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Added for You - Be Relentless
Pay Per Click Advertising and Article Marketing Compared Their suggestion was to run ads for what you want to do or sell and see the response, see if the market "likes" what you offer. Duh! This seems so obvious. They were right, though primitive and simple, isn't this similar to what Marjorie and I had been doing naturally with our flowers and ads for pine trees? Most people don't test out their markets before they invest. We were lucky we did. So take this valuable lesson and "test."At first glance, Pay Per Click advertising seems to be the fastest way to send targeted website traffic to your websites online. You choose some keywords and add your website’s url and you are done. However, with most things online the competitive search terms are often very expensive and you spend lots of money to win the Pay Per Click wars. This article will list five reasons why article marketing may be better than Pay Per Click Advertising.Permanent linksAnyone knows that once you stop paying for your pay per click results, you will stop getting website traffic. Articles on the other hand always stay on the pages of a high traffic website if added. This is like opening a shop in a busy shopping mall. You get more targeted website visitors this way quite easily. Once readers read the targeted articles and then click through to your website, they are in the mood to read whatever offers that you can sell and you tend to make more money this way as they treat you as an expert if they like your article. Thus in article marketing, you get traffic on a continuing basis and not just when you pay for it.Viral effectNot only that if publishers like your work, they put it on all their websites and send it to their newsletters with many readers and some of these readers will start clicking to your website and signing up or purchasing whatever you are promoting. Some readers if they like your article will forwarding the em Marjorie and I now began investing in farm properties and leasing out spaces on the farms to help pay for the mortgages so we'd have positive cash flow. I decided that I would buy an option on a property (thank you again, dad's friend John for your lesson) and if I could, find tenants who would rent the property. If there was now the positive cash flow, we would exercise the option to buy. In this manner we would only buy properties that were "cash cows." We were testing to see if each of the properties would make money. (Thank you, Walter and Paul.) Additionally, we'd have all properties rented the day we took over so we would have no vacancies. Okay, being in an area with a growing economy helped. All of this real estate "business," all of this investing we're doing is not "rocket science." It is the planned application of simple ideas. Or, to say it differently, it is the implementation of a plan. As they might say at the Wharton School of Business, this is "Planning and Control". Okay, enough of the repetition from Highland Hill Farm's Department of Redundancy Department. Just consider that we did not invent any new products or provide any better services. We spend our time, we "invest" our time "up front," beforehand, whether it's a tree, a plant, or real estate we're going to market. We followed our plans and always invested our time before our money. I always tell people to start at the public library. It's a gift of many books to all of us. The price of all those books is very low too. They're free to borrow. Remember that you don't have to read, for example, "The International Plant Propagators' Society Volume 54, 2004 edition, 88888,000001 pages," to be up to date. Do read a wide range of books. Even if only simple, "How-To books," like the how to select how to plant, how to sell, types of books. My final lesson Internet Marketing Merchandising May Be Changing - The “Puppy Dog Sale” Technique! Bill's Life and his Lessons Learned, Part IIInternet marketing is constantly changing. The changes, for the most part, are good changes. Improvements for the consumer, who is usually a fellow internet marketer. Recently, I was very glad to see an old technique being added to the merchandising of an internet marketing promotion.A new wrinkle to internet marketing was being introduced by a fellow internet marketer. The internet marketer was launching a new software program. Prior to the launch date, a 7 day trial period was being offered.Back in the old days of traditional selling, this was called the “Puppy Dog Sale”! Let the customer take the cute, cuddly puppy home for a couple of days or a week. How many puppies do you think were taken back to the pet shop? Very few! Unless the puppy, just plain made a mess of the house, chewed up one or two shoes, or quit loving its new friend, the puppy was not going back to the pet shop. No way! The puppy had a new home!This software promotion may be helping to change the internet marketing industry.How would this software promotion bring a, much needed, feature and benefit to the internet marketing industry consumer?Think about it for a minute or longer. Maybe more consumer confidence from the fellow internet marketers who are our best customers?This is not a bad idea to win back more confidence of consumers.I believe this internet marketer has taken a bold step by adding another, much needed, There are a few people, very exceptional people, who are so singularly special that the complimentary joke is made; after they were born, the mold to make them got broken. In other words, there's no chance for posterity to make any more of the likes of Michelangelo, George Washington Carver, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, etc. In