Open Discussion: Does Marketing Ruin Everything?

By admin · May 13, 2010 · Filed in Object · 1 Comment »

There’s an old saying (I don’t know where it came from) that goes: “Marketing ruins everything.” I think there’s some truth to that, but by no means is it the entire truth. Does marketing really ruin everything, or is that an oversimplistic way to try and describe something else?

More: 
Open Discussion: Does Marketing Ruin Everything?

The Slacker’s Guide to Staying Motivated

By admin · May 10, 2010 · Filed in Object · 1 Comment »

This is a guest post by Nathan Hangen. The other day my alarm went off around 8am and I didn’t feel like getting up

Read the rest here: 
The Slacker’s Guide to Staying Motivated

Three Simple Steps to Quality Content

By alexa · April 26, 2010 · Filed in Object · 1 Comment »

This is a guest post by the Fit Jerk. In the world of online content creation, the one sentence that’s been repeated ad nauseam is “content is king”. And you know what

See original here: 
Three Simple Steps to Quality Content

Five Reasons Why Mind Mapping Rules

By alexa · April 23, 2010 · Filed in Object · 1 Comment »

Mind mapping is a technique for brainstorming in an organized but nonlinear way that lets you see how ideas relate to each other.

Read more here: 
Five Reasons Why Mind Mapping Rules

Are Ebooks Dead?

By admin · April 30, 2009 · Filed in Object · No Comments »

I’m on a bit of an ebook kick. Previously, I wrote How to Write an Ebook that Doesn’t Suck , which assumed that writing ebooks was a good thing. But what if it’s not

See the rest here:
Are Ebooks Dead?

Should You Have a Blogroll?

By admin · April 20, 2009 · Filed in Object · No Comments »

A blogroll is a list of links to other blogs you read and like. Many blogs have them, and they’re one of those “bloggy” things that make blogs what they are

Here is the original: 
Should You Have a Blogroll?

How to Set Up A Blog (For the Long Run)

By admin · April 14, 2009 · Filed in Object, Uncategorized · No Comments »

Wouldn’t it be great if you could start something knowing that you couldn’t fail? When you first get into blogging, you’re faced with a dilemma: the more you learn, the less likely it is you’ll get going and commit. The less you learn, the more likely it is you’re going to just take the plunge–but you’ll make a bunch of mistakes you might regret later

See the original post here:
How to Set Up A Blog (For the Long Run)