Easy HTML Training

March 16th, 2009 by Craig Ball No comments »
Learn Basic HTML!

Learn Basic HTML!

When I first started out marketing online there were tons of website builders that did not require any HTML programing knowledge and today they’re even more options to choose from. This type of website design is convenient and can more than take care of most of your website needs. However what I have been doing over the last couple of years is slowly learning the HTML and the newer XHTML programing language to supplement my classified ads and surprisingly many other places like blog post, forums submissions and company owned websites that I use. I’m not talking about getting to know HTML well enough to design websites here…for that job I still rely on my favorite website builder (bluevoda) which I use with VodaHost, I only need enough knowledge to find the different parts of the website inside the HTML code that makes up each page of my website and to make simple additions like placing the Google Analytics codes into my sites for my own site tracking and the Google Webmaster Center which helps Google and other search engines find my site and index it. With basic knowledge of HTML you can learn enough to make your new online ventures profitable.

I have taken and recommend the free HTML course offered by About.com. The 10 week course will give you the basic knowledge that you need and you will be surprised how much you will use your new online degree to improve your efforts. You can sign up at: About.com free HTML Course Trust me on this one… you will thank me later.

Sales Principle Two: Build up the Customer

March 7th, 2009 by Craig Ball No comments »

Social psychologists have shown that one of the most predictable drives people have is to build up their self esteem. We will bask in the reflected glory of so-called “winners,” cast off signs of reflected failure in those who we feel are low status by distancing ourselves from them, stage performances to show our talents in case someone misses these talents, use the trappings of competence (signs of our success like cell phones, pagers, high status clothes), conspicuously consume (to show we have enough abundance to waste) and self-promote (brag, point out our strengths while still projecting an image of modesty). Much of this very human behavior is to get others to like and respect us. What happens when you give people what they need?

We call it ingratiation if we compliment someone else, give them the idea that we agree with them, or mimic their behaviors (gestures, way of speaking, dress). But the truth is that ingratiation works! When we feel that we are being complimented and built up in a genuine way (it is specific, it is something that we believe to be true of ourselves), we tend to start liking the source of the compliment more. We then want to help them and do favors for them. A number of experiments show that we are more likely to be persuaded by salespeople who: remember and use our names, make eye contact, show that they are listening to us (riveted to our every word), agree with us, imitate our speech patterns and gestures, and compliment us. Basically we want to believe good things about ourselves. If we give people a positive label about themselves (you are so generous, you are so helpful, you give to others, you are a risk-taker, you are courageous and independent), the listener wants to act in a way that is consistent with that label. It is a self-fulfilling prophecy.