my case, they threw out the "mold," but I fooled 'em and grew back! Seriously speaking, the first lesson I learned while very young is that in order to sell successfully you must be relentless. You have to be downright incredible to be able to keep your integrity and successfully sell something like, "ice in the wintertime to Eskimos." However, As John Paul Ghetty, the oil-marketing billionaire, observed, if you have a high quality product you know people both need and want, repeatedly, it will almost sell itself." Like the nursery stock we grow at Highland Hill Farm. I have learned these lessons. There are basic concepts that are important to understand. Starting when I was very young, I've always had "business." My first business was making and selling potholders when I was 5-years old. My parents had bought me a small potholder-making contraption. Rather than just make a few for the sake of "arts and crafts," developing my fingers and hands, I made hundreds and hundreds. I got real good at making real good potholders, you could say. Whenever I met someone I tried to sell them potholders at 25 cents each. As I earned more and more money, I started an account at the savings bank in Lambertville, always carrying with me lots of differently colored potholders when I walked into town to make my deposits. On the sidewalk and inside the bank, grownups would inevitably say, "What a cute little boy," and then, "Why are you carrying all those pretty potholders?" They sold themselves. The potholder sold themselves. The customers "sold" themselves. I sold enough potholders for me to buy 2 shares of General Electric stock and 2 shares of the Atlas Corporation, upon the advice of my great-uncle Bill. (See My Uncle Bill's Story, Part I of my life and my lessons learned). I got these shares of stock when I was 7-years old. My small beginning business venture then expanded to include looking for Helgermites, or Hellgrammites, they're like Redworms, which I'd sell out along the road (leading to the Delaware River, of course). I picked wild blackberries and sold them along the road too. I bought fishing lures and took them to sell along the Delaware River's east bank, our side of the river. There were "hot spots" where Shad fishermen would gather during the intense "fish runs." It seemed like a good idea to bring along some blackberries too. The fisherman needed a snack. I did too. I parlayed my growing savings and bought 144 chickens. A "gross" of chickens came at a discounted unit price. I didn't quite realize it at the time, but I was "leveraging" my money and buying in bulk, "wholesale." So, here are two more valuable lessons for us all. Buy as cheaply as you reasonably can. (Did you notice I didn't buy a dozen gross of chickens? That's 1,728 chickens. The price per chicken would have been cheaper, but I would never have been able to handle them all!) Also, make your money work for you. Make your money work just like a transistor works, use a little power to control a lot. My father, who coincidentally worked in electronics engineering, had a wonderful friend who bought me a book about stock options. John stuttered so terribly he could barely speak, but I will always be grateful to him for teaching me about the greatest investment vehicle of all in the stock market: Options. What a great way to make money work, investing a small amount of money to "own" rights to shares worth far more money. With my 144 chickens, I created an "egg route," using the experience from my potholder business. I had "saturated" the market. Just how many potholders can people buy? John Paul Ghetty was right. It is best to sell something people need repeatedly, like fuel, and like food. I sold eggs in the two towns nearest to our little farm, Lambertville and Titusville, New Jersey. I joined the 4H club and started to raise bees for their honey. Again, not realizing it, I was selling food, something people needed over and over, like John Paul Ghetty said. As I sold honey along with my eggs, I noticed that unlike some of my friends, I never got an allowance. Then again, I didn't need one. As you can see my selling started early and has simply never stopped. Family and friends of my parents helped me. My small ventures were very important to me and I learned the valuable lessons I'm sharing with you. There was a great lesson in another book my father gave me, The ABC's of Beekeeping. It mentioned that if you wanted more bees, just put an advertisement, an "ad," in the newspaper. Just have the "ad" say "Wanted Bee Swarms," with your phone number below it. Well stupid me, I believed everything I read and I therefore I did just what it said in the book. Within a few days a woman called me from Lambertville and said she had a bee swarm, could I come and get it? I followed the guidelines my father taught me and from the book. I captured that first swarm, and many, many more. Bees at the greatest price discount possible, free, were available for my to use to make honey and make money. The above paragraphs contain a number of more unmentioned, as yet, valuable lessons. First, it's important to find parents who are supportive of your efforts. I was lucky, but if you're not as blessed, find "mentors" as so many other successful people have. Second, it is important to read books. Give books as gifts too. Don't believe everything in 'em, do believe most of what is in 'em. Especially when you use at least two sources for your information. Reporters call this "corroboration," and "confirmation." Third, the best way to find things or market things is through advertising. With all these money making ventures going on, I was spending a tremendous amount of time