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Affiliate Program ”Get Money from your Website”

We’ve been brainwashed, people. The advertisers know exactly how to make us believe we simply can’t live without their products when, in reality, we could survive quite nicely without them, thank-you very much.
Half of the things on our grocery lists aren’t food at all. What many cleaning products have going for them is convenience, but is saving a couple of minutes worth the extra cost? There are loads of them out there but here are six things to leave off of your weekly grocery list to save money.
  • Pre-moistened cleaning cloths – It really bothers me that some things are made to use once and then throw away. It’s hardly environmentally-friendly and it’s certainly not wallet-friendly. I could never understand the sense in spending money on a pop-up container of wipes pre-moistened with kitchen cleaner or furniture polish. Is it really that much trouble to spray some cleaner on a reusable cloth?
  • Toilet cleaner – I stopped buying fancy toilet cleaners when I ran out one day and sprinkled some Old Dutch powdered cleanser into the bowl, instead. I was surprised by how well it worked. It removed water stains and did a bang up job of cleaning under the rim, too. Those toilet cleaning commercials will tell you that their product destroys 99.9 per cent of germs but powdered cleansers disinfect too and really, how clean does the commode have to be? After all, we don’t get our drinking water from it. I also discovered a bonus of using Old Dutch or Comet powdered cleansers to clean the toilet. The toilet brush doesn’t get all yellow and gungy like it does with the harsher cleaners and at a buck or less per container, the powdered cleansers are a genuine cleaning bargain.
  • Swiffer wet mops – Here’s another way to toss your money into the landfill. The Swiffer wet mop employs use-it-once saving on grocerycleaning pads and special cleaning solution refills that need to be replaced when empty. Instead, try Vileda’s Pro Mist mop. It doesn’t need batteries and the cleaning pads are washable up to 100 times before you need to replace them. You just put two teaspoons of your favorite cleaner in the refillable bottle and fill the rest with water. Bravo, Vileda!
  • J-cloths – Okay, who was the genius who came up with what is essentially a reusable rag that doesn’t even last as long as a regular rag. Admittedly, it looks nicer than an old t-shirt, but that’s about all you can say for it. Micro-fiber cleaning cloths that you can buy for a buck at the dollar store are much better choices. You can use them wet or dry to dust or clean glass and mirrors with or without cleaners and they work on the bottom of your Swiffer broom, too. They can be washed over and over and are made to last.
  • Window cleaner – Personally, I’ve never found anything better for washing windows than good old vinegar in a bucket of hot water. Use half of an old tea towel or dish cloth to wash and full-sized tea towels to dry, instead of mounds of paper towels. Your windows will sparkle and your pocket book will escape unnecessary trauma.
  • Dryer sheets and other fabric softeners – If you watch these commercials, it’s mostly all about how your clothes will smell when you use a fabric softener. Not only are fabric softeners largely unnecessary, the chemicals on dryer sheets have been shown to clog up your dryer’s lint catcher over time and reduce its efficiency. For softening clothes and preventing static build up, dryer balls have become quite popular and are very inexpensive. You can even buy them at the dollar store for about a buck each and they last about two years before you need to replace them. Then, if you must have clothes that smell spring-time fresh, spritz yourself with some floral-scented body mist before leaving the house in the morning.
Want to save some money? The next time you make up a grocery list, take a hard look at the cleaning products on it. Is it one use only? Can it be  replaced with something cheaper and/or more environmentally friendly? Despite what advertisers want you to believe, you can maintain a clean home without spending money on every new product that comes on the market. The choice is yours.


