By Anne O'Dwyer
Like the song "times they are a changing", nothing stands
still everything changes, things grow or decline, live
or die, get better or worse. We have been watching the series or programs about
life in the 50s and 60s. It is really funny to see how we lived then compared
to now. Life seemed so much simpler then, people seemed more satisfied with
less. Where will this desire for more escalate to I wonder?
As a child I remember less clothes were available to buy, hand-made was
part of life. Luckily my mother was a great seamstress and made us beautiful
clothes and amazing dolls clothes. She was innovative too and I remember
seaside holidays were the time for knitted swimsuits. Great when they were dry,
but if you went in the sea they became a sodden weight that dangled round your
knees. Not a good Look!
As a teenager an important part of the weekend was spent making a new
dress for the Saturday night dance. Friday payday meant after-work a quick dash
to the shop to purchase several yards, (not metres) of cloth to be converted
into the latest style by Saturday night. My friends all made their dresses too
with the help of their mothers. Hemlines rose weekly inch by inch as we became
more daring, up to our knees and beyond. In fact I remember making coats,
dresses, suits and even my wedding dress it was the norm then,
So how has affiliate marketing changed? ClickBank
with an affiliate link was a popular starting point for affiliates, followed by
sourcing your own products from large warehouses online, building your list of
happy customers, with email and other marketing techniques plus building your
own websites or paying someone to do it for you. All this too, before you
earned anything, they were then often tiny commissions.
NOW there is a simple solution to starting online, work with the
guidance of a mentor who provides great products with generous commissions,
sales pages and training SO WITH THIS REDUCED WORK LOAD AND NO NEED TO LEARN IT
ALL FIRST, it is much easier to start online. You can even earn whilst you
learn the techniques.
It does take time to build a sustainable business so keep your paid work
initially and work your new business in your spare time. It makes an exciting
new hobby as you watch your efforts turn into cash.
Make 2016 a year to remember!
Books to help you:
"The Power of Your Subconscious Mind" by Joseph Murphy.
"Speed Reading and Speed Memory" by Tony Bazan
"Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway" by Susan Jeffers. Read
if you have doubts
"99 Ways to flood Your Website With Traffic" by Mick Macro.
Simple suggestions.
"SEO step by step" by Caimin Jones. An easy book for
beginners to SEO
"500 Social Media Marketing Tips" By Andrew Macarthy
"Profitable Social Media Marketing" by Tim Kitchen &
Tashmeem Mirza Also by the same author "How to get to the top of
Google"
"Email Persuasion" by Ian Brodie
Article Source: Ezine Articles expert Anne O'Dwyer
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