outdoors. I developed a love of hunting and fishing. I loved the woods and being out in nature while "harvesting" the wild blackberries, collecting worms, tending the bees, walking my egg-and-honey delivery route etc. As I got older, I became an adolescent and then a teenager. Really, you ask? No fooling? I say this because like practically every other teenage boy, I got interested in cars. I started to collect junk cars and trucks. As I began to tinker with one of them, my mother came outside to talk with me. (There's that lesson about the importance of finding supportive parents. Boy I was lucky with both!) My mother said, "Bill you don't want to be a farmer. They don't make money. You have to study. Go to college and get a respectable job. If you don't, you will be a farmer working too many long hours worrying about weather and crop diseases and such. Or, you'll be a trash collector. I love you." Then, she walked back into the house. I guess she saw the junk cars and trucks I had collected as trash. Listen to your mother. That's a lesson you probably already knew before reading this. I picked out a college in the not-too-far from home backwoods of Pennsylvania. I graduated from Juniata College, near Huntingdon, in 1973 with a B. S. in Chemistry. My wife, Marjorie, also a Juniata graduate, is a teacher. We were married in 1977. We settled in Dublin, Pa. I worked for a small chemical plant. One weekend we had a yard sale. The first item that sold was the bunch of flowers that I removed from my wife's window box. Here's another valuable lesson that I have learned. Be observant. This eye opener was telling us that there is a market for plants here. If people will buy them from your window box, plants "will sell themselves." I always had a desire to raise trees and plants and own a farm, though not be a farmer like my mother warned me, so we decided to "go for it." Another valuable lesson: It is good to have a plan... We purchased a small farm near Doylestown, in the well-to-do and growing heart of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. We began our "tree farm," our nursery. The local newspaper, The Doylestown Intelligencer, became our "store." Placing small "ads" in the paper under the classifieds was our method of advertising. A small, cheap 2 line ad such as, "Pine trees delivered. Planted and mulched, $8. Guaranteed. Call 215-345-0946," were awfully economical and phenomenally successful. We tried many ads. We found that just about anything can be sold or bought using classified advertising. Would it have been better to place quarter-page or full-page sales ads? Would it have made sense to spend money we didn't have yet? I believe the answer is no. "Buy as cheaply as you can," I said above is an important lesson. Now, besides trees, we market anything at our consignment store in Milan, Pa. A few years later, we learned another lesson. Friends, Walter and Paul, who make Christmas Tree ball kits, had us over for dinner. They had years of marketing experience and told us that you have to test your market. Their suggestion was to run ads for what you want to do or sell and see the response, see if the market "likes" what you offer. Duh! This seems so obvious. They were right, though primitive and simple, isn't this similar to what Marjorie and I had been doing naturally with our flowers and ads for pine trees? Most people don't test out their markets before they invest. We were lucky we did. So take this valuable lesson and "test." Marjorie and I now began investing in farm properties and leasing out spaces on the farms to help pay for the mortgages so we'd have positive cash flow. I decided that I would buy an option on a property (thank you again, dad's friend John for your lesson) and if I could, find tenants who would rent the property. If there was now the positive cash flow, we would exercise the option to buy. In this manner we would only buy properties that were "cash cows." We were testing to see if each of the properties would make money. (Thank you, Walter and Paul.) Additionally, we'd have all properties rented the day we took over so we would have no vacancies. Okay, being in an area with a growing economy helped. All of this real estate "business," all of this investing we're doing is not "rocket science." It is the planned application of simple ideas. Or, to say it differently, it is the implementation of a plan. As they might say at the Wharton School of Business, this is "Planning and Control". Okay, enough of the repetition from Highland Hill Farm's Department of Redundancy Department. Just consider that we did not invent any new products or provide any better services. We spend our time, we "invest" our time "up front," beforehand, whether it's a tree, a plant, or real estate we're going to market. We followed our plans and always invested our time before our money. I always tell people to start at the public library. It's a gift of many books to all of us. The price of all those books is very low too. They're free to borrow. Remember that you don't have to read, for example, "The International Plant Propagators' Society Volume 54, 2004 edition, 88888,000001 pages," to be up to date. Do read a wide range of books. Even if only simple, "How-To books," like the how to select how to plant, how to sell, types of books. My final lesson i Web Marketing: What Do Visitors Want from Your Site? g for Helgermites, or Hellgrammites, they're like Redworms, which I'd sell out along the road (leading to the Delaware River, of course). I picked wild blackberries and sold them along the road too. I bought fishing lures and took them to sell along the Delaware River's east bank, our side of the river. There were "hot spots" where Shad fishermen would gather during the intense "fish runs." It seemed like a good idea to bring along some blackberries too. The fisherman needed a snack. I did too.Part of the planning activity for Web content is to identify what visitors want to find or do on your site. Analyzing visitors' needs and expectations will help you choose the best way to implement information and interactivity on the site.Understanding Visitor Activity Gaining an understanding of what visitors want will more successfully guide your choices about the amount and type of content and interaction on the site. Examples of visitor activity include:* Retrieving overview or detailed information about a specific product, service, or event.