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How to Make Money Online
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People who want to make money online may have tried in the past and failed. There is a good reason why they failed. They did not have the right guidance. Without the right guidance, you might as well stay with your office job and continue making your boss richer. With the right guidance, you work for yourself and make money online. With the right dedication and diligence, you may be able to retire in just a few years with a seven figure income. It is possible and there are internet entrepreneurs who are willing to tell you how. Proper Guidance You may be wondering what you could know that other people would pay you to learn. Here is just one example. There are websites that are trying to be information powerhouses. They will pay you for information on nearly every subject. What are your hobbies? Do you enjoy hunting? Do you change the oil in your car? Have you raised children and do you know how to get gum out of hair? Any and all of that could earn you money. There is one hitch. These information powerhouses do not want people to know that John Q. Public provides the information so it is very difficult to find out who pays for information from experts and who does not. Using Your Talents to Make Money Online We all have talents. We all know something another person does not know and in this information age, people will pay you for what you know. If you take your knowledge to the streets, you can reach the people in your neighborhood. If you take your knowledge to the web, you can reach the world and make money online. In the not too distant future, there will not be a place on Earth that lacks internet access. Are you going to do this or will you step aside and let someone else do it? If you do not want the freedom of working for yourself and the flexibility of setting your own hours then take the next exit on the information superhighway and yield to people who want to make money online.
More Consumers Paying for Content
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Despite a generally weak economy, consumer content spending in 2003 grew to nearly $1.6 billion, a healthy 18.8 percent increase over 2002. Three categories -- personals/dating, business/investment and entertainment/lifestyles -- accounted for 64 percent of total spending for the year, with the personals/dating category generated the most revenue. Michael Zimbalist, president of the Online Publishers Association (the OPA) -- which conducted the Online Paid Content U.S. Market Spending Report in conjunction with comScore Networks -- says that although the entertainment/lifestyles category remained among the top categories, it actually declined in 2003, compared to 2002. "We suspect this is a result of our current data collection approach, which by design does not include transactions taking place in non-browser Internet applications (i.e. iTunes)," says Ziimbalist. "We believe application-based paid content delivery is likely to have grown significantly in the past year and will become an increasingly important trend. As such, we are currently exploring approaches to capture this important data so that it may be included in future reports." The personal growth and sports categories experienced the most rapid year-over-year growth in Q4 2003, according to the report. In fact, the personal growth category jumped more than 100 percent. The OPA and comScore also found that the growth rate in paid content revenue is attributable to the growth in the number of consumers buying content and not additional dollars per consumer. The average spending per paid content customer increased only 4.5 percent from Q4 2002 to Q4 2003, while the number of U.S. consumers paying for online content grew from 2.1 million who paid for content in Q4 2002 to 16.4 million in Q4 2003. Accordingly, the year-over-year growth in consumer acceptance of online paid content is 7.7 percent, from 10.3 percent of the U.S. Internet population in Q4 2002 to 11.1 percent of the U.S. Internet population in Q4 2003. Subscriptions, as opposed to single purchase sales, continue to be the dominant pricing model for online content sales. Retention rates remain high, with 71 percent of those who subscribed for monthly payments still visiting fee-restricted content areas 12 months later. In addition, the average conversion rate for those who signed up for free trial offers becoming paid subscribers was 18 percent, up only slightly from the 2002 free trial conversion rate of 17.8 percent.
How to Make Money with Your Knowledge
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People who want to make money online may have tried in the past and failed. There is a good reason why they failed. They did not have the right guidance. Without the right guidance, you might as well stay with your office job and continue making your boss richer. With the right guidance, you work for yourself and make money online. With the right dedication and diligence, you may be able to retire in just a few years with a seven figure income. It is possible and there are internet entrepreneurs who are willing to tell you how. Proper Guidance You may be wondering what you could know that other people would pay you to learn. Here is just one example. There are websites that are trying to be information powerhouses. They will pay you for information on nearly every subject. What are your hobbies? Do you enjoy hunting? Do you change the oil in your car? Have you raised children and do you know how to get gum out of hair? Any and all of that could earn you money. There is one hitch. These information powerhouses do not want people to know that John Q. Public provides the information so it is very difficult to find out who pays for information from experts and who does not. Using Your Talents to Make Money Online We all have talents. We all know something another person does not know and in this information age, people will pay you for what you know. If you take your knowledge to the streets, you can reach the people in your neighborhood. If you take your knowledge to the web, you can reach the world and make money online. In the not too distant future, there will not be a place on Earth that lacks internet access. Are you going to do this or will you step aside and let someone else do it? If you do not want the freedom of working for yourself and the flexibility of setting your own hours then take the next exit on the information superhighway and yield to people who want to make money online.
