December 26, 2007

Releasing The Multi-Tasking Queen Syndrome

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The inefficiency of multi-tasking in business is well-known. 

Checking emails, making phone calls in the middle of working on a project is called continual partial attention -

when your mind has something is it constantly tracking and never turns off.

When your business needs to shift gears it takes a while to shift back - as much as 30 minutes each and every time -

for me much more time - and the cost of it can become very high.

I know this from experience;

I have called myself "the multi-tasking Queen", juggling resources and time all of my adult life. 

It took me 10 years of study at the university,

a lost job,

a broken marriage,

the birth of four children,

and 10 years of failure at business to finally learn this one.

This is my greatest AHA this year.

Continuing to multi-task when my experience has taught me that it is extremely inefficient is just downright foolish. 

I have three kids at home and since our recent move, my office in the living room,

so how will I achieve real focus and "flow" in my work and business?

Obviously, I need to make some changes - more changes.

But they are good ones - these changes -

and I start by changing my self-description on my "about us" page on this site.

To Our Mutual Success, Both Online and Offline,

Angela Wickenberg

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February 27, 2007

The Sky's No Limit: Be A Dreamer

[I was reading an essay by Jeanne Tessier Barone and felt that what she writes merits being published here.  She and I think alike; in fact, to some extent, she could be another me.  I have taken the liberty of adapting the content to my life and changing things to apply to me, and perhaps also changing parts of the writing and so the essay is not as the original, but her basic ideas and thought processes are there, which I wanted to give her credit for, especially, her style of posing questions and then answering them, which I have learned a lot from.]

A short while back, I read something the poet Rita Dove once wrote:  "When the sky's the limit, how can you tell when you've gone too far?"  That seems a bit hemmed in when your head is full of far-flung metaphors, like mine often is.  That quote makes me feel contained, constrained by what struck me at first as a somewhat negative statement or idea: "When the sky's the limit, how can you tell when you've gone too far?"

But if you know anything about me, I love a challenge and living on the edge, so I pondered the quote awhile. You should know, by the way, that I have spent most of my life testing limits, my own and those imposed on me.  I am a born questioner and limit-tester, so much so that I just can't hold it inside and often blurt out my questions - not meaning to cause dissention or disharmony -  but with a desire to discuss… and well, test limits.  At school and at the University, my teachers dispaired.  As a child, I tested everything, even at the young age of two, when I nearly burned myself to death… After many operations and years in and out of the hospital, I started school, and became a dare-devil on wheels at age five, and whomever dared to challenge me got a match they would not soon forget - a small stick of a child, outwardly extremely feminine, but inwardly - a warrior!

So, faced with this limiting quote, this wrinkle in thought, I responded as any good questioner and limit-tester would; I went looking for answers to the questions that quote stirred up in me.  Sure enough, when I was done, I was grateful for the question that I once thought was a wrinkle in thought - some seriously faulty thinking.

The questions that came up were:

"Who says the sky's the limit, anyway?"

"And, it is really the limit, or do we just think so?"

"And, how can we know a limit is truly a limit unless we test its edges with all our might?"

"And isn't it just as important or more so to know when we haven't gone far enough?"

"And what does it mean to go to far anyway?"

So who says the sky's the limit, anyway?  This phrase comes from a contemporary of Shakespeare, a Spaniard named Miquel de Cervantes.  I was delighted to learn of this because this meant that the saying was not meant to impose limits, but to challenge and push against them.  The original phrase was by Cervantes was this: "No limits but the sky."  I find that an oddly more positive phrase than how it now appears in modern usage "The sky's the limit."  The phrase appeared in a novel by Don Quixote, which was first published about 1605.  The timeless story of DonQuixote was made into a Broadway musical called Man of La Mancha about 40 years ago, with a song, famous at the time, called, "To Dream the Impossible Dream." Maybe you've heard of it?