* Purchasing a product or registering for an activity online.* Reviewing background information on a consultant, company, or organization.* Researching information on a specific topic or interest.* Finding the location of the nearest store or dealer.* Obtaining Web-only special prices and sales incentives such as free shipping, feature upgrades, and extended warranties.* Contacting your company via email to discuss a need or ask a question.For example, you can determine whether to offer complete documents, such as brochures or articles, or instead place a "quick-read" summary on the Web.Serving Diverse Audience NeedsConsider the needs and capabilities of your audience when determining what elements or information to place on a Web site. For example, consider the age, cognitiv I parlayed my growing savings and bought 144 chickens. A "gross" of chickens came at a discounted unit price. I didn't quite realize it at the time, but I was "leveraging" my money and buying in bulk, "wholesale." So, here are two more valuable lessons for us all. Buy as cheaply as you reasonably can. (Did you notice I didn't buy a dozen gross of chickens? That's 1,728 chickens. The price per chicken would have been cheaper, but I would never have been able to handle them all!) Also, make your money work for you. Make your money work just like a transistor works, use a little power to control a lot. My father, who coincidentally worked in electronics engineering, had a wonderful friend who bought me a book about stock options. John stuttered so terribly he could barely speak, but I will always be grateful to him for teaching me about the greatest investment vehicle of all in the stock market: Options. What a great way to make money work, investing a small amount of money to "own" rights to shares worth far more money. With my 144 chickens, I created an "egg route," using the experience from my potholder business. I had "saturated" the market. Just how many potholders can people buy? John Paul Ghetty was right. It is best to sell something people need repeatedly, like fuel, and like food. I sold eggs in the two towns nearest to our little farm, Lambertville and Titusville, New Jersey. I joined the 4H club and started to raise bees for their honey. Again, not realizing it, I was selling food, something people needed over and over, like John Paul Ghetty said. As I sold honey along with my eggs, I noticed that unlike some of my friends, I never got an allowance. Then again, I didn't need one. As you can see my selling started early and has simply never stopped. Family and friends of my parents helped me. My small ventures were very important to me and I learned the valuable lessons I'm sharing with you. There was a great lesson in another book my father gave me, The ABC's of Beekeeping. It mentioned that if you wanted more bees, just put an advertisement, an "ad," in the newspaper. Just have the "ad" say "Wanted Bee Swarms," with your phone number below it. Well stupid me, I believed everything I read and I therefore I did just what it said in the book. Within a few days a woman called me from Lambertville and said she had a bee swarm, could I come and get it? I followed the guidelines my father taught me and from the book. I captured that first swarm, and many, many more. Bees at the greatest price discount possible, free, were available for my to use to make honey and make money. The above paragraphs contain a number of more unmentioned, as yet, valuable lessons. First, it's important to find parents who are supportive of your efforts. I was lucky, but if you're not as blessed, find "mentors" as so many other successful people have. Second, it is important to read books. Give books as gifts too. Don't believe everything in 'em, do believe most of what is in 'em. Especially when you use at least two sources for your information. Reporters call this "corroboration," and "confirmation." Third, the best way to find things or market things is through advertising. With all these money making ventures going on, I was spending a tremendous amount of time outdoors. I developed a love of hunting and fishing. I loved the woods and being out in nature while "harvesting" the wild blackberries, collecting worms, tending the bees, walking my egg-and-honey delivery route etc. As I got older, I became an adolescent and then a teenager. Really, you ask? No fooling? I say this because like practically every other teenage boy, I got interested in cars. I started to collect junk cars and trucks. As I began to tinker with one of them, my mother came outside to talk with me. (There's that lesson about the importance of finding supportive parents. Boy I was lucky with both!) My mother said, "Bill you don't want to be a farmer. They don't make money. You have to study. Go to college and get a respectable job. If you don't, you will be a farmer working too many long hours worrying about weather and crop diseases and such. Or, you'll be a trash collector. I love