วันพุธที่ 3 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551

Article Writing The Top 5 Places to Get Article Writing Ideas

Do you ever have trouble coming with ideas for your article writing? Read on to discover the top five places to get ideas for writing articles.

The top 5 places to get ideas for writing articles

1. From your niche/area of expertise - You are an expert in something, whether you always believe it or not. Write about what you know.

2. From your clients - My clients give me so many ideas for what to write about. I keep a little notebook handy in which to capture the ideas. My in person clients know I am still listening when I lean over to my desk to write down enough words to jog my memory later.

3. From the media - Pay attention to what is going on in the media as it relates to your niche. Write about what you see as it relates to your niche and the people with whom you work.

4. In the grocery store - Yes in the grocery store and any other place that offers you all those magazines at the last minute while you are checking out. Read the headlines and mini-headlines and the article titles. These folks have spent thousands of dollars to know what people want to read about. Benefit from it.

5. Your own experiences - Write about your own experiences and what you have learned from them, especially as they relate to your niche and area of expertise.

How would you like to banish writers block forever and write away, right away? Then get yourself a copy of my 26 Article Writing Templates with Examples at http://www.TheArticleGuy.com/articletemplates.htm


[tags]article writing, article marketing, writing articles, articles, the article guy, jeff herring[/tags]

Article Writing How to Find Ideas for Your Article Writing

Do you ever struggle with coming up with ideas for your article writing?

Well, welcome, you are part of a very big club.

Here are some tips and tools to come up with an almost unlimited amount of ideas.

How to NOT come up with article writing ideas

Article writing ideas are everywhere, but you can miss them if you do any or all of the following.


  • Believe that all the good ideas are taken.

  • Believe there are only a limited number of ideas out there.

  • Do not pay attention to the world around you.

  • When you get an idea while you are doing something else, tell yourself you will remember it and that there is no need to write it down.

  • Convince yourself that you are not creative enough to come up with enough ideas for article writing.

There is your prescription for not coming up with any ideas.

Now if you would like to have an almost unlimited amount of ideas from which to draw, check out the next list.

How to come up with an almost unlimited amount of ideas


  • Pay attention to the world around you.

  • Practice looking at the world through the lens of article writing material and you will begin to notice ideas everywhere

  • Do some complicated and difficult market research - the next time you are in line at the grocery store, pay attention to the titles of articles in all those magazines they want you to buy at the last minute. Those companies have spent thousands of dollars to know what people want to read. Use those ideas and write something better.

  • Keep a small notebook with you to write down article writing ideas as they come to you. The weakest ink is better than the strongest memory.

How would you like to banish writers block forever and write away, right away? Then get yourself a copy of my 26 Article Writing Templates with Examples at http://www.TheArticleGuy.com/articletemplates.htm

You can also subscribe to The Article Writing & Article Marketing Tips Newsletter delivered to your email inbox twice a month from Jeff Herring, The Article Guy.


[tags]article writing, article marketing, writing articles, articles, the article guy, jeff herring[/tags]

Article Writing His Difficulty Writing May Present a Challenge When Faced with the Dissertation

Article writing has been a great boost to my businesses, both online and offline.

But if I would have listened to my own limitations or the limitations that others put on me, none of this would have ever happened.

The power of words

I didn't finish the dissertation part of a Ph.D. program in marriage and family therapy because I believed I could not write. While there may be some people who would say that is still true, I would like to think I somehow found a way to surprisingly blow those limitations out of the water.

At some point in my graduate school career, I had an opportunity to look in my student file in my department. One of my favorite professors in my master's program said in her referral letter that while I was bright and personable, that my writing abilities might present a challenge when it came time to write a dissertation.

Boy was she ever correct!

And I probably still could not write academically, for the most part because I find it tedious and boring. I found myself bored so often as a child that I promised myself I would not spend much time as an adult feeling bored.

So here I am as an adult, not only benefiting greatly from writing and marketing articles online and offline, but coaching and mentoring others to do it as well.

Go figure.

Do you believe you cannot write?

Has someone told you that you cannot write?

What if the both of you are wrong?

Visit http://www.TheArticleGuy.com for more leading edge tips and tools for writing articles that bring you prospects, publicity and profits. You can also subscribe to our monthly Article Writing & Marketing Tips Newsletter. You are also invited to visit my Express-Start Article Writing Program for more information on the next article writing tele-seminar.


