Budget Friendly Ways To Market Your Home-Based Business

In this post and some upcoming posts we are going to share some budget friendly ways to market your business.

Every business owner needs to make the most of their marketing dollars and sometimes thinking outside the box can help you do much more with less.  We are sharing some great ways to market your business without emptying your bank account.   These strategies and tips come from home-based business owners just like you who have proven that working from home can provide a good income and allow you to have a flexible schedule.

Tip #1

1.  Have a Giveaway

One budget friendly way to market your business is to sponsor a giveaway on a blog or Facebook.

Tip #1- Do giveaways on Facebook, your blog, and/or other blogs that have a lot of traffic. Give away something small from your business about once a month and ask that to enter the contest, you must “like” your Facebook page. There are several free giveaway apps on Facebook that will even send the message to their followers and also run the contest by picking the winner for you. I’ve watched my fan page grow from about 200 likes to almost 3,000 likes in around 6 months just from giveaways, and I get many customers and a lot of feedback also from these giveaways.

The giveaway could be a report, a free book, a gift certificate for a product or service, a gift certificate for an online store, a gift card for coffee.  Be creative.  It does not have to be expensive.  Oftentimes business owners will be happy to give you a $25 gift certificate in return for you mentioning their business in your giveaway promotion.

 

Thanks to:  Megan Andrus from My Accessory Business

 

Please share your thoughts.
We love hearing from you.

Posted in Article Marketing, Blogging Info, Christian Home Business, Facebook, Internet Marketing, List Building, Passive Income, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

5 Ways to Rejuvenate Today

Thank you to our guest blogger Mary DeMuth for these five ways to rejuventate today!

I don’t know about you, but my life’s been hectic lately. I traveled far too much, and I need a break. So I  write these words to myself (and to you) in hopes that we’ll all take a holy breath and find ways to refresh. Here are five ways.

Take a day off. Set aside a day each week where you rest. On those days, get away from the computer and phone, if possible. Go outside. Create something—take photos, play music, draw pictures.

If you haven’t yet read “The Rest of God” by Mark Buchanan, I highly recommend his book. Life changing.

Cultivate spiritual disciplines,  particularly silence and solitude. Spend extended time with God for your own spiritual development. Write out your prayers. Fast from media.  Take long walks.

Indulge in a life-giving hobby. Find a hobby that limits adrenaline demand. Consider something you’ve  always wanted to do but never gave yourself permission to enjoy.

Like art? Take a class. Always wanted to fix up old cars? Join a local car club.

Invest in quarterly retreats. Once  every three months, take a planned break from everyday life for rest, reflection, and prayer. Read classics or novels for personal growth, no “how to” books allowed. Find a place where God’s natural beauty will rejuvenate you.

Hang out with friends who are outside of your work responsibilities. Having a rich tapestry of relationships unrelated to your job will keep you sane when inevitable needs arise. You need safe relationships where you can let down your hair and be you, where you’re not required to play a role.

Mary’s ezine is Live Uncaged.

Posted in Business Productivity, Christian Inspiration, Clutter Management, Health, Motivation, Personal Development, Recommended Blogs, Time Management | Leave a comment

Becoming Minimalist

7 Common Problems Solved by Owning Less

Written by Guest Blogger Jeremy Becker

“Anything you cannot relinquish when it has outlived its  usefulness possesses you, and in this materialistic age a great many of  us are possessed by our possessions.” - Peace Pilgrim

Three years ago, we sold, donated, or discarded over 70% of our family’s possessions. We removed clothes, furniture, decorations, cookware, tools, books, toys, plus anything else we could find in our home that was not immediately useful or beautiful. The result has been a completely transformed life and lifestyle. It is a decision we have never regretted.

The intentional choice to live with fewer possessions has brought with it a great number of benefits. It has been the answer to much of the discontent we felt in our lives when we owned more. And the decision holds the potential to do the same for you.

Consider these Seven Common Problems that Can Be Solved by Owning Fewer Possessions:

1. “I don’t have enough money / I’m in debt.” The simplest solution to almost every money problem is “spend less.” In fact, it’s the first step in almost every financial program ever devised. Purposefully deciding to own fewer possessions is an important step in getting your financial house in order – and often times, it’s the only step you really need to take.

2. “There’s just not enough time in the day.” We were immediately surprised at how much extra time we found in our lives after removing our unnecessary possessions. We came to realize, if we aren’t careful, the things we own quickly move from “time-saving” to
“time-consuming.” Just think about all the time we waste caring for our possessions: shopping, researching, organizing, picking up, cleaning, repairing, replacing – even earning the money to buy them in the first place. And the reality is, it can be difficult to determine how much time our possessions are actually stealing from us until we actually
remove them.

