful site needs elegant presentation and promotion. In this article, we discuss 10 basic elements that can significantly contribute towards success of any website. 1. Content No matter if you have a business site or a personal page, you have to give people a reason to stay on your site - the first question the visitor is going to ask - "what's in it for me?" That doesn't mean you have to give away freebies - programs, books, tickets, holidays etc. etc. - it does mean that you have to offer something. That "something" could be:
Remember, a successful site is a useful site. It should contain:
2. Overall Look Your home page is your billboard or store front-- it creates an immediate impression on visitors. Considering the importance of first impression, we all are aware of, it should look:
Do not be stingy with white space, spread them as much as required. Aim to "underwhelm" rather than overwhelm. Too many flashing lights, animations, colours, drop-down boxes, graphics etc. are distracting. It's a like those stores that play loud, frenetic music--your heart rate rises, your stress levels go up and you just want to get out - fast! 3. Speed In this age of impatience - an average visitor will spend no more than 20 seconds to decide the worth of your site. You can well imagine what happens if the visitor spends that precious 20 seconds looking at a blank screen slowly loading tons of images.. So you must ensure that your home page at least, loads as quickly as possible. That means no big, flashy graphics. Keep reminding yourself that your first page is like a billboard. When driving your car, you don't have time to read detailed descriptions, or admire intricate pictures on billboards. The signs flash past you and have to make an immediate impression. Your web visitors are 'flashing past' as well, so keep your front page simple and fast. 4. Graphics and Lay-out The graphics and lay-out of your home page contribute to that first impression--think about what image your site is trying to convey and make sure everything on your site contributes something towards that overall image. If you have a serious business site, you don't want garish cartoons on your front page - but if you have a games site, then cartoons can be an integral part of the image. Graphics are what eat up the loading time of your site. A rough rule of thumb to determine good loading time for a page is to keep the entire page around 50 Kb. Images should be between 6 and 8K. Each additional 5K may add one second to loading time. If in doubt, right click the image and then click on "Properties" to get the size of the image. Colour is also an important part of your site; colours have different effects on our emotions: Red and orange excite the senses and increase heartbeat, blues and greens are more restful. Yellow reminds us of sunshine and is a happy colour Consider the effect you want to create and choose a colour that is appropriate. When reading Western texts, the eye travels from the top left of the page, across and then down to the bottom right. Remember this when you're placing graphics on your page. Any graphic image which has a directional aspect should be placed to point towards the most important section of the page. If you have a picture of a bird on the top left corner of your page, make sure it is facing inward and that its beak is leading the eye to the centre of the page, not away from it. The same applies to all graphics: Faces should 'look' to the centre of the page. Cars should be 'parked' facing towards the centre of the page. Roads, neck ties etc should all be placed to lead the eye across from left to right, or down from top to bottom This is also why you should place your navigation bars down the left side of your page - it keeps them constantly in the visitor's field of vision. 5. Text Readability This doesn't refer to the words you use (we'll look at them in detail later) --but to the way the words look on the page. Going back to the concept of the billboard, your words need to stand out on your page - you need to surround them with plenty of white space. Dark backgrounds make you feel as if you're in a small space and also have a depressing effect on your mood. Certain coloured backgrounds make it very difficult to read text; purples, orange tonings and reds dazzle the eyes. The colour of your text is just as important--bear in mind that different browsers read colours differently--what looks great on your browser could well be invisible on another ! Take a lesson from the newspapers and divide your text into columns for easier (and quicker) reading--even two columns are better than one slab of text that covers the entire width of the page. Another element that contributes to text readability is the font you choose. Plain fonts (Arial, Times New Roman, Garamond and Courier) are the easiest to read. Fancy fonts are fine for headings, but not for full pages (imagine trying to read a whole page in Gothic, Script, Westminster, or Cloister). Your eyes would soon tire of the effort involved and you'd be reaching for the back button! 6. Structure Each page You have to make your page as easy for visitors to read as possible and this means breaking it up into little 'chunks'. We've already looked at the need for columns, (which divide the page vertically); you also need to divide your page horizontally, through the use of headings and sub-headings. 7. Fonts Select a font for all your headings and sub-headings (and stick to it). It's not necessary to have a different font for headings (just go up one size for headings, and then use bold on all headings and sub-headings). This way it's easy to recognise which is a heading (large and bold) and which is a sub-heading (same size but bold). The purpose is to make it easy for your visitors to glance at your page and make out what the key points are. If what they see interests them, they'll stay and keep reading. To draw attention to other important points, you can also highlight them by putting a whole sentence in bold or a different colour (or both). However, take care with the colours you select: some are quite difficult to read--even against a white background. 8. Navigation Navigation is one of the most critical aspects of any web site - arguably the most important. No matter how good a site looks, and no matter how much useful information it offers, without sensible navigation scheme, it will only manage to confuse visitors and chase them away. A simple, logical, understandable navigation scheme can increase your number of page impressions, boost return visits, and improve your "conversion rate" (the number of visitors who are "converted" into customers). It's a critical aspect of site design that has a direct effect on the bottom line. The core of any good navigational scheme is:
Newspaper inserts are a great way to advertise for retailers and services businesses. While it costs more than run-of-press newspaper advertising, it costs much less than direct mail. Regular newspaper advertising tend to get lost in the mix of black and white ads and dull color newsprint ads. However, inserts are full color glossy ads that fall out of the paper and into your potential customer's hands. This gives your advertising more impact and a better response rate. Inserts can also be targeted by geographics and demographics, giving less advertising waste.Direct mail can also target in the same way, but direct mail can cost 4-5 times as much money as newspaper inserts. Wholesaleinserts.com can print full color glossy inserts and ship them to your newspaper for delivery. The costs for printing and shipping in SE, USA is only 1.5-2.5 cents each (other areas slightly higher). Your local newspaper would then charge 3.5-5.5 cents each to deliver. The total cost would be 5-8 cents each for printing and distributing the sales flyers. Direct mail is usually 22-40 cents each to print and mail, which can be quite costly. Wholesaleinserts.com can deliver to SE, USA in a week's time (other areas slightly longer). Your local newspaper would take longer to print and cost more. Design services can also be provided, if needed.The best time to insert for local businesses is mid-week, when the inserts are fewer. Also, the newspaper deo find) 2. Overall Look Your home page is your billboard or store front-- it creates an immediate impression on visitors. Considering the importance of first impression, we all are aware of, it should look:
Do not be stingy with white space, spread them as much as required. Aim to "underwhelm" rather than overwhelm. Too many flashing lights, animations, colours, drop-down boxes, graphics etc. are distracting. It's a like those stores that play loud, frenetic music--your heart rate rises, your stress levels go up and you just want to get out - fast! 3. Speed In this age of impatience - an average visitor will spend no more than 20 seconds to decide the worth of your site. You can well imagine what happens if the visitor spends that precious 20 seconds looking at a blank screen slowly loading tons of images.. So you must ensure that your home page at least, loads as quickly as possible. That means no big, flashy graphics. Keep reminding yourself that your first page is like a billboard. When driving your car, you don't have time to read detailed descriptions, or admire intricate pictures on billboards. The signs flash past you and have to make an immediate impression. Your web visitors are 'flashing past' as well, so keep your front page simple and fast. 4. Graphics and Lay-out The graphics and lay-out of your home page contribute to that first impression--think about what image your site is trying to convey and make sure everything on your site contributes something towards that overall image. If you have a serious business site, you don't want garish cartoons on your front page - but if you have a games site, then cartoons can be an integral part of the image. Graphics are what eat up the loading time of your site. A rough rule of thumb to determine good loading time for a page is to keep the entire page around 50 Kb. Images should be between 6 and 8K. Each additional 5K may add one second to loading time. If in doubt, right click the image and then click on "Properties" to get the size of the image. Colour is also an important part of your site; colours have different effects on our emotions: Red and orange excite the senses and increase heartbeat, blues and greens are more restful. Yellow reminds us of sunshine and is a happy colour Consider the effect you want to create and choose a colour that is appropriate. When reading Western texts, the eye travels from the top left of the page, across and then down to the bottom right. Remember this when you're placing graphics on your page. Any graphic image which has a directional aspect should be placed to point towards the most important section of the page. If you have a picture of a bird on the top left corner of your page, make sure it is facing inward and that its beak is leading the eye to the centre of the page, not away from it. The same applies to all graphics: Faces should 'look' to the centre of the page. Cars should be 'parked' facing towards the centre of the page. Roads, neck ties etc should all be placed to lead the eye across from left to right, or down from top to bottom This is also why you should place your navigation bars down the left side of your page - it keeps them constantly in the visitor's field of vision. 5. Text Readability This doesn't refer to the words you use (we'll look at them in detail later) --but to the way the words look on the page. Going back to the concept of the billboard, your words need to stand out on your page - you need to surround them with plenty of white space. Dark backgrounds make you feel as if you're in a small space and also have a depressing effect on your mood. Certain coloured backgrounds make it very difficult to read text; purples, orange tonings and reds dazzle the eyes. The colour of your text is just as important--bear in mind that different browsers read colours differently--what looks great on your browser could well be invisible on another ! Take a lesson from the newspapers and divide your text into columns for easier (and quicker) reading--even two columns are better than one slab of text that covers the entire width of the page. Another element that contributes to text readability is the font you choose. Plain fonts (Arial, Times New Roman, Garamond and Courier) are the easiest to read. Fancy fonts are fine for headings, but not for full pages (imagine trying to read a whole page in Gothic, Script, Westminster, or Cloister). Your eyes would soon tire of the effort involved and you'd be reaching for the back button! 