30 Jun
There are several ways to monetize domains on the Internet. One of them probably everyone will know who is selling them, but there are other ways to earn money with domains on the Internet. One of the techniques used on the Internet, is the Domain Parking. what’s Domain Parking? It consists of being the owner of the domain (eg.: www.domain.com), and put the same domain parked.
And how will I make money with this? Simple.

There are many companies of Domain Parking, where we can sell our domains or simply parking them. When an domain is parked in an enterprise of this kind, will be used a certain advertising, with which we will make money on every click made there. Basically all visitors to the domain who click on ads, will monetize our domain.
Google also has a system of Adwords to put on parked domains where the customers can have a return. There are also those who buy domains specifically for parking and make money.
I will leave you a document from Wikipedia to see if you need more information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_parking
You can also consult the following addresses for more information:
http://www.namedrive.com/
http://www.sedo.com
http://www.google.com/domainpark/
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!12 May
Here are 30 social bookmarking sites available on the web. Good for you.
Backflip.com - Check out the most popular links each day, set “The Daily Routine” as your homepage so you can visit your must stop sites each day with ease.
BibSonomy.com - Public & private bookmarks, tag cloud, related tags, duplicate detection with the chance to merge their info.
BlinkPro.com - Dynamic folders, bookmark all links of a page plus all the usual features.
BlogMarks.net - Save your bookmarks, tag them with keywords for easy searching amongst your list, share with others.
Bluedot.us - Tabbed user page showing a network of friends, bookmarks, and related tags. Allows you to import contacts from all the major mail services such as GMail and Yahoo.
BmAccess.net - Bookmark a site, add tags, when you look up a tag, you get the names and a little thumbnail image of the site along with it.
BuddyMarks.com - Store your bookmarks online, share some or all of them, discover new sites to visit by searching the public bookmark area.
Chipmark.com - Browse random “chipmarks”, share them, sort, filter, and get personal recommendations.
Complore - 10MB of file storage, public & private sharing, tag cloud, popular feeds and more.
Connotea.org - A themed social bookmarking site specifically for researchers, clinicians and scientists.
Diigo.com - Highlight portions of a page, write on it like you would a piece of paper, share with your group, and search all publicly saved pages.
Excites.com - Organize your bookmarks by tags, add comments and notes, share publicly, subscribe to certain tags so you can be notified when a new site is added that may interest you.
Feedmelinks.com - All the usual social bookmarking goodies, but you can also add links via email.
GetBoo.com - Export your folders to HTML, import and remove duplicates, delete all bookmarks.
Givealink.org - Donate your bookmarks to this site to help them recommend sites and get a better understanding of how each person bookmarks.
Hyperlinkomatic.com - Import/export, categories, notes, sharing, block users, RSS, tags.
IKeepBookmarks.com - Folders, search folder names and more.
Lilisto.com - Ratings, notes, categories, smart categories and in-page editing.
Linkroll.com - Links open in new window, subscribe to tags, browse by archives.
Ma.gnolia.com - Discuss all the saved bookmarks in groups, see what the Featured Linker is all about, join discussions in the Hot Group.
Mister-Wong.com - Bookmark and tag, search for tags that interest you, make buddies with people who have interesting saved sites.
Netvouz.com - Save your bookmarks in folders, tag them with keywords, share them with others or password protect them.
Nextaris.com - Folders, tags, clippings; store up to 100MB for free.
Shadows.com - Share your already existing bookmarks, discuss and rate sites and see what you can find.
SocialBookmarking.org - User and global tag cloud, blogs, social networking, avatars and more.
StumbleUpon.com - Lets you “channel surf” the Internet and review sites; it learns what you like and recommends more of the same.
Unalog.com - A basic social bookmarking site, but with the ability to look back at specific days and see what was going on.
WireFan.com - You can vote on links as well as add thumbnails for sites.
Xilinus.com - Tags, rating, search, public & private listing, drag-and-drop sorting.
Yahoo! My Web - One button click adds your bookmarks to the search engine giants system, features duplicate detection to help you keep your bookmarks tidy.
15 Apr
Here’s some reasons why lists can be good for your site or blog:
1. Lists are Scannable - online readers are notoriously lazy. A list helps communicate a number of points quickly and easily.
2. Lists keep posts succinct - there is something about a list that keeps you from rambling.
3. Lists are easy to link to - most of the links to the link above simply summarize the list (giving the keypoints) - bloggers seem to like linking up in this manner.
4. Lists can be more comprehensive.
5. Lists are persuasive - if you want to mount a case for something quickly presenting numerous arguments in a list can be quite convincing.
6. Lists can add to the ease of writing - I like writing in lists because they break down my thoughts into bite sized pieces which is good not only for readers but me as a writer as I consider how to express myself.
7. Lists as Memes - Lists can start “epidemics of ideas”. For the above reasons (and others - bloggers seem to love linking to lists and as a result they have the ability to spread quickly.
Using lists on your blog as part of your writing mix is an worthwhile strategy.
15 Apr
There are three basic things to learn:
- We have to understand that all compelling headlines make an intriguing promise that makes it almost irresistible to the target audience. Understanding the intended audience is key — a really great headline generally won’t appeal to everyone, and watering it down for mass appeal will only hurt you.
- We have to study headlines that have been proven to work, and that usually means direct response advertising headlines. You can also learn by studying some of the top magazine headline writers, who work for Cosmopolitan and similar glossies, and even the tabloids you see at the supermarket checkout lane.
- And most importantly, rather than simply mimicking great headlines, they understand why the headline works, and therefore can make an educated decision as to which type of headline structure is most appropriate, and how to tweak it within a certain context.
Understanding what type of headline is appropriate to a specific context is the key to writing magnetic post titles that will get your writing read.
1 Apr
Every copywriter and every journalist knows the importance of a powerful headline, and that awareness has spilled into the business blogosphere, where everyone is a bit of a copywriter and a bit of a journalist. And we know that great body content with a bad or even marginal headline is doomed to go largely unread. Here are some suggestions to write a great headline.
The copywriting trainers at American Writers & Artists teach The Four U’s approach to writing headlines:
Headlines, subheads and bullets should:
The superstar copywriter Clayton Makepeace says to ask yourself six questions before you start to write your headline:
It takes work and focus, but the effort will make you a more popular blogger and a more profitable businessperson. Good look.