3. “There’s always so much cleaning to do / Even after I clean, my house feels cluttered.” Want to have a cleaner home? Own less stuff. It works every time.

4. “My house is too small / There’s never enough storage around here.” Chances are pretty good that your house isn’t too small – you’ve just put too
much stuff inside it. Case in point: according to statistics, the average house size in America has doubled since the 1950?s… yet, many of  us still think that we need something bigger. You probably don’t. And removing the unneeded possessions from your home and life will likely provide the opportunity for you to discover that again.

5. “I’m too stressed.” The artist and philanthropist, John Ruskin once said, “”Every increased possession loads us with a new weariness.” Every increased possession weighs down our lives with new things to worry about, care for, and maintain. Our purchases have far surpassed bringing convenience and ease into our lives. In fact, they have begun to do just the opposite – they have brought new forms of stress and anxiety instead.

6. “I can’t decide what to wear / It’s so hard to keep up with the changing fashions.” On the surface, fashion appears to be an ever-evolving game where the
rules change with each passing season. As a result, it demands astute attention (and an expansive income). But it does not have to. Instead, carry a beautiful wardrobe filled with a few timeless pieces that you truly love to wear. Once you love everything hanging in your closet, deciding what to wear will be one less problem to deal with in your morning.

7. “I wish I had…” Our culture begs us to own more. Advertisements call us to purchase the latest and the greatest. Our natural tendencies cause us to compare our lives with those around us. And we seem to have a built-in desire to impress others by owning as much as possible. As a result, we spend precious energy wishing we had more. But this constant dreaming, hoping, and envying other’s possessions is stealing from our joy and ontentment today. It makes us feel like we are missing something – even though there is so much joy right in front of us.

We made the decision years ago to live with fewer possessions. Sometimes, I get asked, Do ou think you’ll always live with a minimal number of possessions?” My response is always the same, “Oh yeah, I’m never going back. There is just too much joy and freedom on this side.” And I cherish the opportunity to invite others to experience it as well…

Thank you Jeremy.  You have given us a lot to think about and consider in your post.

If you are interested in other materials written by Jeremy please see below:

Inside-Out Simplicity, is being offered as part of the Second Annual Simplify Your Family Life Bundle Sale. The importance of family has been a recurring theme on this blog from the very beginning and I was honored to offer some of my writings to help make their sale a success. All told, the sale includes 38 ebooks and products from well-known bloggers that focus on family life. And for the next four days (Monday-Thursday), the entire collection is only $29. I invite you to check it out: Second Annual Simplify Your Family Life Sale.

Posted in Article Marketing, Business Productivity, Christian Inspiration, Frugal Living, Internet Marketing, Personal Development, Recommended Blogs, Time Management, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Getting Started In a Christian Home Based Business

If you are thinking of starting your own Christian home business there are several things to think about.

You can create the business you love.

Planning is the first step.  Consider carefully all the options.  If you are a people person, then being in thebusiness of working with people is something you would want to consider.  If you are the quieter type, then a service business may be more suited to your personality.

What are the skills you have to offer?  Do you do bookkeeping, graphic design, proofreading or editing?  Do you have products to sell?  Can you design newsletters, write blog posts or articles?  Do you have administrative skills?  Do you have project management skills?

You can work as a freelance contractor and bid on jobs through Elance.com or Guru.com or ODesk.com.  Here you will be competing with many other people who offer the same services so your prices will need to be competitive.

There have never been more options for working from home than there are now.  The Internet has changed the way we work, the way we shop and do business and it has brought many opportunities to work at home.

One word of caution, there are companies and individuals who take advantage of people looking to work from home.  Don’t pay any money to a company for the chance to work from home.  Do research on any company or individual ahead of time.  Make certain that an opportunity is a good fit for you.  What kind of reputation does the company have? How long has the company been in business? Does the company have a good management team?

Definitely learn about a company or the person you are going to work with before making any commitments!

Get counsel from people you know who are successful business owners.  Seek the Lord in prayer and ask for wisdom and guidance in this important decision.