6. Structure Each page You have to make your page as easy for visitors to read as possible and this means breaking it up into little 'chunks'. We've already looked at the need for columns, (which divide the page vertically); you also need to divide your page horizontally, through the use of headings and sub-headings. 7. Fonts Select a font for all your headings and sub-headings (and stick to it). It's not necessary to have a different font for headings (just go up one size for headings, and then use bold on all headings and sub-headings). This way it's easy to recognise which is a heading (large and bold) and which is a sub-heading (same size but bold). The purpose is to make it easy for your visitors to glance at your page and make out what the key points are. If what they see interests them, they'll stay and keep reading. To draw attention to other important points, you can also highlight them by putting a whole sentence in bold or a different colour (or both). However, take care with the colours you select: some are quite difficult to read--even against a white background. 8. Navigation Navigation is one of the most critical aspects of any web site - arguably the most important. No matter how good a site looks, and no matter how much useful information it offers, without sensible navigation scheme, it will only manage to confuse visitors and chase them away. A simple, logical, understandable navigation scheme can increase your number of page impressions, boost return visits, and improve your "conversion rate" (the number of visitors who are "converted" into customers). It's a critical aspect of site design that has a direct effect on the bottom line. The core of any good navigational scheme is:
Are you running classified ads regularly? You should. They're a powerful way to promote your business inexpensively.Online, you can place ads in ezines and on Web sites, and offline, run them in your local paper and in trade magazines.If you've tried a classified or two to promote your business and were disappointed with the results, remember that a one-shot deal won't work.You need to run your ads repeatedly. For months, not weeks. Run one classified a week in a newspaper, or one a month in magazine read by your target audience ---for at least four months.The humble classified ad is the magic bullet of advertising. And like a bullet, it needs to be precisely aimed.=> Step One: Pick your baitSomehow you've got to pack the copywriter's AIDA formula of an successful ad: Attract, Interest, Desire, and Action, into 30 words.You attract interest, arouse desire and get the reader to take action, with an appealing bait.Start by listing everything you can think of to say about your product or service. Don't limit yourself. Don't just cover all the features you usually cover. Write down *everything* you can think of. You should have a long list.Let's say you're selling a German Shepherd puppy. You can include: color, age, sex, the pedigree, temperament, conformation, and vaccination history. Don't confine yourself to only these points however.Add that he'll sit and drop on coything on your site contributes something towards that overall image. If you have a serious business site, you don't want garish cartoons on your front page - but if you have a games site, then cartoons can be an integral part of the image. Graphics are what eat up the loading time of your site. A rough rule of thumb to determine good loading time for a page is to keep the entire page around 50 Kb. Images should be between 6 and 8K. Each additional 5K may add one second to loading time. If in doubt, right click the image and then click on "Properties" to get the size of the image. Colour is also an important part of your site; colours have different effects on our emotions: Red and orange excite the senses and increase heartbeat, blues and greens are more restful. Yellow reminds us of sunshine and is a happy colour Consider the effect you want to create and choose a colour that is appropriate. When reading Western texts, the eye travels from the top left of the page, across and then down to the bottom right. Remember this when you're placing graphics on your page. Any graphic image which has a directional aspect should be placed to point towards the most important section of the page. If you have a picture of a bird on the top left corner of your page, make sure it is facing inward and that its beak is leading the eye to the centre of the page, not away from it. The same applies to all graphics: Faces should 'look' to the centre of the page. Cars should be 'parked' facing towards the centre of the page. Roads, neck ties etc should all be placed to lead the eye across from left to right, or down from top to bottom This is also why you should place your navigation bars down the left side of your page - it keeps them constantly in the visitor's field of vision. 