[tags]articles, article writing, article marketing, jeff herring[/tags]

Are You Flexible Enough To Succeed

When I was in college, a famous British rock group performed in our amphitheater, and this was nothing less than a major event.

And it was free to students! Our Commissioner of Assemblies had set it up, and this was one of the reasons he was crowned Student Body President, the following year!

But the concert itself was less than 100% gratifying, because the group refused to play its greatest hits, opting instead to showcase its more orchestral ministrations that just happened to appear on their current album.

In time, the fame of that group declined precipitously, and to this day I wonder if it is due, at least in part, to its members’ inflexibility.

Peter F. Drucker, the recently departed management guru and my professor, has pointed out that many people and companies keep themselves from rising to the top because they are inflexible, especially when it comes to responding to what he terms, “the accidental success.”

That rock group succeeded with tunes it didn’t especially like, and it probably thought were no good. So, they were embarrassed to win with efforts that weren’t as “serious” as those that they could produce with a larger orchestra.

Drucker cites examples of department stores that had a rule of thumb that fashions should account for about 75% of profits, yet unexpectedly, televisions and refrigerators started becoming the leaders.

The president of Macy’s for one, was concerned and actually tried to find ways to slow down appliance sales so fashions could catch up, becoming restored to their proper and rightful spot in the pantheon of profitability.

In other words, instead of seizing the new opportunities presented by appliance sales, management was inflexible, wasting time and money to try to restore the old balance.

If an opportunity comes along that can bring you sudden success, will you be flexible enough to ride it to victory, or will you insist on riding your old horse, instead?

Dr. Gary S. Goodman, President of www.Customersatisfaction.com, is a popular keynote speaker, management consultant, and seminar leader and the best-selling author of 12 books, including Reach Out & Sell Someoneฎ, You Can Sell Anything By Telephone! and Monitoring, Measuring & Managing Customer Service, and the audio program, “The Law of Large Numbers: How To Make Success Inevitable,” published by Nightingale-Conant. He is a frequent guest on radio and television, worldwide. A Ph.D. from USC's Annenberg School, a Loyola lawyer, and an MBA from the Peter F. Drucker School at Claremont Graduate University, Gary offers programs through UCLA Extension and numerous universities, trade associations, and other organizations in the United States and abroad. He holds the rank of Shodan, 1st Degree Black Belt in Kenpo Karate. He is headquartered in Glendale, California, and he can be reached at (818) 243-7338 or at: gary@customersatisfaction.com


[tags]customer service training,sales training,success,telemarketing training,customersatisfaction.com,USC[/tags]

Are YOU Controlling Stress So Stress Does Not Control YOU

Have you recently moved or started a new job? Do you feel you have too much to do and not enough time to do them? Do you worry about your financial situation? Do you worry about your future? Do you feel your efforts at work or at home go unappreciated?

If you answered "Yes" to any of these questions, you are experiencing stress but you're not alone.

Two surveys indicate that worker anxiety is rapidly rising. According to one survey by The Gallup Organization dated October 2002, the vast majority of the employees attribute their stress to the job itself; and the data from a second survey that an employee assistance program provider CompSyche researched shows:

• 48% of employees report high levels of stress.

• 38% report constant but manageable, stress levels.

• 14% report low levels of stress.

Is it safe to say that if you are breathing, you are experiencing stress? YES, because stress is a powerful force in the form of positive and negative influences and is necessary for life. Without it, we often feel empty. We all need to feel excitement, experience enrichment even frustration and thrive under a certain level of stress.

Stress is mentally and emotionally disruptive or upsetting condition when occurring in response to adverse external influences and can create positive and negative feelings. Stress is the "wear & tear" our bodies experience and can attribute to debilitating consequences to our mental and physical health.

In summary, stress is how you react to pressures and is inevitable as long as pressures exist. Keep the pressure and get rid of the stress.

So how do you know you're stressed out? Here are some common signs for burn out. See how many of them you are experiencing.

• You are missing deadlines and unable to make decisions.

• You are not as productive even though you feel like you are working twice as hard.

• You are feeling blue or in a depressed mood for several days without specific reason. You are lacking self esteem, and feeling unable to live up to expectations. You are feeling unappreciated.