In your planning consider:

  • What is the product or service? Will you offer a product or a service to make
    money?
  • Can you provide customer service ordo data entry?
  • What are the costs? Figure out what equipment you will need to start your business?  Do you need any training in order to offer your service?  Are there affiliations you should join or credentials you should obtain?
  • With any business, you can expect that were will be expenses to get started.
    Do you need a license?  Have you officially registered your company name?  Do you have an EIN for tax purposes?
  • Get the word out.  Join a networking group with other business owners either online or in your community.  Get to know other business owners by attending your local chamber of commerce.  Join the Better Business Bureau.
  • What niche market do you want to attract?
  • Who is your ideal client?

Your business will evolve and change over time.  Under promise and over deliver and always treat each customer or client like they are worth gold, because they are.  Think of little ways to say thank you throughout the year.  Never promise more than you can deliver and never take on more work than you can do.  As you grow you may need to add staff.

Social Media is a great tool to have to market your new business.  Create a Facebook page for your business and have a Twitter account.  Use a blog to write about your business.  Your website is your online business card.  It has to reflect your business well.  List your business on Google Places.  It’s free!  Create backlinks back to your website.  If you use these tools correctly, you will attract customers and clients to your new business.  Treating them well will create customers for life. 

Does it feel authentic? Whatever business you decide on, it has to be authentic. If it doesn’t feel right, it will show. But if it’s something you enjoy and are passionate about, you will be successful!

 

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Conducting Your Christian Home-based Business Biblically

As Christian Home-based Business Owners we do things differently.  Carrie Balrok has written our blog post for today.  She has some wonderful points to share with us Christian Home-based Business Owners.  Thank you Carrie.

There are many ways to conduct a business. And as Christian home-based business owners, you are fairly independent in determining how you will conduct your business. You will decide what practices to employ and what limitations you will impose to run your
business. There is no boss telling you what to do.

But that isn’t entirely true, because as a Christian home-based business owner, you do have a boss – God! As a Christian, you must take into account your own set of morals and beliefs and hold yourself accountable to God.

When determining how to conduct your business as a Christian business owner there are some Biblical commandments that you should definitely consider first.

They include:
The Golden Rule which essentially says, “do unto others as you would have them do unto you” Treating your employees, customers and anyone else you interact with in your business with respect and patience is the first step to conducting your business in a Christian-honoring manner.

The Ten Commandments located in the book of Exodus.

Particularly consider “Remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy.”. Let’s be honest, as Christian home-based business owners, we must have some limitations on how much time we spend on our businesses. Setting aside Sundays to focus on the Lord is a great way to remember what is most important and have a day of rest.

Other Commandments that we should uphold in our business are “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.” and “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house; you shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, or male or female slave, or ox, or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor.” Both commandments tells us how we should deal with other people, including fellow business owners.

Sometimes we can have negative interactions with other business owners, whether we feel threatened by them, wish we had what they have, or we feel belittled by their accomplishments. It is never right to say things against them just because of our jealousy or to be jealous in the first place. God will reward us in our own time if we are obedient to Him.

Therefore, commit your business to God and He will bless you. As Psalm 37:5 says“Commit your way to the LORD, Trust also in Him, and He will do it.” As you set out to determine your Christian home-based business practices, take all of these biblical commandments into consideration. Be sure that your business dealings honor God first before worrying about success or profits and watch how God will bless you.

Carrie Balrok, owner of The Christian Woman – Christian Women & Life


©2009
by Carrie Balrok, owner of The Christian Woman -
Christian Women & Life

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Nothing Goes to Waste

The following is a blog post written by Marily Meberg of Women of Faith

Her words are not only an encouragement in marriage but can be something to encourage us in whatever path our life takes us on today.

I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go; I will guide you with My eye.
—Psalm 32:8

When I married Ken in 1961, I thought I was embarking on a random journey to a destination of its own determination. In the years since then, I’ve learned that my life is not a random trail. There is nothing random about any aspect of my life, and I’m not in charge of its destination. God is. He is sovereign, not random. Therefore, my life path is sovereignly superintended by a loving God.

Some of you may be in a marriage that does not feel like the “best path.” You wonder how you can possibly believe God had anything to do with that path because everything on it feels so wrong. I encourage you to be aware of the ways in which God is guiding you to places and persons who can come alongside you and help.

That help may come from a friend, a pastor, marriage counseling, or all three.

I’ve also learned my greatest spiritual growth has sprung from my deepest human pain. Nothing in our lives goes to waste. All experiences, even a marital calamity, will ultimately work together for our good. I’ve also learned to be patient about not knowing what God knows. I have to trust him to take care of what I can’t see and ultimately make sense of what I do see. Your marriage may not make sense to you right now. Do what you can
and trust God’s way, which is to work out his plans for your life. His faithful love endures forever (see Psalm 138:8).