Ways to Make Money with Your Knowledge and Interest
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To make money online, the majority of experienced Internet marketers began their career marketing products or services that they had knowledge of or an interest in. It would be most advisable then that when starting out that you should do likewise Though Internet marketing work is much easier and less time consuming than a nine to five job, it does however take motivation developed by having knowledge and interest in the product or service, simply so that boredom won't set in and cause you to give up in the early stages of your Internet marketing career. Should you have no knowledge or interest in any product or service in demand then affiliate marketing aside there is another option. By far the greatest collection of information about any subject is available to all via the search engines. It goes without saying then that on a number of occasions you will surf the net to find some of the answers you need. It would be foolish not to after all. It is entirely feasible option to spend a few short weeks studying a niche product or service and be perfectly capable of finding ways of making money from what you have learned. I would be very surprised if your research did not meet such goals so keep at it and choose the company providing your product or service carefully. It should be a well established company, and offer products and services that are in demand and indeed one that you can develop an interest and belief in. If it doesn't fit these categories just move on to another It is very tempting to choose a product or service where there is no interest or knowledge present simply because it is easy to market to millions of people. If their is one piece of advice I would put ahead of all others, it would be to go with a product or service you know something about so please do not ignore this. It's all too easy to try and copy an Internet "guru". Don't, not only has he experience, he is a member of a group of people like himself that make fortunes out of promoting each others products. You have no chance of competing against them and you are unlikely to have much knowledge of Internet marketing products. There is a reason for advising a newbie Internet marketer to choose a product or service that he or she has knowledge of and a interest in..it works. Your long term goal ought to be to have the ability to find a way to make extra money with almost anything online. That skill on its own will bring you the freedom and lifestyle that most people can only dream about. Don't forget there are a number of other steps in setting up an online business you have to learn about, so take your time to educate yourself or find a good trainer or training program. There are a number of good Internet Marketing trainers with excellent track records and good quality training materials such as online video streaming or telephone support So go find a product or service you can be passionate about, find a good training course and launch your Internet business, I promise you will not regret it and success will come to you, providing of course you follow the steps I have laid out. Read more: http://www.articlesbase.com/internet-articles/ways-to-make-money-with-your-knowledge-and-interests-817903.html?utm_source=sendgrid.com&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=sys_mails#ixzz0r2EhZFdS Under Creative Commons License: Attribution
Computing WorldWide Health Indicators
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May 24, 2010 We recently added data on health indicators for more than 200 countries and territories. We now have World Health Organization data on health care workers, immunizations, water and sanitation, preventive care, tobacco use, weight, and more. Data is also now available on specific types of health care personnel, such as physicians, nurses, and dentists, and Wolfram|Alpha can also compute per capita figures for each type of health professional. Check out the figures on midwives in South Africa or dentists in Iceland—or for a particularly interesting view, try asking about doctors per capita in all countries. Other intriguing indicators include figures on hospital beds, drinking water and sanitation, tobacco use, weight and obesity, and reproduction and contraception. Some data, such as for infant immunizations (including DTP, MCV, hepatitis B, and Hib), spans several years—which allows you to see dramatic increases in immunizations in many developing countries, as well as surprising declines in some first-world nations. Try comparing medical resources of Cuba and the USA, or contraceptive use in Chad and France. Regional overviews are possible, too: you can view maps and summaries of data on underweight children in Africa and DTP immunization around the world, for example. For more suggested queries, visit our examples page. Whether you’re a student, researcher, or just curious, we invite you to explore the data.
Will Consumers Pay for Content
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Will consumers pay for online news and entertainment they now get for free? That's the question Nielsen asked more than 27,000 consumers across 52 countries. As expected, the vast majority (85 percent) of people prefer that free content remain free. But Nielsen concluded opportunity exists for online content providers, especially with content that consumers have paid for in the past. Easy Payroll OnlinePaychecks, direct deposit & taxes. No software to buy. PayCycle.com Obama Credit Bailout PlanSee if You Qualify for the Obama Credit Reform Bailout Plan See Now www.CreditReliefAct.com The report shows people are most likely to pay for content they normally pay for offline, like theatrical movies, music, games and current television shows. Slick, professionally produced content may also be worth the price of admission. Many people have paid for this type of content in the past and recognize its value. Consumers are far less likely to pay for homegrown content, whether that's a YouTube video, a Facebook update or a blog post. This type of content is viewed as cheap to produce and has always been free. Newspapers, magazines, Internet-only news sources, radio news, and talk shows could also have a tough time persuading people to pay for their products online because much of their information is readily available elsewhere for free, Nielsen concluded. Younger users more willing to pay The study showed younger users are far more likely than their older counterparts to pay for digital content, even if they are less able to afford it. Nielsen suggests those under 20, though they are more familiar with getting around paid content, also understand the risks of peer-to-peer content sources, which can include prosecution or unknowingly downloading a virus. Furthermore, younger viewers do not discriminate between screens – that is, a movie streamed through an on-demand service such as Netflix and viewed on a computer screen is just as valuable to them as one that is distributed through a cable company and viewed on their television. But young or old, when it comes to the news, only one-third of respondents said they would pay for online newspaper content, citing their ability to get similar information from a number of online sources. This may signal bad news for the New York Times, which recently announced plans to start charging readers for access to online content next year. Both France's national newspaper Le Figaro and Great Britain's Times of London have begun experimenting with a pay for content model. Magazines fared slightly better: 39 percent of respondents said they would pay for digital versions of magazines. The report suggests consumers will drive a hard bargain if and when they are asked to pay for content. People will not pay twice More than three out of every four survey participants (78 percent) said that if they already subscribed to an offline newspaper, magazine, radio or television service, they should be able to use its online content for free. More than two thirds of participants (62 percent) believed that once they purchased content, it should be theirs to copy or share with whomever they want. With the current state of digital rights management, this is certainly not the case. Removing the encryption, or digital rights management (DRM), code from music or movie files is a federal offense in the U.S. Nearly three-fourths (71 percent) of global consumers say online content of any kind will have to be considerably better than what is currently free before they will pay for it. Nearly eight out of every ten (79 percent) would no longer use a web site that charges them if they can find the same information at no cost. An alternative to the direct pay-for-service model is advertising, a model familiar to all consumers. And in recent years, consumers have been trained to accept a hybrid model, combining both a subscription fee with advertising. Once ad free, cable channels now carry ads the same as network channels. The Nielsen survey suggests this hybrid model will be less successful online: Less than half of the respondents said they were willing to accept more advertising to subsidize free content. And 64 percent said that if they have to pay for content online, there should be no ads.
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