• You have weakened relationships at work. You are constantly opposing management decisions and isolating yourself away from your team.

• You have increased level of absenteeism because of poor health. You are experiencing pain in your neck, shoulders and lower back. You are suffering from constant headaches. You can't concentrate and you are tired even after a good night sleep.

To create a stressless lifestyle, you have first to learn to eliminate stress and second manage the stress that you have left.

Apply these tips and practice these techniques to eliminate stress:

• Condition your mind and body to eliminate stress and positively affect the way you perceive the world.

o Get Enough Sleep

o Eat a balanced & nutritious diet

o Exercise

• Avoid adverse external influences that trigger responses that then cause stress

o Don’t procrastinate

o Be organized

o Delegate

o Learn to say NO!

o Resolve Disputes

o Like what you do

o Be efficient

o Prepare for next day

o Triage your to do list

o Count to three

o Create a kind commute

o Expectation for yourself

o Talk to someone

o Take a vacation

o Do nice things for someone (unexpected)

And as the final attempt to overcome stress, manage what’s left of your stress by focusing on these methods:

o Identify stress factors in your life.

o Avoid alcohol, caffeine and artificial stimulants.

o Muscular relaxation

o Visualize

o Laugh

Vera Haitayan, Principal Consultant of The Leadership Laboratory, a California-based employee development and process improvement consulting firm and is the senior editor of The Stepping Stone Newsletter featuring leadership and process improvement best practices.
http://www.1leadershiplab.com
mailto: vera@1leadershiplab.com


[tags]article submission, articles, writers, writing, publishing, ezine, email marketing, email newsletter, email[/tags]

Analytic Overlay ... Missing Out On What Truly Is!

Some time ago, I successfully completed a remote viewing course here in Nevada. Not only was I quite amazed at the technology, but also that I had the ability to remote view as I did manage to hit nine targets out of nine. But, the most interesting thing I found, about myself, is that I've been missing out on a lot in my life. This is not a whining article outlining regrets, but an actualization of the things that we, as human beings, have blocked out of our lives because they seem to be trivial to our personal missions in life. I noticed that these silly trivialities are the things that can turn an unbalanced life of black and white into a colorful maze of new and positive journeys.

What is remote viewing?

Remote viewing, or RV, is the process that an individual uses to acquire information about a target (i.e., person, place, thing, or event) that is physically distant in time or space. In all cases, the information collected during an RV session is not accessible to the individual through any means currently known to science. RV is not psychic, but it is a specific process performed within an approved protocol to validate the data being acquired.

In RV, you don't necessarily go into a trance, jiggle beads, or anything of that nature. Some RVers listen to rock-n-roll before performing their sessions and others might meditate in quiet. The entire process requires that you simply focus on a particular target and accept the information as it comes to you. The information is acquired according to a set of rules, or the protocol, which provides a basis for validating the information acquired. The trick is in pushing the conscious mind out of the way to keep it from filling your session with logical representations of the data your acquire, also known as analytic overlays.

What about this analytic overlay?

When we get a great idea or come across something in our lives that is out of the ordinary, we tend to analyze and categorize it based on what we already know. As we apply existing knowledge to unknown information, we are providing ananalytic overlay. An analytic overlay is the closest thing your brain knows based on the attributes of the new idea or information.

One of the more interesting abilities required of a remote viewer is the use of all senses: sight, smell, touch, taste, and hearing. Another trait that is required of the remote viewer is the ability to accept information for what it is and focus your subconscious so that your conscious mind doesn't interfere. In both cases, this is a difficult task as we are raised to allow our conscious mind to filter out unnecessary information acquired by our senses and only use the information that applies to our current situation and our existing beliefs and knowledge.

Analytic overlay occurs when we've acquired a considerable amount of information during a remote viewing session and our conscious mind applies this information to something we already know. For instance, four or five pieces of information might be characteristics of a particular item that your logical mind can identify. In this way, your brain turns the target into something that is familiar, thus misguiding your session.

How does analytic overlay affect you daily?

It's rather interesting to note that, as you learn remote viewing, you begin to find that your conscious mind is blocking information from so much of your day to day activities. Instead of accepting things as they truly are, your conscious mind is busily categorizing information into nice, neat boxes that are easy to manage.