Excerpted from Daily Gifts of Grace © 2012 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

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Love is all you Need

A Sermon on Romans 13: 8-10

I’ve decided to speak this morning on one of the most unnerving and threatening pieces of Scripture I’ve ever come across -  threatening and unnerving at least for professional clerics like myself (people who get paid to teach the Bible). The passage is from Paul’s letter to the church at Rome, chapter 13:

“Owe no one anything, except to love one another; for the one who loves another has fulfilled the law. The commandments, ‘You shall not commit adultery; You shall not murder; You shall not steal; You shall not covet’; and any other commandment, are summed up in this word, ‘Love your neighbour as yourself.’ Love does no wrong to a neighbour; therefore, love is the fulfilling of the law.”

Ugh! It makes me shudder! What gall, to suggest that it could all be so simple – to suggest that the entire ethics of the Scriptures can be reduced down to a simple command to love, and that the one who has loved has fulfilled the law.

Surely it can’t be that simple, for if it were that simple, you wouldn’t need to employ me – with all my University degrees and prestigious title and library full of books – to teach you the Scriptures!  Not if it’s all that simple!  If that’s all there is to it, I reckon you can work the rest out for ourselves!

I mean, it stands to reason, doesn’t it, that if you’re employing a professional to teach you the Scriptures, the implication is that this book requires professional training before you can really come to terms with it. These must be highly obscure books with mysterious hidden messages.

And of course professorial figures like me come at a price!  We have to be compensated for all those years of training and hard study, but surely that’s a small price to pay if it means you now have someone to guide you through these ancient books in all their Byzantine complexity, and can so discern the inscrutable will of God.

But not if it’s all this simple; not if there’s just one simple commandment  – “love one another” – and the rest is just application.  Maybe it’s time I started looking for something to do with my hands?

“The one who loves another has fulfilled the law”, says St Paul.  And maybe we could write this off as one of St Paul’s more manic moments, except that I think Paul got this teaching from Jesus, didn’t he?

Wasn’t it Jesus who, when asked what the most important commandments were, didn’t just say that loving God and neighbour were the most important commandments.  He went further to say, “On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets” (Matthew 20:40). In other words, not only is the law of love central to the Scriptures, but it is at the basis of every other law and command we find in Scriptures, and indeed none of these other laws or commandments can be understood except as applications of this law of love!

I suspect that this is one of the key reasons Jesus upset his religious peers so much.  I think they feared that he was going to put them out of a job.

Now I don’t pretend to have any deep knowledge of the way Rabbi’s worked then or now, but my understanding is that the basic job of a Rabbi was (and is) to give rulings from God’s law that apply to the different situations of life.

You come to a Rabbi and you can ask him anything from, ‘Is it permitted for me to kill someone who has broken into my house?’ to ‘Is it permitted for me to mix milk into my gravy?’ and the Rabbi’s job is to tell you, ‘It is permitted’ or ‘It is not permitted’ based on his unravelling the multiple stands of the Torah. And it’s a tough job, because the Mosaic law is long and complex.

And professional clerics in Islam have a similarly difficult job, as I understand it, for when you read the Koran you’ll find that it too is a complex web of rules and regulations that require some expertise to work through.

But not so for the Christian, according to St Paul, and according to Jesus.  All the law and the prophets – the totality of the exhortations of the Scriptures – go back to one simple command to love, and “the one who loves another has fulfilled the law.”So if you’re in a situation where you are not sure what you should be doing, all you need to ask is, ‘what does love dictate?’ and you have discerned the will of God!  It’s that simple!

Now I want to take a moment to reflect on just how radical a formula that is, and, frankly, just how irreligious that is, as a basis for a system of ethics.  For it seems to me that the traditional religious basis for determining whether or not something is the will of God is not on the basis of whether or not it is loving, but on the basis of whether or not “it is written”.

I’m sure some of you remember that scene from Monty Python’s ‘Life of Brian’ where Brian and his mother turn up to a stoning, where they are going to stone some poor fellow for taking the Lord’s name in vain.  And Brian asks, “why can’t we take the Lord’s name in vain, mum?” and she says, “because it is written.  That’s why.”And that would indeed seem to be a fairly obvious way of working out God’s will – if indeed we believe that this is God’s book – that all we need to do is to determine whether it is written in the book or not.

Why do we have to circumcise all our male children?  Because it is written. That’s why!