you." Then, she walked back into the house. I guess she saw the junk cars and trucks I had collected as trash. Listen to your mother. That's a lesson you probably already knew before reading this. I picked out a college in the not-too-far from home backwoods of Pennsylvania. I graduated from Juniata College, near Huntingdon, in 1973 with a B. S. in Chemistry. My wife, Marjorie, also a Juniata graduate, is a teacher. We were married in 1977. We settled in Dublin, Pa. I worked for a small chemical plant. One weekend we had a yard sale. The first item that sold was the bunch of flowers that I removed from my wife's window box. Here's another valuable lesson that I have learned. Be observant. This eye opener was telling us that there is a market for plants here. If people will buy them from your window box, plants "will sell themselves." I always had a desire to raise trees and plants and own a farm, though not be a farmer like my mother warned me, so we decided to "go for it." Another valuable lesson: It is good to have a plan... We purchased a small farm near Doylestown, in the well-to-do and growing heart of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. We began our "tree farm," our nursery. The local newspaper, The Doylestown Intelligencer, became our "store." Placing small "ads" in the paper under the classifieds was our method of advertising. A small, cheap 2 line ad such as, "Pine trees delivered. Planted and mulched, $8. Guaranteed. Call 215-345-0946," were awfully economical and phenomenally successful. We tried many ads. We found that just about anything can be sold or bought using classified advertising. Would it have been better to place quarter-page or full-page sales ads? Would it have made sense to spend money we didn't have yet? I believe the answer is no. "Buy as cheaply as you can," I said above is an important lesson. Now, besides trees, we market anything at our consignment store in Milan, Pa. A few years later, we learned another lesson. Friends, Walter and Paul, who make Christmas Tree ball kits, had us over for dinner. They had years of marketing experience and told us that you have to test your market. Their suggestion was to run ads for what you want to do or sell and see the response, see if the market "likes" what you offer. Duh! This seems so obvious. They were right, though primitive and simple, isn't this similar to what Marjorie and I had been doing naturally with our flowers and ads for pine trees? Most people don't test out their markets before they invest. We were lucky we did. So take this valuable lesson and "test." Marjorie and I now began investing in farm properties and leasing out spaces on the farms to help pay for the mortgages so we'd have positive cash flow. I decided that I would buy an option on a property (thank you again, dad's friend John for your lesson) and if I could, find tenants who would rent the property. If there was now the positive cash flow, we would exercise the option to buy. In this manner we would only buy properties that were "cash cows." We were testing to see if each of the properties would make money. (Thank you, Walter and Paul.) Additionally, we'd have all properties rented the day we took over so we would have no vacancies. Okay, being in an area with a growing economy helped. All of this real estate "business," all of this investing we're doing is not "rocket science." It is the planned application of simple ideas. Or, to say it differently, it is the implementation of a plan. As they might say at the Wharton School of Business, this is "Planning and Control". Okay, enough of the repetition from Highland Hill Farm's Department of Redundancy Department. Just consider that we did not invent any new products or provide any better services. We spend our time, we "invest" our time "up front," beforehand, whether it's a tree, a plant, or real estate we're going to market. We followed our plans and always invested our time before our money. I always tell people to start at the public library. It's a gift of many books to all of us. The price of all those books is very low too. They're free to borrow. Remember that you don't have to read, for example, "The International Plant Propagators' Society Volume 54, 2004 edition, 88888,000001 pages," to be up to date. Do read a wide range of books. Even if only simple, "How-To books," like the how to select how to plant, how to sell, types of books. My final lesson Easily Avoidable Stock Market and Investing Mistakes ped. Family and friends of my parents helped me. My small ventures were very important to me and I learned the valuable lessons I'm sharing with you.If you are like many millions of Americans investing in the stock market sounds scary and comes with a lot of reservations. This is natural and as it should be since the stock market can be very risky. However by follow some simple steps, taking it slow and making deliberate moves you can mitigate many of the risks involved with stock market investing. This does not mean you will never lose money because you will however, by following these guidelines you can ensure that in the end you will come out profitable.If you are just getting started with investing then one of the easist ways to get up and running and typically the safest is to get a stockbroker. Later you will want to do away with a stockbroker and save on the fees and have more control. However when starting out a stockbroker can be very useful in getting you familiar with how the stock market works and how to begin trading. It can also be very helpful to find a trusted friend that invests and use them to bounce ideas off of and discuss the process with. Once you get some basic level experience you will