There are many freebies being offered online from well-known companies, and some not so well-known companies too. This is a guide on how to make sure you’re keeping your personal data safe when applying for them – are they genuine freebies? Some scammers may set up a freebie website simply to harvest your personal details. But with a little knowledge and a bit of work, you can check out the site and make sure it is a legitimate offer.
Here are some questions you need to ask:
1. Is it a brand you know?
If it’s a big named brand offering a freebie on their main website, then you don’t really need to worry. But if you’ve never heard of the brand, do a little research and see what people have written about them in the past.
2. Does the site look professional?
If it’s a site you’ve never heard of before, navigate around and make sure all the links are working. Is the home page blank? Avoid them. Are there false details on the contact us page? Avoid them. Is the site full of typos and grammatical errors? Avoid them.
Just use a bit of common sense in deciding whether or not it is a legitimate offer.
3. Is the Whois data reliable?
The average consumer is not aware that you can look at the registration details of a website by doing a Whois lookup. Pop the site’s URL in there, and check out the data that appears. If the site was only created a short while ago, if it is
registered to a false email address, or if the details look suspicious, then these are some warning flags to watch out for.
However, some companies may set up new domains for a special promotion and the Whois data might be very new. You can check this by going to the mother site and making sure that the new domain is linked to directly from there – giving the new site a true link and reason to exist.
4. Did you use a unique password?
When signing up to a freebie, mailing list, or special offer, it is always recommended not to use the same password as you do at many other sites. If the data is compromised, they will simply be able to go to other sites where you use the same email address and password combination. They can then log in to your accounts elsewhere, causing potential issues with data theft or credit card theft. Use unique passwords for each and every site you sign up to, ideally managed by a password manager.
5. Did you Google search for some history?
It’s always useful to Google search for the company name or “received X freebie” and you can see if people out there have actually had success with the offer. In many cases, you’ll see reports on forums telling others that it’s a scam or a data collection site, warning people not to use it. Alternatively, you may see reports that people have received the item, and you have a reason to trust that it could be a true freebie. But look closely and make sure those reports are not seeded – see that the comments are from established users of the site with high post counts, and not a brand new member on their very first post.
Conclusion
If a freebie sounds too good to be true, it probably isn’t real. Spend a few minutes checking out the website using the above tools and tips, and you can keep your personal information safe from the scammers.
This is a guest article written by Anna, owner of Bargainmoose.ca. Bargainmoose is a Canadian website where you can find the latest shopping deals and coupon codes, helping Canadians save money every day. [RSS &Twitter]

Formula to make money Online

Posted by goodOne On 14:56 0 comments

How to Make Money Online: The sales funnel
This Article is Brought To You By Make Money Online With a Teenage Dad
According to Google, there are over 800,000+ searches for the phrase “how to make money online” The goal of this page is to share with you exactly how to do just that.
The Video below contains the no B.S. guide on how to make money online. if you want to learn how to make money online, then I recommend you checkout the video below.

Transcript + more hidden tips that are not included on the video

in this article, I am going to share with you the no B.S. guide on how to make money online.
First of all, there are dozens of ways to make money online.
In this article, I will not be covering the ways to make money online. Instead, what I will do is acually explain to you how to actually make money online.

The Formula of Making Money

To learn how to make money online, you should know the formula of making money first.
The Formula to make money is:
Leads + Offers = Money $$$
Whereas Leads are the prospective customers who are interested in what you have to offer.
And the Offers is anything that you can think of that can make you money.
Examples of offers:
  • Your own products (digital or physical)
  • Affiliate products you are promoting
  • Advertisements spots for sale on your site
  • etc… (all things that makes you money are considered as an offer.)