Why aren’t we allowed to work on the Sabbath? Because it is written.

And if you look around the church today you’ll find all sorts of people telling us what we can and can’t do on the basis of ‘it is written’.

I was talking this week with a woman who founded a wonderful Christian fellowship group in this area, and she had been running that group successfully for some years until she was told that because she was a woman she wasn’t allowed to play a leadership role in her fellowship.  Why not?  Because it is written. That’s why not!

I remember some years back the argument that did so much damage to the Ministers Fraternal in this area (ie. the gathering of the priests and pastors from the various denominations that are represented in this area).

The issue was over a gay church that had been started not far from here and the question was, ‘should we invite them to join the fraternal?’ Up to that point we had only one requirement for admission – that the would-be member church should agree with the three fundamental historic creeds of the church, and as far as we knew this group did accept all of these ancient creeds, so we had no reason not to invite them to join.  But the suggestion was put forward that a second requirement should be added for those who would become members of the fraternal:

  1. You have to agree with the three basic creeds of the church and
  2. You are not gay!

And why should we introduce this second requirement?  Because it is written.

Now it’s not really my goal today to discuss the role of women in the church or whether we should embrace gay congregations, but what I do want to suggest is that using ‘it is written’ as the sole and sufficient basis for making decisions about what is the will of God was something, it seems to me, that New Testament Christianity very deliberately abandoned!

We see this in repeatedly in Jesus’ conflicts with His religious peers over his seemingly lax attitude to the Sabbath laws.

You are not supposed to work on the Sabbath, as we all know. Why not?  Because it is written that you don’t, that’s why not!  And indeed it is written right in to the ten commandments. It’s number four!

But Jesus never seemed to get too worked up about the Sabbath.  He eats, he heals and he does any number of things that his religious peers consider to be work, and when they challenge him, what does he say?  He doesn’t say, “Oh, actually I think you misread what was written.”He says, “C’mon guys!  The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath!”

And it’s an extraordinary statement, as it shows how Jesus refused to simply take the commandment at face value, but instead looked behind what was written to grasp the principle behind it, which was one of love.

God gave us the Sabbath so that we would rest and celebrate.  Six days you shall work, but you mustn’t work yourself to death. You must take regular time out for rest and recreation. God knows what us crazy workaholics are like and so specifies this time out as a commandment, but it was always for our sake. It was always an act of love on God‘s part, and if, as Jesus found, people get so obsessed about what is written that they lose sight of the purpose it was written for, then they get the whole thing back to front and end up oppressing people with a commandment that was designed to help set people free!

Jesus saw the Sabbath law as an application of the law of love.  And by the time you get to St Paul’s writings, he seems to have gone one step further, becoming almost entirely dismissive of the Sabbath law (as written).

“One person esteems one day as better than another (says Paul in the very next chapter of his letter to the Romans) while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind.” (Romans 14:5)

It is extraordinary, I think, that Paul had the courage to more-or-less dismiss, not just any Scriptural law, but one of the ten commandments!  And you can see his peers saying to him, “but Paul … it is written!”  And you can understand why our Seventh Day Adventist brethren just couldn’t go all the way with St Paul on this one because … hey, it is written!

Of course Paul seemed to abandon not only the traditional observance of the Sabbath, but also most of the traditional food laws, and even that most fundamental practice that was at the heart of the religion of the historic people of God – the ritual of circumcision.  And he never denied that it was written that you were supposed to do all those things, but it seems that in the context he was working in, dealing with gentiles rather than Jews, so many of those laws were just no longer applicable, as written.

Instead of taking the Scriptural commandments at face value, he looked behind those laws as written to see what purpose they were supposed to serve, and he decided that in his context those particular ancient laws were just no longer valid applications of the purpose for which they were created.

Now I do believe that once you latch on to this insight into the way the Biblical writers do their thinking, I believe it changes your whole approach to the Bible.  You can never say any more.  ‘Hey, I know this is the right thing to do’ or ‘I know that you are doing the wrong thing because … it is written.’ I mean, you can say that, but from a Biblical perspective, I think you’ll find that there is still another question to ask.  ‘OK. It is written, but is it the most loving thing to do?’

I think of people who have proudly told me how they tried to sort out their problems with a fellow church member by following the Biblical model, as outlined in our Gospel reading today from Matthew 18, where Jesus tells us that if you have an issue with someone, first you try to sort it out one-on-one, then, if that doesn’t work, you take one or two others with you, and if that doesn’t work, you put the matter before the whole church community, etc.