Don Quixote was a man who saw a world beyond the limits the world itself sought to impose.  In himself, an aging eccentric, he saw a brave knight errant seeking to rid the wrold of that which caused others harm.  In a foolish and ignorant barber, he saw a brave companion for his quest. In a depised and self-despising prositute, he saw a beautiful woman waiting to be cherished. Don Quixote was a man without limits, who looked beyond what others called impossible and found rich and joyous possibilities.  All those he encountered thought him mad; an unknowing fool.

So, in answer to the question: "Who said the sky's the limit anyway?" The answer is: A writer who sought to create a world seen through kinder and more redeeming eyes. about 400 years ago.  At that time, of course, the sky had not yet been pierced through by rocket ships, probed by satellites, travelled across in metal birds by you and I, and studied in all its glorious and infinte detail by a massive telescope travelling through space.

The sky, rather, is limitless in possibilities and is defined as:  "The expanse of air over a given point on Earth: the upper atmosphere." The sky, in other words, is nothing more than the air we breathe, and an illusion created by a certain lanlocked point of view.

Another writer, from the 1800s (Authur Schopenhauer) said that  "Everyone takes the limits of her own field of vision for the limits of the world." We see the blue above and nothing beyond and we assume the sky's the limit. We see a structure, an institution, an attitude, a habit of being, and we assume it must be and always be so.

In the field of Communications, the power of self-fulfilling prophecies are taught: that human beings tend to enact or make real what they believe about themselves and others.  One woman believes that, discrimination or not, gender and cultural barriers or not, there is still no limit to what she can attain if she pursues her goals with all her heart.

Another believes her world is a closed system in which women are hopelessly shut out and disenfranchised, and so have always been.  The first woman builds a life of accomplishment with dignity and grace; the second woman builds a life of bitterness, recrimination, narrowness.  (My feminine language applies to all people.)

So now we have an answer to the second question: Is the sky the limit, or do we just think so?  We think it so.  We are bound at every turn by the limits of our beliefs. They define what we think is real and what we ourselves will become. So we had best be careful, then, about what we believe.  We had best create and hold beliefs that leave as much room as possible for us to be wrong, for us to expand and grow.  We had best build worlds for ourselves that have few walls, and many windows and doors.

Are there no real limits in our lives, then?  Aren't there limits we cannot change simply by believing? Of course there are. some persons struggle with terrible poverty. Some are differently abled in ways that make everyday life tasks difficult. Some carry burdens of abuse and experience that others will never know.  Limits abound, but it is more how we think about them than what they are that will determine the quality of our lives. Writers Dominquez and Robin have said: "Once we're above survival level, the difference between prosperity and poverty lies simply in our degree of gratitude."

The third question facing us, then, is:  How can we know our limits unless we test them?  Here the answer is straightforward and simple: We can't.  It is only through testing and pushing against the limits of our perceptions, experiences and culture that we can be a force for change; change our own circumstances and those of others. If we didn't test our limits, we would never walk, we would never grow, we would never fly.

So, the sky is not limits but endless possibilities, and it is we who perceive and impose limits where none exist, and if we do not test the limits of our perceptions and our abilities and our worlds, we will never know what lies beyond.

But now we have arrived at our fourth question:  How do we know when we haven't gone far enough?  Most of us are committed, hard-working people, aren't we? Isn't that far enough to go? No. How do we know, then, if we need to go farther? Here are some conclusions I've  come to in my own search for an answer to this question:

If we do not engage in work for which we have a real passion and pursue our work passionately, we have not gone far enough.  If we do not have a clear sense of direction and meaning in our lives, we have not gone far enough.

If we do not understand that our actions and words can have a lasting impact on the quality of human life, we have not gone far enough.  If we don't hope and strive to make a positive difference in our world, if we are content with what we do and don't continually look to how we can be better persons, we are not going far enough.

If we haven't wholly loved another human being, if we don't at least try to recognize the good in everyone we meet, if we don't have times of real joy in our lives, then we have not gone far enough.