want to strike out on your own and go for it making your own decisions etc. However, when you first get started having advice and someone to show you the ropes can really help.One of the worst stock moves you can make is with variable annuities using the premium of your insurance. A variable annuity is an insurance contract that allows you to invest your premium in mut There was a great lesson in another book my father gave me, The ABC's of Beekeeping. It mentioned that if you wanted more bees, just put an advertisement, an "ad," in the newspaper. Just have the "ad" say "Wanted Bee Swarms," with your phone number below it. Well stupid me, I believed everything I read and I therefore I did just what it said in the book. Within a few days a woman called me from Lambertville and said she had a bee swarm, could I come and get it? I followed the guidelines my father taught me and from the book. I captured that first swarm, and many, many more. Bees at the greatest price discount possible, free, were available for my to use to make honey and make money. The above paragraphs contain a number of more unmentioned, as yet, valuable lessons. First, it's important to find parents who are supportive of your efforts. I was lucky, but if you're not as blessed, find "mentors" as so many other successful people have. Second, it is important to read books. Give books as gifts too. Don't believe everything in 'em, do believe most of what is in 'em. Especially when you use at least two sources for your information. Reporters call this "corroboration," and "confirmation." Third, the best way to find things or market things is through advertising. With all these money making ventures going on, I was spending a tremendous amount of time outdoors. I developed a love of hunting and fishing. I loved the woods and being out in nature while "harvesting" the wild blackberries, collecting worms, tending the bees, walking my egg-and-honey delivery route etc. As I got older, I became an adolescent and then a teenager. Really, you ask? No fooling? I say this because like practically every other teenage boy, I got interested in cars. I started to collect junk cars and trucks. As I began to tinker with one of them, my mother came outside to talk with me. (There's that lesson about the importance of finding supportive parents. Boy I was lucky with both!) My mother said, "Bill you don't want to be a farmer. They don't make money. You have to study. Go to college and get a respectable job. If you don't, you will be a farmer working too many long hours worrying about weather and crop diseases and such. Or, you'll be a trash collector. I love you." Then, she walked back into the house. I guess she saw the junk cars and trucks I had collected as trash. Listen to your mother. That's a lesson you probably already knew before reading this. I picked out a college in the not-too-far from home backwoods of Pennsylvania. I graduated from Juniata College, near Huntingdon, in 1973 with a B. S. in Chemistry. My wife, Marjorie, also a Juniata graduate, is a teacher. We were married in 1977. We settled in Dublin, Pa. I worked for a small chemical plant. One weekend we had a yard sale. The first item that sold was the bunch of flowers that I removed from my wife's window box. Here's another valuable lesson that I have learned. Be observant. This eye opener was telling us that there is a market for plants here. If people will buy them from your window box, plants "will sell themselves." I always had a desire to raise trees and plants and own a farm, though not be a farmer like my mother warned me, so we decided to "go for it." Another valuable lesson: It is good to have a plan... We purchased a small farm near Doylestown, in the well-to-do and growing heart of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. We began our "tree farm," our nursery. The local newspaper, The Doylestown Intelligencer, became our "store." Placing small "ads" in the paper under the classifieds was our method of advertising. A small, cheap 2 line ad such as, "Pine trees delivered. Planted and mulched, $8. Guaranteed. Call 215-345-0946," were awfully economical and phenomenally successful. We tried many ads. We found that just about anything can be sold or bought using classified advertising. Would it have been better to place quarter-page or full-page sales ads? Would it have made sense to spend money we didn't have yet? I believe the answer is no. "Buy as cheaply as you can," I said above is an important lesson. Now, besides trees, we market anything at our consignment store in Milan, Pa. A few years later, we learned another lesson. Friends, Walter and Paul, who make Christmas Tree ball kits, had us over for dinner. They had years of marketing experience and told us that you have to test your market. Their suggestion was to run ads for what you want to do or sell and see the response, see if the market "likes" what you offer. Duh! This seems so obvious. They were right, though primitive and simple, isn't this similar to what Marjorie and I had been doing naturally with our flowers and ads for pine trees? Most people don't test out their markets before they invest. We were lucky we did. So take this valuable lesson and "test." Marjorie and I now began investing in farm properties and leasing out spaces on the farms to help pay for the mortgages so we'd have positive cash flow. I decided that I would buy an option on a property (thank you again, dad's friend John for your lesson) and if I could, find tenants who would rent the property. If there was now the positive cash flow, we would exercise the option to buy. In this manner we would only buy properties that were "cash cows." We were testing to see