The Sales Funnel

let me break this down to you by introducing you to something that is called a “Sales Funnel”
1. The Sales funnel starts with traffic. Traffic is basically the number of people who are able to see any form of your online content.
  • Website
  • blog posts
  • YouTube videos
  • facebook posts
there are many ways to get traffic. The top 3 best places to get traffic is via:
  1. Google (being on the front page result for a keyword)
  2. Facebook (because people like your content, they share it and it gets viral via facebook)
  3. youtube (same explanation like facebook and google)
2. The Lead capture mechanism is something that you use to get the traffic (visitor’s) information.
  • can be an optin page where you collect their email address
  • can also be a free membership site where they are asked to sign up (good examples are social networking sites and forums)
Tip: an easy way to get information from your visitors is by giving away a free incentive like an ebook that they can download in exchange for signing up to your site or email list
3. After you “captured” their information, they become prospective customers or Leads.
4. A series of follow up emails that provides value to your leads helps you build good relationship with your leads
5. By providing more value and building a good relationship with your leads, you improve your brands credibility and earn their trust that leads to higher conversions in sales on what you have to offer.
Take note that an offer is not always the product that you are selling. An offer can sometimes be a way on how you structure a deal with your leads. You can do that by giving a twist or over delivering what you have to offer.
some examples could be:
  • Offering a once in a lifetime discount on a t-shirt you are selling
  • You can give your leads exclusive coupon codes to get your products in half the price
  • offer a bonus e-book if the customer decides to purchase your product within the next 2 weeks
  • the ideas on how to structure your offers are unlimited.
6. The last part is where you actually make those sales and make money. :-)

How To Make Money Online (The Re-cap)

To Make Money Online, you are going to need two components.
  1. The Leads
  2. Your Offers
the same formula is true and used by almost all kinds of businesses (Online or Offline)
For example, if you are running a grocery store, you need prospective customers (leads) to come inside their shop to checkout what you have to offer (which are grocery items)
on the other hand, without offers, the grocery store won’t survive. (obviously)
to make money online, you need to have leads and offers.
The more leads you get, the more “interested people” will see your offer. the more interested people see your offers, the more likely you’ll make a sale.

How To Make More Money Online (something you should focus on)

Focus on this little formula, get it into your head to make more money online.
More Content + More Offers = More Money $$$
The more content you provide via your blog, youtube, facebook or any place on the internet is going to provide you with more traffic that will eventually give you more leads to capture.
The more leads you get, the more money you can potentially make.
The more value you provide your leads, the more likely they would buy your offers
And by presenting more offers either by selling more products or offering your products in different ways is going to result in *you* making more money online.
Take note of the word *more* ;-)

How To Make Money Online (Again and over again)

I’m sorry i have to repeat this again. :-D
please bear with me here, I just like to inject it on your head. (like a micro chip or something)
here it goes again:
Lead + Offers = Money
To make more money, you should provide
More content, more value and more offers
Take note of the word “more” ;-)
And that’s about it on our little article on how to make money online. I hope you learned something from this. if you have any questions, reactions please leave it on the comment form below. thanks and I’m hoping to see you on my blog more! ;)
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20 way to cut your bills

Posted by goodOne On 14:53 0 comments

From cutting down on your food bill to entertaining at home, Hannah Ricci shows how you can cut back on costs without sacrificing your quality of life.
With the economy showing little sign of recovery, now is an ideal time to overhaul your lifestyle for a simpler way of life. In fact, more and more people are shunning the consumerist, spendthrift existence that has developed over the last century or so, and embracing a back-to-basics lifestyle to combat the economic slowdown by saving money and reducing waste.
That’s right: it’s now cool to be frugal. Staying in is the new going out, charity is the new designer fashion and saving is the new spending.
So, to assist you on your way to thrifty living, Moneywise has put together 20 top tips to help you transform your lifestyle and fight the recession.

1. Plan your meals

Draw up a weekly menu to help cut back on the huge amount of waste UK households create every week. It will help identify areas where you can use up leftovers, finish half-eaten sauces, use fruit and vegetables before they turn bad and avoid grabbing expensive ready meals.
Remember to factor packed lunches into your shopping list to save on school-dinner costs and expensive take-out lunches. Try to stick to one big weekly shop to help budget and save on petrol.
Plus, never go shopping when you’re hungry - you'll only end up buying snacks you don't really need - and try to shop at the end of the day when many items are reduced.

2. Make your own

Supermarkets and chemists are lined with rows of expensive cleaning products, but a rummage through your kitchen cupboards could unearth a multitude of products that also do the trick for a fraction of the price.
For household cleaning, a teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda on a damp cloth works just as well as expensive brand-name cream cleaners, for example, while vinegar is a great smear-free window and mirror cleaner.
Ideas for homemade beauty products include mixing natural yoghurt and honey for a deep moisturizing face mask and mixing a couple of teaspoons of olive oil with granulated sugar to exfoliate rough hands. An egg yolk will revive dry skin, while the white will leave your skin feeling silky soft.