Life is too short  and too precious not to live it with passion and pursue it with zeal. And your work is much too important to pursue with anything less than your total commitment.

And now we come to our last question:  "What does it mean to go to far"  I am sure we all remember when "going too far" meant having sex before marriage and I think we all know it doesn't mean that anymore.  So what does it mean?

Have we gone too far if we try something new that fails?  No.

On the contrary, if we never fail, we can't be sure we aren't going far enough.  Have we gone too far if we try to re-envision our work, our organizations, our goals, our dreams? No. All change, all innovation, beings with re-imagining.  Is it going too far to take important risks? No. We have to be willing to risk for the sake of movement and growth.   Is it going too far to stand up and speak out about what you believe, even if your ideas are unpopular? No. The human story would be a slow and sad one if there had not been individuals all along the way who spoke out against the status quo and called their peers to be better than they were.  Is it going too far to remain a committed idealist in a world that invites pessimism? Never. Without ideals we die.

Can we ever really go too far?  This is a difficult question for me because I have already admitted that I am a life-long edge tester and there's a part of me that always wants to say that you can never go too far. Even my current decent into deep middle age hasn't deterred me from, often, heading out on metaphorical tight wires without benefit of nets.  But I have also sometimes fallen hard onto the floor below. So with exhilerating experiences and occasional bruises to show for it, here is what I would say about going too far.

First, take big risks and important actions, but give them careful thought. Also make sure a part of the thinking process includes sharing your ideas with someone whose opinion on these matters you respect, because we human beings are expertly capable of having blind spots in our thinking and of deceiving ourselves.

Second, try not to go so far that, when you arrive at your destination, you find yourself utterly alone.  It is hard to be a limit-tester, a risk-taker, a traveller into new terrain.  Seek and maintain the support of someone who loves you.

Third, be aware that change involves loss as well as opportunity.  You can't leave one job for another without surrendering the comforts and sometimes the friendships of where you were.  You can't take on new responsibilities without letting go of old ones. Not for long anyway, or you will be of no use to anyone, including yourself.  You can't launch new programs without sacrificing some aspects of what's already being done.  You have to make enough room in your life and work for growth to occur.

Fourth, be ready to feel afraid.  All change is scary.  It is human to love a rut; ruts are comfortable and safe.  There are many ways in which most of us would prefer the predictable to the uncertain or unknown.  This is why, for example, when change occurs in organizations, it is often met with resentment or anger.  This is why: "That isn't how it's done" and "but we've always done it this way" are such well-known phrases.  Change requires that we rethink old ideas, and there is nothing scarier than giving up what we were convinced were truths about our work, ourselves, our world. But, you know, fear is also enlivening, which is why people skydive and bungee jump and scale sheer mountain cliffs.  And it is good to feel fully alive.

Fifth, dare to dream. Let your mind wander. Rita Dove has a poem called "Daystar" in which she describes a woman who takes a chair out behind her garage to stare at an empty field while her children are napping.  When her daughter finds her and demands to know what her mother has been doing out there, the mother responds, "Why, building a palace."  We should build palaces in our minds.

Can we go too far?  Maybe, but there are things to learn from it that we can't learn any other way, and even when I've sometimes thought I'd done it - gone too far - I've never regretted it for long.

I have no idea what Rita Dove had in mind when she wrote the words we began with: "When the sky's the limit, how can you tell you've gone too far?" But I do know where my attempt to address her question has taken me. By way of conclusion, and in humble tribute to her poetry, let me end this way:

The sky is infinite.  It is we who make it a wall.  The only way to know is: go.

Standing still is death.  And far is never where you are, but where you dream to be. Everything good in life was born in dreams.

Be a dreamer.

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July 4, 2007

Independence Day, Freedom, and My Birthday - The Fourth of July and Free Gift!

In the States, where I'm from, it's Independence Day, the National holiday is commonly associated with  fireworks, parades, barbecues, picnics,
baseball games, and various other public and private events celebrating the history, government, and traditions of the United States.   Fireworks have been associated with independence day since 1777, with a 13 gun salute at daybreak and night fall.