if each of the properties would make money. (Thank you, Walter and Paul.) Additionally, we'd have all properties rented the day we took over so we would have no vacancies. Okay, being in an area with a growing economy helped. All of this real estate "business," all of this investing we're doing is not "rocket science." It is the planned application of simple ideas. Or, to say it differently, it is the implementation of a plan. As they might say at the Wharton School of Business, this is "Planning and Control". Okay, enough of the repetition from Highland Hill Farm's Department of Redundancy Department. Just consider that we did not invent any new products or provide any better services. We spend our time, we "invest" our time "up front," beforehand, whether it's a tree, a plant, or real estate we're going to market. We followed our plans and always invested our time before our money. I always tell people to start at the public library. It's a gift of many books to all of us. The price of all those books is very low too. They're free to borrow. Remember that you don't have to read, for example, "The International Plant Propagators' Society Volume 54, 2004 edition, 88888,000001 pages," to be up to date. Do read a wide range of books. Even if only simple, "How-To books," like the how to select how to plant, how to sell, types of books. My final lesson Medical Billing - FB1 Record you will be a farmer working too many long hours worrying about weather and crop diseases and such. Or, you'll be a trash collector. I love you." Then, she walked back into the house. I guess she saw the junk cars and trucks I had collected as trash.In this installment of medical billing, covering the practice of sending claims via electronic means, we will be covering more line item detail. The record covered will be the FB1 record, which is very specific detail related to the provider of services.If you take a look at the FB1 record, you will notice that the entire record involved sending data for the various providers of services, which includes the ordering provider, referring provider, rendering provider and supervising provider. Because all the information for each provider is the same, covering name and UPIN numbers, as well as the patient ID for the claim, we're not going to review this record in detail. Instead, we're going to explain why this information needs to be sent. This will give you a clear understanding of the procedure involved with getting a claim processed and approved.As with the United States government, the medical profession has a number of checks and balances put in place to help prevent not only fraud, but malpractice and criminal negligence. As much as we don't want to admit that these problems exist, they do indeed exist and these checks and balances make it harder for these things to go on without being punished by law.In a previous article, we explained the difference between the four providers. The rendering provider being the one who actually provides the service, the supervising provider being the one who watches over the rendering pr Listen to your mother. That's a lesson you probably already knew before reading this. I picked out a college in the not-too-far from home backwoods of Pennsylvania. I graduated from Juniata College, near Huntingdon, in 1973 with a B. S. in Chemistry. My wife, Marjorie, also a Juniata graduate, is a teacher. We were married in 1977. We settled in Dublin, Pa. I worked for a small chemical plant. One weekend we had a yard sale. The first item that sold was the bunch of flowers that I removed from my wife's window box. Here's another valuable lesson that I have learned. Be observant. This eye opener was telling us that there is a market for plants here. If people will buy them from your window box, plants "will sell themselves." I always had a desire to raise trees and plants and own a farm, though not be a farmer like my mother warned me, so we decided to "go for it." Another valuable lesson: It is good to have a plan... We purchased a small farm near Doylestown, in the well-to-do and growing heart of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. We began our "tree farm," our nursery. The local newspaper, The Doylestown Intelligencer, became our "store." Placing small "ads" in the paper under the classifieds was our method of advertising. A small, cheap 2 line ad such as, "Pine trees delivered. Planted and mulched, $8. Guaranteed. Call 215-345-0946," were awfully economical and phenomenally successful. We tried many ads. We found that just about anything can be sold or bought using classified advertising. Would it have been better to place quarter-page or full-page sales ads? Would it have made sense to spend money we didn't have yet? I believe the answer is no. "Buy as cheaply as you can," I said above is an important lesson. Now, besides trees, we market anything at our consignment store in Milan, Pa. A few years later, we learned another lesson. Friends, Walter and Paul, who make Christmas Tree ball kits, had us over for dinner. They had years of marketing experience and told us that you have to test your market. Their suggestion was to run ads for what you want to do or sell and see the response, see if the market "likes" what you offer. Duh! This seems so obvious. They were right, though primitive and simple, isn't this similar to what Marjorie and I had been doing naturally with our flowers and ads for pine trees? Most people don't test out their markets before they invest. We were lucky we did. So take this valuable lesson and "test." Marjorie and I now began investing in farm properties and leasing out spaces on the farms to help pay for the mortgages so we'd have positive cash