Lynn Anderson Promoted to Distinguished Service Professor

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Lynn Anderson

CORTLAND, NY (05/14/2012)(readMedia)– SUNY Cortland Professor Lynn Anderson, a nationally recognized expert in the fields of outdoor, therapeutic and inclusive recreation, has been promoted to the rank of Distinguished Service Professor, one of the highest academic ranks in the SUNY system.

The SUNY Board of Trustees promoted Anderson, a SUNY Cortland professor of recreation, parks and leisure studies and the creator of a user-friendly database of inclusive New York recreational facilities, during its May 10 meeting in Albany, N.Y.

Anderson, as a distinguished service professor, is honored and recognized for her extraordinary service not only at the campus and within SUNY, but also at the community, regional, state and national levels. She was among 21 SUNY faculty promoted to distinguished this year and brings to six the number of distinguished service professors currently serving at SUNY Cortland.

A highly successful grant writer, Anderson has obtained more than $700,000 in external funding, including an ongoing multi-year grant from the New York State Planning Council for Developmental Disabilities. The grant was used to establish a statewide inclusive recreation resource center that is housed at SUNY Cortland. The mission of the center is to identify Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliant parks and recreational sites throughout New York with the goal of ultimately providing outdoor recreation opportunities for all state residents.

“Frankly, I cannot think of a single academic in the field who has done as much to make a difference in the lives of persons with disabilities, which has had a ripple effect on their partners, families, friends and communities,” wrote Charles Sylvester, chair of the Department of Physical Education, Health and Recreation at Western Washington University. “When I pause to think of the thousands of students, practitioners and fellow educators Dr. Anderson’s research has informed, inspired, and empowered, well, you cannot help but get the picture of her massive impact.”

Anderson, who has served the College since 1998 and was promoted to professor in 2002, currently serves on the New York State Therapeutic Recreation Association State Licensure Committee. She has collaborated with the New York State Recreation and Park Society and the National Recreation and Park Association National Certification Board to ensure student access to the national exam to become a certified park and recreation professional. Through her grant work, Anderson also has collaborated with the I Love New York Tourism Division and the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. She has participated in Park Ranger Training Workshops in New York state.

From 1998 to 2001, Anderson served on the committee that reviews national credentialing standards in the field of therapeutic recreation. For this and her many other contributions to her profession, Anderson was named the recipient of the New York State Therapeutic Recreation Society 2011 Member of the Year Award.

In addition, more than 1,400 outdoor recreation practitioners nationwide have been trained in ways to enhance the quality of life for individuals with all types of disabilities through “Inclusion U,” an innovative program established by Anderson through ongoing funding from the New York State Developmental Disabilities Planning Council.

Anderson served as chair of SUNY Cortland’s Recreation, Parks and Leisure Studies Department for her first 12 years at the College. As chair, she led strategic planning and successful accreditation visits.

As a teacher, Anderson has few peers. She was recognized for her superior teaching with the 2003 Teaching Award at SUNY Cortland for Incorporation of Service Learning and with the 1998 McDermott Outstanding Undergraduate Teaching Award at the University of North Dakota. She was listed in Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers in 1998, 1999, 2004 and 2005.

Anderson is the published author of two books, 22 journal articles and book sections on therapeutic and inclusive recreation that were published in refereed journals. She also wrote 55 articles in non-refereed journals.

Anderson’s 2011 book, Inclusivity Assessment Tool and User Guide, is already considered a seminal work within the recreation and leisure studies discipline. Her most recent manuscript, a co-authored book currently in press called Therapeutic Recreation Practice: A Strengths Approach, is a much-anticipated addition to the profession.

Anderson serves on the editorial boards of several prestigious journals in her field and has shared her expertise in presentations at national, state and local conferences. In 2011, she was an invited keynote speaker at both the Canadian Congress for Leisure Research and the Colorado Therapeutic Recreation Association Conference.

“Dr. Anderson’s work is resulting in extending the theoretical base of the profession as well as serving as a national model and resource for communities and states to create and manage inclusive opportunities,” said Marcia Carter, professor of recreation, park and tourism administration at Western Illinois University-Quad Cities.