It's also my birthday today.  I was born, though, after all "bombs had burst in the air" -  the noise had stopped and all was peaceful, at 11.25 PM on the Fourth of July.  Here's a video of a song composed and sung by another person, also born on the Fouth of July. Press play and then pause to let it load and while it's loading come back and read the rest of this post and download your gift:

http://youtube.com/watch?v=vnRqYMTpXHc  This the link to the URL where the song is.

One of my dreams is to become Independent  - financially independent so that I will have even more freedom to do the things I want to do.  Living a life of freedom is a dream of many people.   I know I began with Internet Marketing because of the freedoms it promises.

Even my life as it is right now is full of fantastic freedoms:

  • I live in a residential area most people only dream of.
  • I work from home, where I have a lovely patio and garden.
  • I spend time with my children, taking breaks when needed;  I can prepare the bar-be-que as I sit at my computer.
  • Even though I work with a very tight budget, I am able to run a business and have this fantastic blog in SemioLogic Pro (see bottom of page).
  • I am able to communicate with people all over the world and take part in seminars for free or at a fraction of the real cost.
  • And my successes are completely dependent on the things that I do; the decisions that I make and the focused ACTION THAT I TAKE.


The list could be longer, but I want to get to the point here, which is living the life of your dreams and gaining the freedom and independence that you want and deserve.  There is nothing more important in life than this.  In this blog, I have tried to give you many different alternatives and ideas of how you could change your life and improve your work situation.  At times I have tried to inspire you.   Sometimes I have given you tips and free tools.  Have you been reading?

Are you independent?  Are you living the life of your dreams?

A little birthday advice I'm giving.  I have a lot of experience from this one point, so listen closely, please:

Don't let possible amazing life opportunities pass you by because you were afraid that you weren't going to do good…or be embarrassed or hurt.  Go for it to the best of your ability and let the cards fall where they may.


At this point, I want to share an inspiring video from someone who has attained financial freedom.  I know that he earns a reported $800,000 per month from Internet Marketing alone. I have personally met several marketers making this kind of money, so this is no fluke.  He shows his journey from when he first started with Internet Marketing, and how he has become so very successful.  His name is Mike Filsaime, and he has made a video that lets you peek inside of his business.  Thanks, Mike for sharing this.

https://paydotcom.com/r/15727/Gaiaangel/

I was both inspired and somewhat  envious  of his laser-sharp road to success!  While I've been fooling around on the Internet, he was making some major progress!!!  Soon, he will be releasing the DVD's from his $5,000 seminar held earlier this year.  The DVDs are called "7 Figure Code", which stands for earning a seven figure income in this field; learning to run your own 7-Figure business. The video is free so take a look!

https://paydotcom.com/r/15727/Gaiaangel/

Since it's my birthday, I want to give you something more!  Here's a piece of software that has a $97 value and will help you in your Web 2.0 marketing efforts.

http://edwinsoft.com/bumbum.zip

It searches available Squidoo lenses and Hubpages based on your keywords, checks Yahoo for link popularity and checks Google if Squidoo/Hubpages is ranked in the top ten for the particular keyword.

And if you want to learn more about Web 2.0 marketing, or even if  you don't know squat about it, or especally if you don't know what in the world I am talking about, click on the link below to get a free ebook from one of the world's top experts in the field, Jack Humprey.  It's called The Authority Black Book, it's a $197 value, but you can put your wallet away because it's free:  Just click on this link.  This is the best read I have had this year!!

http://contentdesk.com/cmd.php?af=615874

Here in Sweden, on the Fourth of July, most people have already begun their "industrial" vacation or "holiday". "Industrial" because when it was decided years ago that the month of July was "vacation month", that's when most of the working population worked in the various industries here in Sweden. That is no longer a valid reason for vacationing in July, but habits and traditions die hard, don't they?  They travel to their quaint "stugas" small summer cottages in the woods and the archipelagos, they work on their homes and in their gardens, visit friends and family in distant cities, and whole families nowadays travel on chartered air tours to Southern Europe and many other parts of the world. Swedes love to travel and it is relatively inexpensive, too.  So lots of Swedes will have been out of the country between one and several weeks during the summer months, especially.  The average Swede is willing to save a lot just for the privilege of travel - perhaps an inheritance from the Vikings?

In Sweden, it's mid-day now, and  the streets of the residential area where I live are bare; hardly any cars or people are to be seen, no kids are out playing and no people are out on walks, and most of the boats have taken off for adventures in the bracken waters of the Baltic Sea.  The occasional boat comes into the harbor to refill provisions and re-tank water. There's a small restaurant where a few people are eating or some people from town come out to get some ice-cream.  The beach is deserted and the walk in the woods, normally where so many people are jogging or walking, is isolated.  It's quiet.  I think I'll take a walk there now…

Happy Fourth of July!

Angela Wickenberg

P.S.  This website and blog will go through some major changes soon.  Stay tuned and enjoy your gifts!!!

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May 7, 2007

The Seven Minute Secret - For A Limited Time, Free Book

Dear Friends,

It’s time to get real with the facts:


â–  Personal bankruptcies, credit card debt, and property
foreclosures are at an all-time high.

â–  Social Security is out of cash, according to the General
Accounting Office (the auditing arm of Congress).

â–  Personal saving is at an all-time low.

â–  More and more people are living in poverty.

â–  Quality jobs are harder to come by.

â–  The national debt is at an all-time high.

â–  The average worker works three hours out of every
eight hours to pay taxes.

â–  Fewer and fewer people have retirement plans in
place.

â–  The baby boom generation, born between 1946 and
1964 (more than 80 million people), is planning to
retire soon, and the majority don’t have the resources
to do so.

Jim Guarino, Founder/CEO of  TheMoneyExpert.com says
that it's time to get real with money to get real money.

He has developed something he calls The Get Real Philosophy.
When you know the Get Real Philosophy, you'll be ready to Get Real Money!

There are seven major points:

Get Real! #1: Play to win
Get Real! #2: Get real with money
Get Real! #3: Compress time
Get Real! #4: Eliminate risk
Get Real! #5: Act on opportunities
Get Real! #6: Be positive - if someone else can do it, you can do it too
Get Real! #7: Take seven minutes a day


He writes: "In America, we need a whole lot more than more information.
We need the right education, clear step-by-step direction,
and the inspiration that leads to transformation. We need
to change the old thinking, the old systems, the old beliefs,
the old ways that just don’t work anymore in this day and age.
Either we choose to adapt, or we get eaten alive!"

He first learned about the seven minute secret from his guitar teacher when
he was 10 years old.

He has since used the 7 Minute Secret in other areas of his life
where he wanted to accomplish goals—and you can use the 7
Minute Secret to discover how to Get Real! Money just as he did.

For a short time, Jim Guarino is generously giving away his 211 page book
called The Money-Expert-Formula for free. It'll teach you everything you need
to know so that you can Get Real Money.

Here's the link:

http://www.themoneyexpert.com/Money-Expert-Formula/

Angela Wickenberg

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November 20, 2007

The Death of Adwords?

Hi,

I've been so busy transfering my house to the new owners and moving that I haven't had time to work!  You can read about the move and other thoughts and daily things at http://angelawickenberg.com.

I'll also write about my upcoming firesale in this blog very soon.  The firesale will be at http://startingoversale.com and will offer a more than fantastic deal.  Watch for this in the coming days.  Also coming very soon is the re-launch of http://e-bizsecretsexposed.com as a membership site.  *Lots of great news to come in the coming weeks.

One report that I did give time to reading was by a former Google Adwords administrator, Simon Leung, who claims that Adwords will soon be dead!

paydotcom.com/r/25065/Gaiaangel/2223061/

 

 

I read through the report, which I had to pay $2 for.  There are a lot of credible testimonials on the page and the report is a precurser to an ebook that presents solutions to the problems, a classic marketing tactic.  I found the report worthwhile and paid the $2 because I know that Simon really was an employee of Google's so I wanted to read what he had to say. The ebook lays claims to being able to save your business from a slow and painful death.  Unless you've been living under a rock for the past few months, then you are well-aquainted with the many changes that have come about in adwords.  Some months ago - nearly a year - many businesses went completely under due to these changes.  Many of the businesses were legitimate, but many weren't and were abusing the Adwords system.  Even though many of the strategies used for Adwords became obsolete after the infamous "Google Slap", several marketers have continued to profit by selling out-dated ebooks and courses on the subject.  Some marketers simply weren't aware of the harm they were doing, but perhaps some just didn't care whether the information was up-to-date or not.  Some marketers sell information on heresay, not having tested anything that they sell.  This is prevalent in affiliate marketing circles - marketers take a product that is selling and without testing it at all just push it to make as much money as possible.

So in this sense it might be a wise decision to read Simon's report and purchase his book.  He is a very reputable source of information for Adwords strategies and tactics.  Here's the link again:

paydotcom.com/r/25065/Gaiaangel/2223061/

 

To Your Online Success!

Angela Wickenberg

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May 21, 2007

What's going on with you and money right now?

Hi Friends,

Are you in debt, struggling to make ends meet and fed up
with not having enough money?

Are you doing OK financially but want to do much better?

Are you doing well financially but the "price" you've been
paying for your success (stress, anxiety, health issues,
relationship strain, no time, disillusionment, etc.) is too
high?

Have you reached out for books, tapes, seminars or coaching
(including law of attaction stuff) specifically to improve
your finances, lifestyle and quality of life, but nothing
seems to work for you?

If you answered "Yes!" to any of the above questions, I have
some exciting news for you. Robert Scheinfeld just
created a new resource that has the power to radically
transform your relationship with money — in ways that have
never been possible before.

I'm not talking about investing, marketing, the Internet,
network marketing, business building, real estate,
stock trading or some new technique or strategy for
increasing your productivity or efficiency.

I'm talking about a revolutionary breakthrough. Something
you've never seen or heard before. I'm very excited about
this breakthrough that I had to reach out and tell you about it
right away.

http://www.thestorybehindthesecret.com/moneygame.htm

Let me explain …

For 12+ years, Robert Scheinfeld has been teaching people
how to tap unusual "sources of sources" to create success
and prosperity in their lives. You've probably heard of his
best-selling Invisible Path to Success and 11th Element
work. Maybe you already own one or more of his courses or
books.

Robert is very proud of his earlier work which has profoundly
touched the lives of tens of thousands of people in more
than 190 countries.

However, as he continued his own personal journey, he
discovered that while the Systems he developed and taught
made him infinitely better at playing what he calls "The
Money Game" — and enabled him to amass his own fortune
(then lose it and build it up again) — playing The Money
Game was still extremely stressful, his prosperity was still
"fragile" and  vulnerable to severe ups and downs

He noticed it wasn't just him either. The same thing was
true for virtually everyone, no matter how much money they
have.

That wasn't OK with him!

        Further Down "The Rabbit Hole" …

Robert ultimately realized there were additional pieces to the
wealth and prosperity puzzle he hadn't yet found. To use a
popular phrase from Alice In Wonderland and the movie "The
Matrix," he realized he could go even deeper down "the
rabbit hole."

What he discovered through his own experiences (of making
money, crashing and burning and "being rich"), and through
his relationships with hundreds of other extremely wealthy
people (including some of the wealthiest in the world), is
that The Money Game is a game you can't win  — if you play
according to the rules, regulations and structures you're
taught growing up.

Robert discovered it doesn't work to simply play The Money
Game better and pile up more and more money, which is what
most people want tio learn and all the experts teach. You've
got to actually bust loose from the old rules of The Money
Game entirely and start playing a new game with a new set of
rules that work for YOU.

Robert discovered how to do that, how to bust loose from The
Money Game and has been quietly showing others how to do it
for the last year and a half.

He taught this concept to Chris Attwood and many others, whose
lives have never been the same since - this is POWERFUL
STUFF!

Now he's prepared to show you how to do it too through a
brand new resource he just completed and released called …

"Busting Loose From The Money Game Home Transformational
System"

In that resource, he reveals his "Busting Loose Process"
and how to harness it to make money a total non-issue in
your life.

Once you bust loose, there's no more worrying about bills or
the balance in your checkbook. No more asking "Can I afford
that?" Or "Should I buy that?"

No more worrying about your assets and liabilities, personal
income, savings, debt, profits, retirement or taxes.

No more working your butt off to "make ends meet" or carve
out a little pleasure or luxury in your life. No more of the
complexity, worry and stress that come from trying to
intelligently manage, grow and protect whatever amount of
money you've been able to pile up.

In short …

        No limits or restrictions of any kind
               as it relates to money!

We're talking about major "outside the box" thinking and
living here. Sound unbelievable? I assure you, it's very
real and absolutely doable - if you know how, which Robert
can show you.

I don't care what you think you know about money, wealth,
prosperity and abundance, or how many books, tapes or
seminars you've experienced on those topics. Robert's System
is major renegade stuff and I guarantee you've never
experienced anything like it before.

            A Guided Tour Opens The Door
                   To The Secrets …

Robert has prepared a special multimedia Guided Tour of the
Busting Loose Process for you. To take that Guided Tour,
and I strongly urge you to take it, just click on the
following link:

http://www.thestorybehindthesecret.com/moneygame.htm

It will be well worth your time.

Angela

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May 23, 2008

On Standford's Facebook Project And The Power To Make Millions

Apropos Facebook for business and how to make money from your content and network on Facebook, I found this article on Early To Rise:

7 Sizzling Business "Discoveries" From Stanford's Facebook Project (and How They Can Help Any Entrepreneur Make a Million Bucks)

By Charlie Byrne

Last week, Mark Zuckerberg turned 24. 

And my guess is, he's pretty pleased with himself so far. 

A college dropout, but from Harvard. A self-starter who launched a business from his dorm room. And, oh yeah, the world's youngest self-made billionaire, according to Forbes magazine. 

Make that a "theoretical" billionaire, since nobody is really sure exactly how much his hugely popular social networking website - Facebook.com - is actually worth. It's not publicly traded (although Microsoft recently laid out $240 million for a 1.6 percent stake). It's not clear where it's headed. (Mark himself isn't sure.) To some people, it's not clear what purpose it's supposed to serve either.

But at least two things are sure.

First, people love it. Nearly 70 million visited the site last month alone. And second, it's looking like one of the greatest entrepreneurial innovations since, well, since someone launched the first business that offered sliced bread.

One area that's receiving plenty of attention is Facebook "apps" (applications). From useful tools such as stock market tickers and productivity management helpers… to complete time wasters such as "Give the Imaginary Puppy a Bone" and "Who's the Coolest Person You Know"… there's a Facebook app for just about everyone and everything.

After (if) you've chosen to add one of them to your Facebook homepage, it appears in your browser whenever you sign into Facebook. Most of these mini software programs are developed by third-party entrepreneurs and monetized (not always successfully) through a classic advertising model: Get eyeballs and sell ad space or place affiliate ads.

Facebook apps are so big right now that B.J. Fogg, a professor at Stanford University, launched a semester-long project just to develop more of them for Facebook users. 

At the end of the project, Professor Fogg and his students published a report to name the entrepreneurial "discoveries" they had made. But were they really breaking new ground… or just reinventing the wheel?

I decided to take a look. 

Combing back through the longstanding principles you've come to know and love by readi