This overlay is what causes many of us to do the same thing over and over again. You'll always do what you've always done because of what you know and what you believe. We tend to miss out on so many things because we are busily masking the realities so that they are able to fit within our comfort zones.

How can I truly see?

One of the exercises I had to do involved the acquisition of information from my surroundings. My teacher took me to several locations in Las Vegas, including Lake Mead and a farmers market, so that I could observe and sense things as they existed, not as I wanted them to exist. I had to make a conscious effort to smell the smells, hear the sounds, and feel the environment. I didn't realize how much I was missing in my real life.

The brain tends to block those things that are common and inconsequential because they do not have anything to do with your current mission. I found that I was missing out on so much because, somewhere along the way, I lost the ability to accept things like the smell of strawberries, the texture of a papaya, the feeling of water, and the varying beauties of a desert sunset.

As I opened myself up to accepting the small inputs of the senses, not only did my remote viewing become more accurate, but my appreciation of my life through the senses has increased. I was able to see the strawberry and taste it for what it was instead of just seeing the strawberry as something to consume for nourishment. There's so much to the various items of life than I had missed that, once I saw beyond my ingrained filters, I turned a mundane life into one of continual interest and intrigue.

What's next?

In the hectic world in which we live, we're busily blocking unnecessary inputs and categorizing experiences within our comfort zones so that we can focus on the issues and motives at hand. Our conscious brains process information and organize it comfortably as it tosses out those pieces of inconsequential information that don't apply to our lives.

One thing I've learned through remote viewing is that the universe is bigger in mystique, than in size, than we can imagine. However, we, as humans, have allowed our minds to become smaller than is acceptable. We have to learn to touch, smell, hear, see, and taste our lives instead of just issuing a projection of how we think it is, based on that which is comfortable. Not only will such an acceptance of things as they are allow us to enjoy life to its fullest, but it will also simplify life since we won't have to try to make things fit instead of just allowing things to be as they are. By opening our minds to the world outside instead of following the small world we create inside, we can learn to control our whole lives and 'target' a vision that provides us with greater balance and fulfillment.

Edward B. Toupin, Ph.D., is a published author, life-strategy coach, counselor, Reiki Master, and technical writer living in Las Vegas, NV. Edward works with people to help them strive for a richer life. He also authors books, articles, and screenplays on topics ranging from career success through life organization and fulfillment. Check out some of his recent print and electronic books as well as his articles covering various life-changing topics! Contact Edward at etoupin@toupin.com or visit his site at http://www.make-life-great.com.


[tags]article submission, articles, writers, writing, publishing, ezine, email marketing, email newsletter, email[/tags]

Advise Wisely When Giving Advice

When offering advice to someone who has asked to be advised about something, appears to cause a lot of confusion. Which always leaves me thinking twice about the advice they offer when they are advising me.

I read a lot of information on the Internet, in articles (both bought and freebies) and am amazed by the number of times I see this spelling error. In fact, I sort of feel now that it’s me who is out of step with my language skills. But a quick trip to my off-line Oxford Dictionary soon puts me at ease again.

You see, it works like this: When I am offering advice to my Contractors - that is all I am doing – offering advice on how they can save time and improve their marketing skills to get more jobs for less effort.

I am advising them on ways it can be done with ease and efficiency. My advice may not always be taken but it is still good advice and worth reading. And I do differentiate the difference by saying that it is my advice that I am advising them to do based on my experience in their market place. See the difference yet?

Advice is what I give when I am advising them on how to do a better marketing job of their services.

I think this problem occurs because people have become too reliant on their spelling and grammar checker on their computers. You see, both are real words and are both spelt correctly for that word so the computer doesn’t pick it up as an error. It’s a bit like George and Gorge.

Now here’s another interesting error possibility – in more ways than one.

“Just suppose George went to the Gorge and while there he gorged himself on his packed lunch”

The computer would pass that as okay too because there are no spelling or grammar errors in there. But gorging George while doing it in the Gorge, would be about as sick as that sentence – and George!

So my advice to you when advising people on a course of action is to be sure you are giving them the best advice you can in what you are advising them to do.

http://www.constructingprofits.com
Showing contractors how to make more money
~ working less hours!


[tags]Contractors,advice,advise,marketing,confusion,Internet,marketing,language,[/tags]