And, for the most part, I find myself being strangely unimpressed with those who have rigidly followed this model, as I don’t think it is the Biblical model.  It’s a Biblical model.  And indeed, it looks like a very solid application of the law of love when it comes to trying to prevent a quarrel between two people from escalating into something that might destroy the community BUT there will be some circumstances where this is not the most loving way of handling a conflict, and the goal must be to be driven by the law of love, and not to be dictated to by any one particular Scriptural example.

Maybe some people will feel that this approach is not taking the Bible seriously enough.  A lot of people thought that of St Paul of course.  A lot of people thought that of Jesus – that he was dismissive of the law of God, but how did Jesus respond?  He told his opponents, “I have not come to abolish the law but to fulfil it!” (Matthew 5:17)

And this is what Jesus does, and He gives us a key for understanding all the laws of Scripture.  They are all about love, and if we make the mistake of trying to be loyal to the Scriptures without taking into account the motivating power of love that lies behind them, we take our stand with the Scribes and the Pharisees who stayed true to what was written but had no love in their hearts.

So is there a place for us professional clerics or should I indeed be looking to do something with my hands?  It’s a frightening thought of course, as the only thing I’ve ever been able to do effectively with my hands is punch people, and I’m getting a little too old for that.  At any rate, you’ll have to be the arbiter of that one, but I would suggest that if there is still a role for us professional teachers of the Scriptures, our primary job must be to safeguard the simplicity of the Gospel truth, and to stop us from over-complicating everything.  Maybe it takes a bit of sophistry to be able to do that?  I’ll leave you to decide that.

Let me conclude though by mentioning again one of the key things I’ve learnt from Father Elias since he’s been with us, concerning what he believes to be the real division in the church.  And it’s not the division between Protestants and Catholics or between Liberals and Conservatives or any of those things. It’s the distinction between Christians who aim at perfection and Christians who aim at love.

And I think we might be able to make a similar distinction between those who look to found their life on what is written and those who look to found their lives on love – love, not at the expense of what is written, but the very love that emanates through what is written in the Bible and the very love that all of the laws of Scripture stem from – the very love that was embodied for us in Jesus, the living word, our King of love.

Our post today was written by our guest Rev. David B. Smith.

Visit Father Dave’s website: http://www.fatherdave.org/

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A Challenge Small Business Owners Have

The challenge for many business owners is they give great service but no one ever hears about them.  That’s true if you are an online business or if you own a brick and mortar business.

Did you know it’s a proven fact that 50 percent of new businesses fail in the first year? Don’t let your dream of finally owning your own business fall to the wayside because you didn’t join the 21st century.

Google offers many free resources of Google.  Google is the number 1 search engine in the world.  So where better go to find services and products.

With just a small investment of time you can create a listing in Google Places.  You will also be added to Google Maps for business.  This free service could translate to increased business and, therefore, increased revenue for your business within a short time.

Google Places is a free service from Google that lets you list useful information about your business for potential customers to see.

When your business displays on Google Maps  eager customers can click your phone number or find out more about your business immediately.  This free business service has become the go-to source for web savvy searchers looking for local businesses.

Before the Internet, businesses purchased advertising space in newspapers and magazines or television and radio spots to promote themselves to local customers.

The Internet has become ingrained into our lives and is the source for most information. If someone wants to find a plumber for their pipe that just burst, they simply hop online. When they want to know the best local restaurant for Thai food or what hardware store carries Craftsman tools, they go to Google.

Google makes this possible by serving up results based on the user’s location.

How does Google Places Work?  When a person is looking for a business, they can type in what they are looking for.  Google Places will show all of the businesses in that category.

Since Google Places is tailored to your area it’s a wonderful way to get business.

Google Places works really well on mobile phones too. With apps for Android and iPhones your mobile phone becomes the in your pocket yellow pages wherever you are.

To get you more customers, it conveniently will show your business on a map with a link to your customized Places page.

Google Places provides your “click to call” phone number so they can call you immediately with their phone.

This is great for the person looking for exactly what you have to offer who is actually in your neighborhood wanting to buy now.

Millions of businesses have already taken advantage of Google Places, and millions more are poised to follow. They have made the application an integral part of their marketing and advertising campaigns.

Many businesses don’t understand the importance of this service and they let their Places Page sit and collect dust or worse yet, never even claim their free Places Page from Google. By taking action, you can increase your customer base and increase web traffic.

You can stand out in the crowd of competition when your Google Business Places page is fully functioning and your customers are interacting with you online.