3. Review your services

If you employ a gardener, window cleaner or dog walker, or use a car wash, for example, consider whether you’re paying for a service you don’t need. In many cases, you can probably do it yourself. If you haven’t already done this, it’s a sure-fire way to make some savings.

4. Go vintage

Raid your parents’ or grandparents’ old wardrobes for original pieces from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s – even 1980s fashion is cool now – for an authentic spin on the retro fashion seen on the high street. Alternatively, push shopping snobbery aside and scout out your local charity shops.
Head to shops in wealthier areas, where you may stumble upon designer label clothes for a fraction of the retail price. An absolute gem for discovering cheap one-of-a-kind items is eBay.co.uk, and Oxfam’s online fashion shop at oxfam.org.uk/shop, is also worth a visit to find thousands of clothes and accessories for as little as £1.

5. Swap service

With more people staying in nowadays, why not organise a free hire service for books, DVDs, games and CDs with your friends and family.
Get everyone who is interested in taking part to draw up a list of the titles they own, swap lists and borrow items from each other. Keep things organised by arranging it like a library and agree a date by which each item must be returned
Updating your home can seem like an expensive feat when there’s little spare cash for decorating and new furniture, but it is possible to do it on a shoestring.
Wooden furniture, especially oak and pine, can be completely transformed with a lick of varnish or paint and some new handles, for example.
Grab some books on furniture restoration and different painting techniques from the library, and look at interior magazines for ideas on colours. Similarly, old sofas, chairs and cushions can be brought back to life by covering them with new material or adding details such as buttons.

7. Start a car pool

If you live near your colleagues, suggest starting a car pool where you take it in turns to drive each other to work to save on petrol costs, reducing your carbon footprint at the same time.

8. Grow your own

Fresh fruit and vegetables are an essential part of a healthy balanced diet, but packaged supermarket produce does not come cheap. Instead, buy some seeds, invest in a few gardening tools and grow your own.
Whether you’ve got a huge garden or a little patio, you can grow fruit, vegetables and herbs for a fraction of the price – and it will taste much better too. Team up with friends and family to trade the different items you grow.

9. Revive your wardrobe

Dig out the sewing machine, assuming you can use one, and transform your old clothes instead of buying new ones. Tie-dye is a big trend this year, as are sequins and sparkle, so head to markets or haberdashery departments for some cheap artistic supplies.
Use magazines and the internet for ideas and start simply, for instance by replacing buttons or adding a trim to update a tired jacket. This is also a good time to repair any moth-eaten clothes that are unworn due to holes or missing buttons, rather than just throwing them away.

10. Make your own coffee

A cup of fresh coffee is what many people need to function in the morning. But at around £2 for a small cup from cafés such as Starbucks, Prêt a Manger and Costa, takeaway coffees are an expensive luxury, so simply make your own instead.
An electric filter coffee-maker can be picked up for as little £20, and packets of ground coffee can be found in any supermarket for under £2, which means you’ll start saving after just two weeks if you normally buy coffee every weekday. Split the cost with colleagues if you drink your coffee at work, or invest in a flask.

11. Rear chickens

Collecting fresh eggs from your own chickens before breakfast is a little luxury that certainly won’t make you feel like you’re cutting back. Providing you have the time and space, keeping chickens is an inexpensive hobby and will knock eggs off the shopping list for many years to come.
You’ll need to buy or build a decent hen house and run, and provide feed and water for the chickens everyday. However, do your research first. Birds bred to regularly produce eggs, include the Speckeldy, Black Rock or Rhode Island Red, among many others.
Or, you could consider giving a battery hen a new life; according to the Battery Hen Welfare Trust, which re-homes thousands of hens each year, former battery hens still have a 40-50% production rate. So, 10 hens will lay four to five eggs daily.

11. Rear chickens

Collecting fresh eggs from your own chickens before breakfast is a little luxury that certainly won’t make you feel like you’re cutting back. Providing you have the time and space, keeping chickens is an inexpensive hobby and will knock eggs off the shopping list for many years to come.
You’ll need to buy or build a decent hen house and run, and provide feed and water for the chickens everyday. However, do your research first. Birds bred to regularly produce eggs, include the Speckeldy, Black Rock or Rhode Island Red, among many others.
Or, you could consider giving a battery hen a new life; according to the Battery Hen Welfare Trust, which re-homes thousands of hens each year, former battery hens still have a 40-50% production rate. So, 10 hens will lay four to five eggs daily.

12. Buy in bulk

Sales and money-saving deals such as buy-one-get-one-free offers can sometimes be deceiving if they lead you to buy something you don’t need, but some items are always worth snapping up. Look out for sales and deals on non-perishable items that you buy regularly, such as toilet paper, shower gel, shampoo, toothpaste, tinned goods, pasta and rice.

13. Entertain at home

Invite your friends for dinner and drinks instead of going out. A fun idea to spread the cost is to organise a ‘bring-and-share’ evening and ask everyone to bring a different dish.

14. Go for own brands

Do you opt for popular brand names over supermarket own-brands during the weekly grocery shop, assuming they are better quality? Many products are made in the same factories, and using the same ingredients, meaning there is often little difference when it comes to taste or quality.
So during your next shop, try opting for the supermarket’s no-frills range for a few of your regular purchases.

15. Keep-fit for free

The expense of gym membership and exercise classes is an easy area to cut back on, by incorporating exercise into your daily routine instead. Try to walk more, by parking further away from the office or shops, for example, or getting off the bus one stop earlier.
Take the stairs instead of lifts at work and walk across the office to speak to colleagues instead of sending emails. At home, borrow exercise DVDs from the library.

16. Creative cooking

Look back to wartime Britain for tips to cut down on food wastage and find a use for every last morsel. Boil up leftover bones from meat and vegetable peelings to make tasty stocks to be used in stews, soups, sauces and risotto, for example, and make meat go further by bulking out dishes with cheap pulses, such as beans and lentils.
Fill up on cheap, wholesome foods such as porridge, brown rice and pasta, and make use of weighing scales to ensure correct portion sizes and avoid cooking too much food. Visit lovefoodhatewaste.com for recipe ideas on using leftovers and tips to make foods last longer.

17. Use vouchers & coupons

Vouchers and coupons are more valuable than ever: whether it’s a discount on the weekly grocery shop, a two-for-one deal at a restaurant or a few quid off at the petrol pump, it’s really worth the effort.
Scour magazines and newspapers and check out websites such asvouchercodes.co.uk and myvouchercodes.co.uk before hitting the shops. Also make sure you are getting the most out of loyalty cards, such as Tesco’s Clubcard or Boots’ Advantage card.

18. Become fuel efficient

Many of us are throwing money down the drain by not considering how we use the appliances in our home. Simple ways to cut energy bills include not leaving devices on standby and always turning off lights when you leave a room; draught-proofing windows, doors and floorboards, and fixing dripping taps.
Other tips include switching to energy-efficient light bulbs and avoiding using high-energy tumble dryers in favour of line-drying your clothes. Visit the Energy Saving Trust's website for more advice.

19. Brew your own booze

While buying your own alcohol is cheaper than drinking out in a pub or bar, brewing your own beer, wine or cider is cheaper still. Home brewing is also a fun hobby, and the final bottled product can be given as an inexpensive gift – if you don’t guzzle it all yourself.

20. Happy holidays

There are lots of options to cut the cost of your annual getaway. If you’re used to two weeks in the sun, consider ways to cut accommodation costs, such as finally visiting those friends or family you’ve been meaning to catch up with, or taking part in a holiday home swap.
While the weak pound may force many of us to remain on UK shores this year, it’s a great excuse for a budget holiday. Exploring the countryside with a tent can be a great adventure.

Moneywise : Apr 2012-04-08

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