Candace Ashton, professor and coordinator of recreation therapy at University of North Carolina, Wilmington, commended Anderson for her leadership and service on the national task force on therapeutic recreation curriculum accreditation, which drafted the standards and student learning outcomes for the profession.

“She is committed to making sure therapeutic recreation students from every university in the nation are provided with the best learning experiences possible as they become our future recreation therapists and have an impact on the lives of people with disabilities,” Ashton stated.

Of major significance to the College in the past two years was Anderson’s willingness to serve as faculty co-chair for the SUNY Cortland 2012 Middle States Decennial Self-Study and Site Visit. She played a key role in drafting the self-study and educating the campus about the Middle States initiative.

Richard Kendrick, director of SUNY Cortland’s Institute for Civic Engagement, said Anderson has an extraordinary ability to integrate service with learning throughout the undergraduate and graduate courses she teaches..

“Dr. Anderson has for many years involved her students in real-world research projects that have assisted numerous community agencies in program evaluation and assessment,” Kendrick wrote. “By integrating teaching, service and scholarship, Dr. Anderson extends the value that she places on service to her students and prepares the next generation for citizenship.”

For example, in 2005 and 2006, Anderson and 538 SUNY Cortland students created useful program manuals on the Peer Assisted Inclusion in Recreation (PAIR) Program for the local Cortland community’s JM Murray Center and published Individualized Recreation Inclusion Services (IRIS) Program manuals for the Cortland-Madison ARC.

She is active in recreation opportunities within the greater Cortland community and has conducted needs assessment analyses for the local YWCA and the Cortland Youth Bureau. She has established numerous student internships and volunteer opportunities at the nearby Lime Hollow Center for Environment and Culture and with the Adaptive Snowsports at Greek Peak in Virgil, N.Y. She has instructed members of the Migrant Education Outreach Program in kayaking and served as a member of the Tompkins Cortland Community College Recreation Leadership Advisory Board.

She volunteers frequently at sustainability events and for three years has spearheaded the Community Bike Program on campus, which provides free use of bicycles to students, faculty and staff on campus.

Anderson earned her Bachelor of Arts in French from University of North Dakota; her Master of Science in Recreation and Park Management from University of Oregon; and her Ph.D. in education with emphasis in therapeutic recreation from University of Minnesota.

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Google Docs bumps up free storage to 5GB, primes servers for Drive?

Google Docs bumps up free storage to 5GB, warms up servers for Drive?

Is space at a premium in your Google Docs folder? Good news from Mountain View, then, as it’s just stealth-increased the storage allowance for its cloud-based document editor. Unfortunately, anyone that’s already plumped for a paid extension of their Google Docs storage won’t see an extra 5GB on top. This new storage limit also tallies with what we’re expecting to see from Google Drive — presumably pretty soon.

[Thanks Kenji]

Google Docs bumps up free storage to 5GB, primes servers for Drive? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 04:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac Malware Strikes Again With SabPub Trojan

Two more related Trojan exploits that target Macs have been discovered. They appear to be two versions of the SabPub information-stealing Trojan, discovered by antivirus software vendor Kaspersky last weekend. They have existed undetected in the wild for two months, according to Kaspersky’s Costin Raiu.

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Short Term Bridging Finance

In Australia, bridging finance is used in connection with transitional or temporary funding. As the term implies, this is a special type of alternative financing which bridges a cash flow ?gap, and usually it is designated for urgent need funding. Funds are only provided until a permanent solution can be found. In some situations, there are extenuating circumstances that make it necessary to obtain temporary financing, such as expediting the closing of a real estate transaction.

One way to understand bridge loan financing is to associate it with specialized lending. This makes it easier to understand the differences between bridging loans and regular commercial financing. The main difference is that bridge loans have higher interest rates and shorter repayment terms; the industry standard is usually 1 to 12 months.

Another occasion for short term finance is funding for a home. In certain instances, individual homeowners may need to ?bridge the gap? between renting and purchasing a new home. Some homeowners may qualify for a non-interest bearing bridging reprieve. This means that they aren?t required to make a payment during a pre-determined time period.

A good example of this would be obtaining bridge funding to complete a real estate transaction for a new home purchase before the old one sells. This can help to alleviate the financial strain of maintaining two mortgages. Although, bridging financing is considered a viable option for non-business purposes, most homeowners will not meet the income requirements to qualify for two mortgages.

Bridge loans can also help investors who wish to capitalize on foreclosed properties. When it comes to purchasing commercial properties, the terms are standardized and the qualifying process is straightforward. Most loans involving investors obtaining real properties are completed within 72 hours.

Typically borrowers must have the demonstrated ability to repay the loan and assets are required for collateral. Qualifying criterion varies from lender to lender, but the funds are available as interest only loans. This means that bridging finance is different from standard home loans, where monthly payments are divided between the interest and principal. With bridging loans in Australia, interest isn?t charged on the loan until the installment payment is remitted.

Funding for bridge loans are most often provided by private lenders. These lenders are referred to as, bridge loan funding investors. Funding is available for business or business entities that require specialized funding structures. Loans of this type can also be obtained from commercial lenders.

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How to Choose a Good Domain Name for Your Business Online …

Second only to web hosting in the list of priorities for a successful website, registering a domain name is an important part of website creation and can have repercussions on many other aspects of your business online, including search engine optimization.

Your domain name is your address on the web, but it is also your slogan and holds much information about you and your business online.
A good domain name can help your online business by providing trust and authority both to your clients and to the search engines that will determine how well to rank your website.

In this article, we will cover the different aspects that make a good domain name both for the human readers and the search engine robots. Note that you don?t have to follow every point religiously when registering a new domain, but rather keep in mind the overall ideas of these points.

The first element to cover is the domain name length. Generally speaking, it is always better both for the humans and the search engines to keep your domain name as short as possible. It?s better for your potential clients because they will remember your business name more easily, and it?s better for the search engines because some (Google) may penalize too lengthy URLs.

The only exception to this rule would be if you are trying to rank for a long-tail keyword, in which case you should try to get an exact match domain, meaning a domain name that matches your keyword exactly;

The second element is the top-level domain (TLD). Some webmasters choose to use general TLDs like.com or.net, some others prefer the country specific TLDs like.co.uk for the United Kingdom or.cn for China.

Others would rather choose the cheaper alternative which is.info.

Many search engine optimization studies have shown that the most effective domain names choices are the general TLDs, notably.com and.net as they are not only the most used but also the most trustworthy since they are the oldest.

The third point to cover is the quality of the registrar you are selecting. The registrar is the company from which you purchase your domain name, and depending on which type of plans you choose, it can also be your web hosting provider.

Choosing a renown and trustworthy registrar is not only required for the security of your personal information, business information and of your domain name, but it is also a guaranteed help in your SEO efforts. Especially since Google Panda, search Engines take into account the quality of the registrar from which you registered your domain name.

Finally, I would advice you to try and keep your domain name as professional and esthetic as you can. If possible, do not resort to the use of special characters and keep your domain name memorable.

To find out more about domain name registration and domain name registrars, you can read Domain Name Registration For Business which may help you get more of the information you need.

You can also get access my article SEO mistakes choosing a domain name for more information on SEO oriented domain names.

View the original article here

Source: http://kisonewebhosting.com/how-to-choose-a-good-domain-name-for-your-business-online-2/

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Ex-NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf arrested in Montana

FILE – In this July 27, 2010, file photo, former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf is shown in Holter Lake, Mont. Authorities say Leaf was arrested in his Montana hometown on burglary and drug possession charges on Friday, March 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Mike Albans, File)

FILE – In this July 27, 2010, file photo, former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf is shown in Holter Lake, Mont. Authorities say Leaf was arrested in his Montana hometown on burglary and drug possession charges on Friday, March 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Mike Albans, File)

HELENA, Mont. (AP) ? Former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf was arrested Friday in his Montana hometown of Great Falls on burglary and drug possession charges, police said.

The circumstances surrounding Leaf’s arrest were not immediately clear. Great Falls Police Sgt. Dean Bennett, who confirmed Leaf’s arrest, said Friday night that he had not seen a report detailing the allegations against the ex-football player.

Leaf was booked on felony charges of burglary of a residence and criminal possession of dangerous drugs, plus a first-time charge of misdemeanor theft, Cascade County Detention Center Officer Robert Rivera said.

Leaf was freed on $76,000 bond and is scheduled to make an initial court appearance Monday.

Leaf, a former standout quarterback for Washington State, was the No. 2 pick in the 1998 draft behind Peyton Manning. But Leaf flamed out as quarterback for the San Diego Chargers, gaining a reputation as one of the biggest busts in NFL history.

There is no phone listing for Leaf in Great Falls. A message left at his parents’ house was not immediately returned Friday night.

Leaf released a statement through his publicist, Wendy Ogunsemore on Friday night.

“I’ve made some mistakes, and have no excuses,” the statement read. “I am using the tools I’ve learned to move forward rather than backwards, and will be open to talking about the details in the days to come. I am confident that there will be further understanding when the facts are revealed, and feel very blessed for all of the support, especially from my friends and family.”

Last year, Leaf had surgery to remove a benign tumor from his brain stem and later underwent additional radiation treatments.

On March 21, Leaf told an Associated Press reporter in an email exchange that he had struggled through treatments and had an MRI scheduled for the end of the month, but “I’m doing/feeling much better and am excited for the rest of 2012.”

Friday’s arrest also raises the question of whether his arrest means the 10-year probation plea agreement he negotiated with Texas prosecutors stemming from drug and burglary charges in 2009 will be revoked.

James Farren, the Randall County district attorney who negotiated the 2010 plea agreement, did not immediately return a text message seeking comment on Leaf’s arrest in Montana.

In 2008, when Leaf was a quarterbacks coach for Division II West Texas A&M, he was accused of burglarizing a player’s home. An investigation turned up that Leaf had obtained nearly 1,000 pain pills from area pharmacies in an eight-month span.

He resigned that year, was indicted in 2009 and the next year pleaded guilty to eight felony drug charges. Besides the 10 years’ probation, he was fined $20,000.

Last year, he authored a book titled “596 Switch” ? the name of a passing play in the Washington State playbook ? that focused on the 1997 season when he led the Cougars to their first Rose Bowl in six decades.

___

Blaney reported from Lubbock, Texas.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-03-31-Ryan%20Leaf-Arrest/id-6c6e1baddf4a44a19aa5224d692b7a25

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Conversion kit lets you push your RAZR to the Maxx for $110

Conversion kit lets you push your RAZR to the Maxx for $110

Let’s pretend you went ahead and purchased a shiny new Motorola RAZR this past November. Now, just for the sake of argument, let’s say Motorola — only months later — released a new version of that handset with a battery that had some pundits asking, ‘where has this phone been my whole life?’ Yeah, that happened. But if you’ve managed to overlook Moto’s past transgression, and are willing to sink another $110 into your handset, you too can experience the battery that just won’t quit. The Cellphone Repair Shop is hocking a kit that will outfit your plain old RAZR with genuine Motorola RAZR Maxx parts — battery included. The site recommends that you send your handset to its repair facility for “professional installation,” but we’re sure some of you are up to the challenge. How about it, RAZR owners, are any of you tinkerers going to try and Maxx-out your handset?

Conversion kit lets you push your RAZR to the Maxx for $110 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Mar 2012 13:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/03/29/conversion-kit-lets-you-push-your-razr-to-the-maxx-for-110/

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Insight: In bounty seasons, Saints among NFL’s most violent

(Reuters) – In a 2011 season in which the New Orleans Saints rewarded players for injuring opponents in a “pay-for-pain” bounty scheme, the team was among the most violent in the National Football League, a Reuters analysis shows.

The Saints were second in the NFL with 17 regular-season defensive flags for violating rules intended to protect players from being hurt, just behind the Oakland Raiders‘ 18. The league averaged nine per team.

The Raiders have a long, proud tradition of aggressive rule-breaking. “The Oakland Raiders have always been a very physical team,” said Jim Tunney, a 31-year veteran NFL referee.

“I think it has a lot to do with team discipline and the way the coach wants to approach the game,” he said.

Unlike the Raiders, though, the Saints did not otherwise commit a large number of penalties. As a result, violent penalties accounted for a league-high 37 percent of all the Saints‘ defensive penalties. The Raiders, with the top number of 88 penalties overall, had a violent-penalty rate of only 20 percent. The league averaged 21 percent.

The Saints also led the league with 1.6 violent penalties per 100 defensive plays and the Raiders were second with 1.57 violent penalties per 100 such plays. The 32 NFL teams averaged just 0.84 on that basis.

When viewed together, the pattern of Saints’ penalties suggests the bounty system may have encouraged defensive players to be selectively more violent.

“The data are consistent with the notion that violent plays are being rewarded or pushed,” said Scott Berry, an expert on sports statistics at Berry Consultants in Austin, Texas, who reviewed Reuters’ analysis.

The controversy over the level of violence comes at a time when the NFL, which is facing lawsuits from hundreds of former players who suffered concussions, has made player safety a top priority.

Reuters used data from Football Outsiders, an NFL statistics website that keeps detailed logs of each penalty. Violent penalties were defined as unnecessary roughness, roughing the passer, disqualification and personal fouls. All other defensive penalties, such as unsportsmanlike conduct, were considered non-violent in the analysis. Data regarding the number of defensive plays came from FootballDB.com. The NFL declined to provide detailed penalty or injury data.

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Interactive Graphic: http://static.reuters.com/resources/media/global/editorial/interactives/the-nfl-violence/nfl-charts.html

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Officials with the NFL declined to comment. The Saints and the Raiders did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the analysis.

Last week, the NFL handed down stiff penalties against the Saints after finding that defensive coach Gregg Williams ran a scheme that awarded Saints defensive players $1,500 for a “knockout” and $1,000 for “cart-off” injuries to opposing players during the 2009 to 2011 seasons.

The league suspended Saints head coach Sean Payton for an entire season. Williams – who had left the Saints for the St. Louis Rams – was suspended indefinitely, and Saints general manager Mickey Loomis must step aside for the first eight games of the 2012 season. The Saints will also pay $500,000 and forfeit selections for the second round of the 2012 and 2013 drafts, a significant handicap.

By Friday, every NFL team must certify it does not have a similar bounty program.

ENCOURAGING VIOLENCE

Retired Dallas Cowboys quarterback Danny White is sure there are others. “If I was a betting man, I’d go to Vegas with every penny I’ve got that there were other teams doing it … I know when I played there was a bounty on me.”

The analysis suggests other teams in the league may have systems, an ethos, or playing styles that encouraged violent rule-breaking. And it all comes amid a 70 percent surge in violent penalties in the NFL since 2008.

The Tennessee Titans’ defensive players, for example, were called for 14 violent penalties in 2011, third in the league. Their violent rate of 32.6 percent of defensive penalties was just shy of the Saints’ rate and they were fourth in the league with 1.25 violent penalties per 100 defensive plays.

The Titans also have a history of being among the league leaders in violent fouls. In three seasons since 2006, the team has topped the league both in total numbers of violent penalties and in violent penalties per 100 plays.

Refereeing crews could in theory call violent penalties at different rates. But referees had a negligible impact on the teams’ rates of violent penalties over the past six seasons, said C. Shane Reese, professor of statistics at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, who also reviewed Reuters’ analysis.

And in recent weeks, several players and coaches have acknowledged some teams have for years had informal incentives for players who make big plays, including hitting players so hard they have to leave the game.

In early March, former Indianapolis Colts Coach Tony Dungy, now a football analyst with NBC Sports, said he knew the Titans have had bounties in the past, including to nail former Colts quarterback Peyton Manning.

He made the comment to NBC’s ProFootballTalk blog:

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/03/02/dungy-titans-had-a-bounty-on-peyton-manning/

Reuters could not reach Dungy for comment. Titans officials declined to comment.

CRUMPLED

Retired hard-hitting Titans defensive player and sports radio host Blaine Bishop defended his former team. He played for the Titans from 1993 until 2002.

“When I was with the Titans, we never had a bounty system, period,” he said.

In recent weeks, the Titans’ hometown newspaper, the Tennessean, has reported that some players admitted to an informal system that rewarded big plays but they denied anyone was rewarded just for taking out an opponent.

Williams was defensive coordinator for the Titans from 1997 to 2000. From 2001 to 2003, he was head coach of the Buffalo Bills, and then from 2004-2007 he was defensive coordinator for the Washington Redskins. In 2008 he had that position for the Jacksonville Jaguars, before joining the Saints.

Reuters did not have the data to analyze the period when Williams coached the Titans, the Bills and the first two years of his Redskins career. The teams he coached between 2006 and 2009 did not have unusually high levels of violent penalties.

When Williams joined the Saints in 2009, however, the team joined the Titans among the league leaders in violent penalties.

PLAYER SUSPICIONS

Whatever the numbers say, players have their suspicions. Consider a play during the Saints-Giants game at the Superdome in New Orleans last November.

About a minute into the second half, Giants quarterback Eli Manning threw a pass across the middle to Hakeem Nicks, who appeared to catch the ball for a moment. Then Saints defensive player Isa Abdul-Quddus drove his helmet into Nicks’ helmet from the side, forcing him to drop the ball, crumple onto the field and briefly leave the game.

After an official threw a flag and Nicks lay on the ground, Abdul-Quddus celebrated along with several other Saints players – behavior that, in hindsight, made Nicks question whether it had been motivated by a bounty.

“Uh, the way he was celebrating, you would probably think that,” Nicks was quoted as saying by the Newark Star-Ledger earlier this month. Nicks later returned to the game, but sat out the next two practices due to a rib injury and concussion-like symptoms, Giants spokesman Pat Hanlon said.

Abdul-Quddus could not be reached for comment.

Nicks’ agent Peter Schaffer said Abdul-Quddus violated a football code: “He tried to injure a player instead of tackling a player, and that’s where the line is drawn.”

Action is needed, Schaffer said. “If there are outside influences that are abnormally encouraging players to go past where the line is drawn, then we have to do everything we can to stop that.”

(Reporting by Cezary Podkul in New York; Editing by Maurice Tamman, Martin Howell, Gary Hill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-bounty-seasons-saints-among-nfls-most-violent-041328388–nfl.html

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Find Out How Powerful Video Marketing Can Prove for Your Online

If you want to drive better traffic to your website and make a good impression on them, you?d be surprised as just how effective on-site videos can be for getting the results you want. The following outlines ways to use videos to your fullest advantage to get conversions, enabling your business to succeed like never before.

The Welbeck Group
Naming Your Videos The Right Way

This is one the fastest trends to catch up in the Internet marketing world. Not a lot of people are doing it right now, but it?s growing steadily. What does it mean to have a video sales page? It?s nothing but a regular sales page where the video replaces the text. This way, you?re not wasting time typing up obtuse sales copy; you just make a video containing your content and post it on the page. It makes hearing about your product much easier! Developing videos for marketing is something that takes certain skills and talents. So if you don?t feel comfortable writing your own copy or speaking in front of a camera, you may want to consider hiring a professional to do this for you. However, if you do have a good history with sales copy and are good at public speaking, you can experience great success doing it yourself. Its important to remember that the video itself is your selling device. So, put your best foot forward, let your smile sparkle and make your video the best it can be. Before you know it, everyone?s going to have video sales pages, so do it while it?s still a novelty.

Keep Track of Your Video Performance.

In the world of Internet information, quality is key. Your search for good information is likely what led you to this particular article. While your videos need to be engaging, they also need to contain relevant information. When you work on video marketing, you want to make videos that will not just thrill your viewers, but sell your product. You can create videos that will be informative and beneficial for your niche. The Internet is used more often than not as an information resource; videos can do this far better than articles can. In the event that you have a gardening tool website; make a video that details various planting and gardening methods and put it up. Because this video content matches the needs of your niche audience, you?ll have a better chance of finding repeat, return customers and visitors. Besides, Google uses relevant videos to rank you higher and thus traffic from your target market will increase. Instructional videos have a way of generating traffic, it also helps show the viewer that you are an ?expert? on the subject and will increase the chances that they will look for more from you.

Video marketing is innovative, immediate, draws great responses from your target market, and can highly differentiate you from other marketers. It is about time that you look into video marketing as a promotional tool for your business if you have not done so already. As time goes by, Youtube and other video sharing sites are gaining popularity, people all over the world using them for entertainment and information purposes, as well as finding out what products are out there for them to purchase. Work on some of the best marketing platforms out there on the Internet by using video marketing in your advertising.

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