There’s no need to massively increase your advertising budget or spend hundreds, or even thousands, on a state-of-the-art website and development team.

By getting the most out of your free Google Places page you will drive in new customers.

Google makes it easy to learn about Google Places with a free training video.  Three free training videos show you How to Get on Google in a snap.

You can also find more tips and suggestion for getting the most out of your Google Places page at Google Places Revealed.

You have claimed your free Google Place page, your free business advertising from Google, right?  If not, you will most certainly want to as soon as possible.  Give your website and your business all the chances you can to be found.  Get started at Google Places today.

Do you know what your Google Places ranking is? Learn Three Factors that impact your Google Places Ranking. Make the most of your free advertising site from Google
and Get More Customers!

Give your website and your business all the chances you can to be found.  Get started at Google Places today What are you waiting for?

We hope you will find this helpful!  Let us know.

 

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Affordable Webinar Service – Meet Cheap Review

Today’s blog is about webinars.  It is written by guest blogger Rhonda White.  Be certain to visit Rhonda’s website www.mommyrevenue.com.  Thanks Rhonda for these great tips about this new webinar service.

Webinars are extremely hot right now…

Although webinars are not the “newest” marketing technique online, they are quickly gaining momentum as more and more marketers are recognizing the powerful affect that results in connecting with their current and potential customers online.

Instantly create your own info product to sell: Many marketers record their webinars and compile them in a series to later sell as an high end product or use them as an upsell to a lower end product.  Some marketers also use the recorded webinars to give away as a bribe to new subscribers…others have posted them on their site for users to browse and listen too.

By the way, I’ve attended quite a few webinars lately and I’m now addicted myself. lol

I’m sold on the power of webinars and here’s why…

I’m sold on the marketing technique of webinars because I’ve seen firsthand the way that I was able to quickly become familiar with the marketers who’ve held frequent webinars; they quickly earned my trust…and I’m compelled to buy their products more because of this personal connection.

In search of an affordable webinar service…

In searching and comparing online conference tools to hold my own webinars…I’ve discovered just how costly it can be.   Most services require you to pay a high monthly fee that would be considered quite expensive for new entrepreneurs.  Recently, I discovered MeetCheap, an affordable service to hold your own webinars, which will be launching on January 23, 2012.

Actually, MeetCheap is an extremely affordable option for small businesses.  Instead of paying $100 a month from the competition, you can now get a $100 seat room for just $1.00 and then only $9.97 per month. Meetcheap will soon be the premier online conferencing and webcasting service for many online marketers. Much of the competition charge a minimum of $100 dollars per month for the same service.

I’ve taken a few screenshots from inside the dashboard to show you…

First, you’ll be relieved to see that there’s training videos to help you get started.  I’ve checked these out and the instructions are super easy to follow.

As you’ll see, these training videos lead you EVERY STEP of the way. (See the list of the training videos below.)  Perfect for newbies or those who feel a little “technically challenged“.

The first step to use your web conference room is to set  yourself up as a moderator.  As you can see, the upper righthand corner you can download the PDF “User Manual” or watch an “instructional video” to help you with this step.

Here’s a screenshot of my conference room.  You’ll see some popular webinar tools at the top: Chat, Browser, Presentations, Whiteboard, Video, Desktop, etc….

Here I had some fun doodling on the whiteboard…and you can save your illustrations to download.

And most business owners will appreciate the web browser.  You can access the internet during your webinar to show visitors a particular website.  (Remember, you can also share your desktop, play a video or upload your own powerpoint presentations, etc.)

I know this is a pretty brief review…but I found it extremely easy to use and love the fact that they offer such detailed training videos…but above all, you really can’t beat the price for such a quality webinar service.  Click here to check out Meet Cheap now.

 

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Top 10 iPhone Apps for Spiritual Growth

Top 10 iPhone Apps for Spiritual Growth

We wanted to share a recent post we read written by Heather MacFadyen.  With the recent advances in smart phones and tablet devices we  can’t give the excuse that we “don’t have time” to read the Bible. Or keep a prayer journal. Or encourage others with Scripture.

There are wonderful applications (aka “apps”) available, most for free, that allow you to grow spiritually and to minister to others on-the-go…in carpool line, waiting at the grocery store check-out line, in the doctor’s office…

I surveyed our Do Not Depart contributors and here are some of our favorite apps for spiritual growth & ministry. I’ve broken them into the following categories: Bible Study, Scripture Memory, Prayer, Worship, & Encouragement.

