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Make Mad Money by Leaving Comments on a Blog?
I’m going to start off by actively apologizing to Eric. I was a doubting mustafa and I was wrong. In my 10 steps to generating new business, I stated the number one key to success was to get out of your house. What ensued was a calm debate between Eric and I on whether or not you can network and build a viable client base without leaving your house through the medium of communities on the web. My (old) stance: All REAL project deals happen offline. Eric’s stance: Online networks are a viable source of projects.
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Word of The Day: Techneurotic
tech·neu·ro·tic [tek-no-raw-tik] adjective A blogging disorder in which feelings of ranking anxiety, obsessive “do they like me?” thoughts, compulsive stats checking and even physical complaints in various degrees and patterns dominate the personality. Compulsive gadget buying behavior fueled by the impossible ideal that you can own a piece of technology that is not already obsolete. An obsessive character trait that drives most avant guard technological inventions such as the robot roach and the Moller Sky car Use: “A rash of techneurotic behavior assaulted the blog community during the Great Subscriber Crash of 07“
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Single Author Blogs I Read
The blogosphere is attracting some great people. In September, I shared the entrepreneur blogs I read. The stuff put together by teams, with editors and money (with a few exceptions). I love those blogs because they represent a phenomenal resource for all of us who are learning how to run a business. I have a second stash, my little private stash. The people out there writing about life, work, and business, who I personally like. Those sole individual bloggers, just telling us what they think, whether or not we care. Here’s a shout out to all of you who write because it stokes you out.
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The Million Dollar Question
If you don’t keep score, how do you know when you are winning? Now there is your list of dreams, an indispensables road map to happiness. Some of us though, happen to like big neat targets we can obsess over. Like ONE MILLION DOLLARS. Peter: Ahem…well, don’t you think we should maybe ask for *more* than a million dollars? I mean, a million dollars isn’t exactly a lot of money these days. Virtucon alone makes over nine billion dollars a year! Shane: Really? Peter: Mm-hmm. Shane: That’s a number. Okay then. We hold the world ransom for…..One hundred..BILLION DOLLARS!! I was reading the web when I saw a post by Cristian Dorobantescu from energybyte.com which asked these questions:
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Word of the Day: Essentual
es·sen·su·al [uh-sen-shoo-uhl] adjective That which at its core is both critical to our survival and arousing or exciting to our base instincts: the senses and the appetites. Being such by its very nature or in the highest meaning; the ultimate experience which elicits raw emotion. That which every artisan seeks, sometimes called the ‘holy grail’ or ‘the best work I ever did that will never win an award because it’s way too personal and a little too weird’. A type of project management lacking in restraints; raw and obsessively driven to identify and focus upon the core of each element. Often resulting in ‘simple software’. Synonym: iPhone
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How to Work With a Mentor
You know why you need a mentor. You took the time and energy to find one. If you haven’t yet: take your list of dreams, goals and aspirations for your personal life, find someone who has achieved the bulk of them in your industry (or if there are none, consider changing industry) and grab their coat tails and never let go. A bit of elbow grease and a whole lot of patience and interviewing will do the trick. So, now that you have a mentor, what the heck do you do?
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Never Hold Your Breath
I’m taking a scuba class right now. One of the primary laws of scuba diving is, “Never hold your breath”. This is because it only takes very small variations in pressure to collapse your lungs. I’ve been told more than once, by friends, family, and clients that I’m not responsive enough. This has always been a challenge, as my nature is to wait until i can formulate the right response. However, I rarely end up with enough time to think through the perfect answer. So I hold my breath and hope that i can get back to them soon. The problem here is one of managing expectations. For example… Client: Peter, could you please tell me what it would take to do XYZ?
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A Day Dream for a Day Job
The first time I ever talked to Peter was on the phone. He was interviewing me to work on a project already in development. I generally like interviews. It’s a chance to meet a new person, learn about what they do and show them what you’ve done. I was happy after talking to Peter. Not only because I was going to work with him, but from my answer to one of his first questions: “If you could do anything in life what would it be?”. I answered immediately: “I’m doing it”. Peter repeated my answer out loud. He was trying to come up with another question that would encourage me to be more descriptive. As we continued to talk, I realized Peter wasn’t only interested in my professional abilities, but was genuinely interested in my hopes and dreams.
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Freelancer’s Guide to Sales: Measuring your Sales Pipeline in 15 Minutes
Four years ago, Julie & I decided we were (emotionally) ready to buy our first house. Santa Cruz is quite expensive, with the median house price weighing in at $740,000 and the medium apartment around $480,000. This was going to have a significant impact on our monthly cashflow. We had some savings, and a loving wedding gift from both our families gave us enough to put 20% on a small apartment or townhouse. Julie and I sat down to figure out what mortgage payment we really thought we could afford. I was trying to stabilize my business at the time, as it was often feast or famine. Some months I could pull in $15,000, other months I would see $1,500. This discussion ran for weeks and continued into our family vacation. Enter the parents. My father listened quietly as Julie …
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Word of the Day: Actionate
ac·tion·ate [ak-shuhn-nit] adjective A passion to act, driven by strong emotion, that is often considered by your more cerebral and dis-actionate kin to be extremely foolhardy. A characteristic assigned to saints, sinners, some bloggers and most entrepreneurs. Usage: “Though many people express the desire when going through the blog action day sign-up list, most were not quite as actionate as they might have proclaimed.” In honor and respect of those who boned it up and wrote some great articles. A few of our favorites:
