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Finding an End Buyer for Your Domains

Many domainers often experience the problems of finding an end buyer for their domains, which result in them keeping the domains or selling them at large discounts to fellow domainers or domain investors.

The main aim of every domainer should be to sell a domain name to an end buyer, where these sales often reach very high amounts.

Below is one recommendation in finding an end buyer for your .com domain names.

Simply conduct a whois search on your domain and attempt to find other TLD extensions which are registered. Compile a letter to these owners stating that you are the owner of the .com domain and that may be the reason why they settled on the other extensions. Indicate to them your willingness in selling the domain to them should they be interested in owning the .com version.

In many instances you will receive replies from the owners of other extensions, which will enable you to enter into correspondence and negotiations. Also, remember that in many instances you might find companies or individuals who might threaten to take actions against you. Simply ignore them as they have no legal basis for this.

We hope that this tip will help you in selling your domains to end users and make huge profits!

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Driving Tons of Traffic to Your Blog

Wicked-wordpress-themes launched the Wordpress Social Poster. This is a fantastic script or Wordpress plugin which is guaranteed to increase your blog’s traffic. We have personally tested this script and this is a guaranteed winner!

What the script does

This script will post all your new posts automatically to social communities, which include Twitter, Tumblr, Delicious and Diigo.

Implementing the script

You simply register accounts at the above-mentioned services and complete your username and passwords in the PHP file.

Upload the file into your Plugins directory and activate the plugin from your WP-Admin.

Your set and all new posts will be submitted!

Download

 http://www.wicked-wordpress-themes.com/wickedwpposter.zip

or

http://www.webmasterincome.net/wickedwpposter.zip

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Naming a Product

It is a common fact that a great name can sell. Many webmasters often struggle in naming a new product or service, but here some tips in choosing a winning name for your new product:

1. Research the names of your competitors’ products which are in the top ranking positions in search engines. This will give you some guidance as to where to begin.

2. Make use of a name that is not closely associated with your competitors’ products.

3. Make the short name and memorable. Your name should be brandable and easy to sell in future.

4. If your product is a website, always try to register the .com extension. This is the most popular extension and often first visited by visitors.

5. Make the name of the product that can be used as keywords. If your product keyword is the most widely used, it is easy to do SEO (search engine optimization) for your product.

We hope that you will find these tips useful in deciding upon a name for your new product!

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When and Who to Follow on Twitter

Webmasters Gossip Forum originally posted these great tips on when and who to follow on Twitter. This is a useful guide for those interested in following people on Twitter:

1. Is the profile an actual person?

There should be a real person behind that profile. If he is just promoting his business and 50% or more of his tweets are just “hey come and see us” or “50% off only today” etc then this is one-sided relationship. You should avoid getting involve in these relationships because they are not going to be any beneficial for you.

2. Does the profile have valid no. of followers?

There are plenty of programs available there to mass subscribe or unsubscribe twitter users and many people use them to mass follow people and after some time they mass unsubscribe them and this way they get more followers than the one they are following. In most of such cases they have very few no. of tweets but thousands of followers. Do not follow them back.

3. Content:

If you don’t find anything interesting in the profile then don’t follow it back. It doesn’t mean that it should be a most-relevant content but it should be something that should get your interest.

Tweets like, watching TV, going to market, wearing shoes and blah blah.. are also not going to make the profile look any good. Try to avoid follow or follow back such profiles.

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10 Twitter Facts

1. 21% (One Fifth) of Twitter accounts are empty placeholders. These are the percentage of Twitter accounts that have never posted a single tweet. They may either be registered simply to hold a username for later use, or be experimental accounts started up but never used.

2. Nearly 94% of all Twitter accounts have less than 100 followers. In a finding perhaps consistent with the newness of the tool as well as the fact that many people may currently have an account simply to start experimenting with the tool, Sysomos found the vast majority of Twitter users have an extremely low followership.

3. March and April of 2009 were the tipping point for Twitter. During these months, Ashton Kutcher launched his quest to get to 1 million followers faster than CNN, Oprah started using Twitter, and the steady flow of new users to the site continued. For many, it offered a safer and easier way to get their feet wet with social media, 140 characters at a time.

4. 150 followers is the magic number. In a particularly interesting data point from the survey, Sysomos found that Twitter users tended to “follow back” all their followers up until about 150 connections. Then the reciprocation rate fell off dramatically, which seems to indicate that this number may be the crossover point where people shift from using Twitter for more personal use to using it more for “lifecasting” their thoughts and actions to a community of people who they feel varying levels of connection to.

5. A small minority creates most of the activity.
A steep curve of a small minority of actively engaged content creators generating most of the activity on a site is common among social networks, but it is steeper and more pronounced on Twitter. 5% of users account for 75% of all activity, and 10% of users account for 86%. This seems to suggest that the site has managed to engage a mass audience beyond those who typically engage with social media.

6. Half of all Twitter users are not “active.” If you take a general description of being “active” on Twitter to mean that you have posted a tweet at some point in the last 7 days (1 week), then the survey learned that 50.4% of all Twitter users fit this category. If you remove the 21% from point #1, this leaves about 30% of users who have an account and have tweeted before, but happen to be inactive now.

7. Tuesday is the most active Twitter day. One of the most useful data points from the report is that it clears up the common question of which day of the week is the best day to tweet something. Sysomos found that Tuesday stood out as the most popular day for tweets and retweets, followed by Wednesday and then Friday.

8. APIs have been the key to Twitter’s growth & utility. In terms of tools that people are using for Twitter, Sysomos found that more than half (55%) of all Twitter users use something other than Twitter.com to tweet, search and connect with others. This may, in part, be due to Twitter’s notorious reputation of failing/crashing, but also is a credit to all the third party applications that have been built on top of Twitter and do their fair share to bring new users to the service.

9. English still dominates Twitter. When exploring Russia as part of a class that I am teaching this summer at Georgetown, one of the barriers we learned about was the difficulty of fitting some Russian language words into just 140 characters. Twitter is, however, extremely English-friendly. As the Sysomos report found, the top four countries on Twitter are all English speaking (US, UK, Canada, Australia). Of these, US makes up 62% of all Twitter users, followed by UK with nearly 8% and Canada and Australia with 5.7% and 2.8% respectively. The largest non-English speaking country on Twitter? Brazil with 2%.IMB_TwitterSysomos2

10. Twitter is being led by the social media geeks. This particular finding should likely come as no surprise, but 15% of Twitter users who follow more than 2000 people identify themselves as social media marketers. These individuals are more likely to post updates every day (sometimes more than once per day) and also use Twitter more actively for direct communication.

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