Bible Study Apps:

1. You Version Bible (FREE)

  • This app is available on the iPhone, iPad, Android, Blackberry, Palm.
  • Over 100 different versions of the Bible in many different languages (I’ve used the Swahili version to share the Psalm 4 with a Muslim refugee from Somalia!)
  • Reading plans available.
  • Type any word or phrase for quick search of Scriptures (concordance).
  • Encourage others through sharing verses. Highlight a verse then with one button chose one of the following options:

**If you just want a copy of the English Standard Version (ESV) by Crossway Publishing, there is an app for that specific version.

2. Bible.is (FREE) by Faith Comes by Hearing:

  • The most translations in the world.
  • 600+ languages including dramatized Audio
  • The JESUS Film Project too…New Testament Scripture comes to life.

3. Matthew Henry Commentary ($1.99):

  • What a deal!! “The complete six volume set (over 5,850 pages) of trusted verse-by-verse commentary of the entire holy bible with over 64,000 scripture references at your finger tips – fast and easy to use.”

4. Logos (FREE):

  • This app is similar to the YouVersion app but it differs in that you can connect it with a Logos account. Therefore you can make notes & highlight verses (80 different colors & symbols available) that are saved across devices (your phone & computer).
  • Pull up any verse and compare it across any 5 different versions…on one screen.
  • “The Passage Guide allows you to enter a verse and get a detailed report that includes relevant commentaries, cross references, literary typing, and media resources.”
  • Highlight a word in a verse to look up the Greek/Hebrew for further study.

Scripture Memory Apps:

5. Bible Memory Verses (FREE) by Woody Hays

  • 1,000 Bible verses to chose from to memorize in 4 different versions of the Bible (ESV, KJV, NASB, NIV).
  • “A word removal tool, flashcard tool, audio record & playback functions, search function and the ability for users to add their own verses.”
  • Includes quizzes to allow users to test their knowledge.

6. Fighter Verses ($2.99) by Children Desiring God (John Piper Ministries)

If you want a little more than the Free app mentioned above…this app has:

  • Has 520 verses preloaded in 6 different translations of the Bible (ESV, NIV, NASB, HCSB, KJV, LBLA (Spanish)).
  • Four unique quizzes: Quick Blanks, Word Bank, Typing, & Reference (match the reference to text).
  • Display the verse you are memorizing on your Lock screen so it pulls up every time you turn on your phone.
  • Set a schedule for weekly memory and get daily or weekly reminders.
  • Songs available to help memorize.

**Here is one more app to check out for Scripture Memory: Mobilize Faith Bible Memory ($5.99)

Prayer Apps:

7. Prayer List ($1.99)

  • The key feature is password protection on this app. Prayer requests listed stay private.
  • Allows you to organize prayers by groups (family, friends, community group, Bible Study, children, school) and then by specific people in that group.
  • Record dates requests were made and answered. Review God’s faithfulness as you scroll through answered prayers!
  • Email prayers to friends to encourage them.

Worship Apps:

8. Pandora (FREE):

  • This personalized radio station is wonderful for helping you worship during your quiet time, re-focus on God while cooking dinner, or praise His goodness while folding laundry.
  • Type in an artist’s name, style of music or song to set up a radio station. The app will then choose music to fit into that station.
  • Some of my favorite stations are: Hillsong, Christa Wells, Chris Tomlin, Bethany Dillon, Aaron Shust, and Contemporary Christian. Share in the comments what stations you love!

9. One Thousand Gifts (FREE):

  • Ann Voskamp’s book “One Thousand Gifts” forever changed my daily experience. Taking note of His daily gifts of grace. Communing with God through gratitude. Now keeping a list of gifts is even easier with this app.
  • Record gifts in text or with pictures.
  • Share gifts on social media (twitter & Facebook).

Encouragement Apps:

10. Reeder ($2.99):

  • There are so many wonderful blogs with encouraging content and truth. To keep track of your favorites, use Google Reader and sync it with this app.
  • What are some of your favorite blogs for solid Biblical teaching and encouragement?

These are the top 10 apps for Spiritual Growth that Heather shared.  Please let us know if you have apps that you’ve found helpful for your Spiritual Growth.  We would love to hear from you.

Heather MacFadyen has been married for 12 years, is the mother of 3 young boys with a 4th boy due in February of 2012. In her “free time”, Heather writes for her blog, www.godcenteredmom.com. Her goal is to encourage other moms (and herself) to daily clothe themselves in humility by placing God in the center, so they can serve their families with joy and to bring God glory.
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