flow. I decided that I would buy an option on a property (thank you again, dad's friend John for your lesson) and if I could, find tenants who would rent the property. If there was now the positive cash flow, we would exercise the option to buy. In this manner we would only buy properties that were "cash cows." We were testing to see if each of the properties would make money. (Thank you, Walter and Paul.) Additionally, we'd have all properties rented the day we took over so we would have no vacancies. Okay, being in an area with a growing economy helped. All of this real estate "business," all of this investing we're doing is not "rocket science." It is the planned application of simple ideas. Or, to say it differently, it is the implementation of a plan. As they might say at the Wharton School of Business, this is "Planning and Control". Okay, enough of the repetition from Highland Hill Farm's Department of Redundancy Department. Just consider that we did not invent any new products or provide any better services. We spend our time, we "invest" our time "up front," beforehand, whether it's a tree, a plant, or real estate we're going to market. We followed our plans and always invested our time before our money. I always tell people to start at the public library. It's a gift of many books to all of us. The price of all those books is very low too. They're free to borrow. Remember that you don't have to read, for example, "The International Plant Propagators' Society Volume 54, 2004 edition, 88888,000001 pages," to be up to date. Do read a wide range of books. Even if only simple, "How-To books," like the how to select how to plant, how to sell, types of books. My final lesson Quality Pool Cue Their suggestion was to run ads for what you want to do or sell and see the response, see if the market "likes" what you offer. Duh! This seems so obvious. They were right, though primitive and simple, isn't this similar to what Marjorie and I had been doing naturally with our flowers and ads for pine trees? Most people don't test out their markets before they invest. We were lucky we did. So take this valuable lesson and "test."A good cue stick is the most important part of the game. At Boston tables, pool cues of the best kind and make are produced. The store basically offers three high quality designs of cues: Eliminator Pool Cue, MLB "Eliminator" Pool Cue and NFL "Eliminator" Pool Cue. These cues are available in various colors and weights. Apart from the ethereal white, cues also come in black and the dark red shades of Burgundy. The cue mass usually ranges from 18 to 21 oz. One thing that strings all myriad shapes of cues from the Boston stable is finesse of the final product.If a player has no faith in the pool cue, his performance is likely to suffer. Performance out of a pool cue and the pool cue tip are considered cardinal for any good game of pool. The Eliminator series cues from Boston tables have a superb and smooth stroke. Professionals have professed their liking for these cues due to zero pinching and a perfect balance that results in true shots.Unlike its peers, www.bostontables.com makes use of an improved grip in its cues. The eliminator graphite and glass produce the smoothest and consistent hits in the entire cue industry. The pressed and polished Irish linen wraps give the cue its added charm. These cues are polished and use a joint pin in addition to a butt plate. The shafts come in many colors plus a high-grade hard rock maple adds durability. The ferrule is a linen fiber with joint protectors. The Boston table pool cues are known for th Marjorie and I now began investing in farm properties and leasing out spaces on the farms to help pay for the mortgages so we'd have positive cash flow. I decided that I would buy an option on a property (thank you again, dad's friend John for your lesson) and if I could, find tenants who would rent the property. If there was now the positive cash flow, we would exercise the option to buy. In this manner we would only buy properties that were "cash cows." We were testing to see if each of the properties would make money. (Thank you, Walter and Paul.) Additionally, we'd have all properties rented the day we took over so we would have no vacancies. Okay, being in an area with a growing economy helped. All of this real estate "business," all of this investing we're doing is not "rocket science." It is the planned application of simple ideas. Or, to say it differently, it is the implementation of a plan. As they might say at the Wharton School of Business, this is "Planning and Control". Okay, enough of the repetition from Highland Hill Farm's Department of Redundancy Department. Just consider that we did not invent any new products or provide any better services. We spend our time, we "invest" our time "up front," beforehand, whether it's a tree, a plant, or real estate we're going to market. We followed our plans and always invested our time before our money. I always tell people to start at the public library. It's a gift of many books to all of us. The price of all those books is very low too. They're free to borrow. Remember that you don't have to read, for example, "The International Plant Propagators' Society Volume 54, 2004 edition, 88888,000001 pages," to be up to date. Do read a wide range of books. Even if only simple, "How-To books," like the how to select how to plant, how to sell, types of books. My final lesson is, always ask questions when you can't find the answers yourself. I've asked thousands of questions. Then, listen to the answers. You can find more answers to almost anything at my web site seedlingsrus.com.
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