5. Text Readability This doesn't refer to the words you use (we'll look at them in detail later) --but to the way the words look on the page. Going back to the concept of the billboard, your words need to stand out on your page - you need to surround them with plenty of white space. Dark backgrounds make you feel as if you're in a small space and also have a depressing effect on your mood. Certain coloured backgrounds make it very difficult to read text; purples, orange tonings and reds dazzle the eyes. The colour of your text is just as important--bear in mind that different browsers read colours differently--what looks great on your browser could well be invisible on another ! Take a lesson from the newspapers and divide your text into columns for easier (and quicker) reading--even two columns are better than one slab of text that covers the entire width of the page. Another element that contributes to text readability is the font you choose. Plain fonts (Arial, Times New Roman, Garamond and Courier) are the easiest to read. Fancy fonts are fine for headings, but not for full pages (imagine trying to read a whole page in Gothic, Script, Westminster, or Cloister). Your eyes would soon tire of the effort involved and you'd be reaching for the back button! 6. Structure Each page You have to make your page as easy for visitors to read as possible and this means breaking it up into little 'chunks'. We've already looked at the need for columns, (which divide the page vertically); you also need to divide your page horizontally, through the use of headings and sub-headings. 7. Fonts Select a font for all your headings and sub-headings (and stick to it). It's not necessary to have a different font for headings (just go up one size for headings, and then use bold on all headings and sub-headings). This way it's easy to recognise which is a heading (large and bold) and which is a sub-heading (same size but bold). The purpose is to make it easy for your visitors to glance at your page and make out what the key points are. If what they see interests them, they'll stay and keep reading. To draw attention to other important points, you can also highlight them by putting a whole sentence in bold or a different colour (or both). However, take care with the colours you select: some are quite difficult to read--even against a white background. 8. Navigation Navigation is one of the most critical aspects of any web site - arguably the most important. No matter how good a site looks, and no matter how much useful information it offers, without sensible navigation scheme, it will only manage to confuse visitors and chase them away. A simple, logical, understandable navigation scheme can increase your number of page impressions, boost return visits, and improve your "conversion rate" (the number of visitors who are "converted" into customers). It's a critical aspect of site design that has a direct effect on the bottom line. The core of any good navigational scheme is:
Our top colleges and Universities in the United States of America have indeed always maintained a strong relationship with our fortune 500 companies, but has the relationship gotten too cozy over the last decade? And if so what will the future be?Now before I say much more I will have to disclose that I am rather pro-business and only anti-learning institution due to the fact that I left school to build a franchising company almost 20-years ago.What I see is that corporations are funding colleges and University’s research for several reasons. By outsourcing their research and development departments they save the salaries, since students do most of the work and tedious works, which can costs hundreds of thousands in labor costs.Secondly they can use the research papers to promote their corporation’s products and services. Also consider that having a group of brilliant students to choose from which now specialize in the exact science they need makes recruiting the best minds in the world very easy.Of course the corporation, academic bond goes much deeper then research and development, as those corporations which fund the college’s various departments also get preferential treatment in recruitment for all their other corporate endeavors. All in all when a corporation adopts a college or University, it appears to be a win/win situation and that makes a lot of sense really. Consider this in 2006. your navigation bars down the left side of your page - it keeps them constantly in the visitor's field of vision. 5. Text Readability This doesn't refer to the words you use (we'll look at them in detail later) --but to the way the words look on the page. Going back to the concept of the billboard, your words need to stand out on your page - you need to surround them with plenty of white space. Dark backgrounds make you feel as if you're in a small space and also have a depressing effect on your mood. Certain coloured backgrounds make it very difficult to read text; purples, orange tonings and reds dazzle the eyes. The colour of your text is just as important--bear in mind that different browsers read colours differently--what looks great on your browser could well be invisible on another ! Take a lesson from the newspapers and divide your text into columns for easier (and quicker) reading--even two columns are better than one slab of text that covers the entire width of the page. Another element that contributes to text readability is the font you choose. Plain fonts (Arial, Times New Roman, Garamond and Courier) are the easiest to read. Fancy fonts are fine for headings, but not for full pages (imagine trying to read a whole page in Gothic, Script, Westminster, or Cloister). Your eyes would soon tire of the effort involved and you'd be reaching for the back button! 6. Structure Each page You have to make your page as easy for visitors to read as possible and this means breaking it up into little 'chunks'. We've already looked at the need for columns, (which divide the page vertically); you also need to divide your page horizontally, through the use of headings and sub-headings. 7. Fonts Select a font for all your headings and sub-headings (and stick to it). It's not necessary to have a different font for headings (just go up one size for headings, and then use bold on all headings and sub-headings). This way it's easy to recognise which is a heading (large and bold) and which is a sub-heading (same size but bold). The purpose is to make it easy for your visitors to glance at your page and make out what the key points are. If what they see interests them, they'll stay and keep reading. To draw attention to other important points, you can also highlight them by putting a whole sentence in bold or a different colour (or both). However, take care with the colours you select: some are quite difficult to read--even against a white background. 8. Navigation Navigation is one of the most critical aspects of any web site - arguably the most important. No matter how good a site looks, and no matter how much useful information it offers, without sensible navigation scheme, it will only manage to confuse visitors and chase them away. A simple, logical, understandable navigation scheme can increase your number of page impressions, boost return visits, and improve your "conversion rate" (the number of visitors who are "converted" into customers). It's a critical aspect of site design that has a direct effect on the bottom line. The core of any good navigational scheme is:
What is Success to You?In my 10 years of experience in coaching my clients to maximize their success, I have created powerful tips to help you accelerate your progress. The first of these is for you to get clear on exactly what "success" means to you. I can't tell you how many agents I have worked with who have a general idea that they want to be successful but they don't really know where they want to be professionally in 12 months from now.Ideal Business VisualizationUsually I help my clients get clear by giving them an "Ideal Business Visualization". I ask them to visualize themselves doing work they love, the number of hours they would like to do it, who they want to be interacting with and the level of income they'd like to be making. This takes the mystery out of "success" and they become crystal clear on how they would know if they were successful. I ask them to write down their desired income and the number hours per week that they are willing to work. Then I ask them "how committed are you to reaching your goals". The ones that answer 100% are the ones who have a 100% chance of achieving what they want. COMMITMENT is the determining factor. What is your commitment level? What do you want to manifest in 12 mo.?I also ask my clients what they would like to manifest in their personal lives in 12 months from now. They usually take a good look at the area of relationships, fun horizontally, through the use of headings and sub-headings. 7. Fonts Select a font for all your headings and sub-headings (and stick to it). It's not necessary to have a different font for headings (just go up one size for headings, and then use bold on all headings and sub-headings). This way it's easy to recognise which is a heading (large and bold) and which is a sub-heading (same size but bold). The purpose is to make it easy for your visitors to glance at your page and make out what the key points are. If what they see interests them, they'll stay and keep reading. To draw attention to other important points, you can also highlight them by putting a whole sentence in bold or a different colour (or both). However, take care with the colours you select: some are quite difficult to read--even against a white background. 8. Navigation Navigation is one of the most critical aspects of any web site - arguably the most important. No matter how good a site looks, and no matter how much useful information it offers, without sensible navigation scheme, it will only manage to confuse visitors and chase them away. A simple, logical, understandable navigation scheme can increase your number of page impressions, boost return visits, and improve your "conversion rate" (the number of visitors who are "converted" into customers). It's a critical aspect of site design that has a direct effect on the bottom line. The core of any good navigational scheme is:
Use a well-structured navigational bar. it should run down the left side of your page, for two reasons: We're accustomed to reading from left to right and from top to bottom We're accustomed to finding navigation bars on the left of web pages -- why buck the system (especially when it works)? On a long page it's also a good idea to have a brief nav bar along the bottom of the page (just home | top of page will suffice). When you've found a system you're happy with, use it on every page so that your visitors know where to look for the information. Greater consistency leads to better readability and ease of use. 9. Privacy Statement and Testimonials Credibility is an essential part of any business site, especially in the anonymous world of Internet. You must ensure that your potential customers feel confident dealing with you. Transparency and openness are the cornerstones of lasting trust - so tell people exactly what you're doing to safeguard their interests. In particular, how you're protecting their privacy. It's worth having a separate page which sets out, in detail, your policy towards their email addresses; how you accept orders; how you gather information; who has access to this information; how you use information gathered from children and so on. Visitors also like to know that real people have used your products or services, so it's worth asking your satisfied customers if you can quote any positive comments they've made about you. Don't be afraid to ask for testimonials--we all like to know that our opinions are valued. Set up a separate page for testimonials and offer to include links to your customers' pages in return for using their comments. This is one of those "win-win" situations 10. Words Now we come to one of the most important elements. If this part is wrong, the rest of your efforts are largely wasted. How many times have you been impressed by a site's initial appearance, only to be disappointed by poor spelling, careless grammar and punctuation ? It reflects badly on the site owner and indicates that whoever is responsible for this page is sloppy, careless, lazy, unprofessional or all of the above! Would you entrust any of your hard-earned money to someone who doesn't even care enough to check the expression of his/her own site?
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