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الثلاثاء، 14 مايو 2019

The Beginners Guide to Online Marketing

The most extensive and comprehensive introduction to online marketing that you’ll find anywhere.

  • Why We Wrote this Guide? Online marketing moves at the speed of light. To keep up, you need a strong foundation with the judgment to think critically, act independently, and be relentlessly creative. That’s why we wrote this guide — to empower you with the mental building blocks to stay ahead in an aggressive industry.There are plenty of guides to marketing. From textbooks to online video tutorials, you can really take your pick. But, we felt that there was something missing — a guide that really starts at the beginning to equip already-intelligent professionals with a healthy balance of strategic and tactical advice. The Beginner’s Guide to Online Marketing closes that gap.
  • Who This Guide Is for? We wrote this guide for an audience of first-time marketers, experienced entrepreneurs and small business owners, entry to mid-level candidates, and marketing managers in need of resources to train their direct reports. Most of all, we want you to walk away from this guide feeling confident about your marketing strategy.
  • How Much of this Guide Should You Read? This guide is designed for you to read cover-to-cover. Each new guide builds upon the previous one. A core idea that we want to reinforce is that marketing should be evaluated holistically. What you need to do is this in terms of growth frameworks and systems as opposed to campaigns. Reading this guide from start to finish will help you connect the many moving parts of marketing to your big-picture goal, which is ROI.

1. Be Laser Focused on Your Customers

Your customers, prospects, and partners are the lifeblood of of your business. You need to build your marketing strategy around them. Step 1 of marketing is understanding what your customers want, which can be challenging when you’re dealing with such a diverse audience. This guide will walk you through (1) the process of building personal connections at scale and (2) crafting customer value propositions that funnel back to ROI for your company. Get Started

2. Build Your Marketing Framework

Mediocre marketers think in terms of campaigns. Great marketers think in terms of growth frameworks. Learn how to position your marketing strategy into a sustainable, ROI-positive revenue engine for your brand. Gone are the days of shallow branding. Leverage metrics to build a solid revenue stream. Get Started

3. Develop Your Brand’s Story

When people spend money, they’re thinking with both their rational and emotional brains. The most effective marketing frameworks appeal to both. Storytelling is one of the most powerful tools that your company can wield to build customer connections. This guide will walk you through the mechanics of cultivating your company’s story. Get Started

4. Get ‘Em to Your Site: Foundations of Traffic Acquisition

You can have the most amazing web storefront, blog, or product in the world, but if you’re not getting traffic, your business’s growth strategy will fall flat. This post will walk you through some of the most common free and paid traffic acquisition frameworks for bringing visitors to your website. Get Started

5. Get the Plumbing Right: Foundations of Conversion Optimization

Traffic acquisition is only half the marketing equation. You need to invest the time in building a strategy for driving sales. Conversion optimization is the practice of (1) converting first-time visitors into customers and (2) converting first-time customers into repeat buyers. This post will teach you how. Get Started

6. Build Audience Connections with Content Marketing

Content marketing is more than just blogging. When executed correctly, content including articles, guides (like this one), webinars, and videos can be powerful growth drivers for your business. Focus on building trust and producing amazing quality. And most of all, make sure that you’re capturing the right metrics. Create content to generate ROI. Measure the right results. This guide will teach you how. Get Started

7. Find Customers with Paid Channel Advertising

Paid channel marketing is something you’ve probably come across in some form or another. Other names for this topic include Search Engine Marketing (SEM), online advertising, or pay-per-click (PPC) marketing. Very often, marketers use these terms interchangeably to describe the same concept — traffic purchased through online ads. Marketers frequently shy away from this technique because it costs money. This perspective will put you at a significant disadvantage. It’s not uncommon for companies to run PPC campaigns with uncapped budgets. Why? Because you should be generating an ROI anyway. This post walks through the basics of how. Get Started

8. Amplify 1:1 Connections with Email Marketing

Email marketing has a bad rap. Why? Because in the majority of cases, it’s spammy. When executed correctly, email marketing can be incredibly powerful. The trick is to prioritize the human-to-human connection above the sale. Balance automation with a personal touch. This post will teach you how. Get Started

9. Drive Incremental Sales Through Affiliate Marketing

It’s hard to believe that the Internet is now multiple decades old. Affiliate marketing has been around since the earliest days of online marketing. It’s a great solution for businesses that are risk-averse or don’t have the budget to spend on upfront marketing costs. Use affiliate marketing to build a new revenue stream for your ecommerce or B2B business. Get Started

10. Get Found with SEO

Search engines are a powerful channel for connecting with new audiences. Companies like Google and Bing look to connect their customers with the best user experience possible. Step one of a strong SEO strategy is to make sure that your website content and products are the best that they can be. Step 2 is to communicate that user experience information to search engines so that you rank in the right place. SEO is competitive and has a reputation of being a black art. Here’s how to get started the right way. Get Started

11. Get the Word Out with PR

You’ve launched an amazing product or service. Now what? Now, you need to get the word out. When done well, good PR can be much more effective and less expensive than advertising. Regardless of whether you want to hire a fancy agency or awesome consultant, make sure that you know what you’re doing and what types of ROI to expect. Relationships are the heart and soul of PR. This guide will teach you how to ignore the noise and focus on substantive, measurable results. Get Started

12. Launch Your Social Strategy

Your social media strategy is more than just a Facebook profile or Twitter feed. When executed correctly, social media is a powerful customer engagement engine and web traffic driver. It’s easy to get sucked into the hype and create profiles on every single social site. This is the wrong approach. What you should do instead is to focus on a few key channels where your brand is most likely to reach key customers and prospects. This post will teach you how to make that judgment call. Get Started

13. A Quick Note on Mobile

Most businesses aren’t optimized for the mobile web, and that’s a problem. We operate in a cross-platform world. Smartphones and tablets are taking over. If you’re not optimizing your site for mobile visitors, you are likely losing money. Learn how to craft a data-driven mobile approach. This guide will help you learn the ropes. Get Started



Source Quick Sprout http://bit.ly/1hswf7m

Link Building

There’s no ranking factor more important than links. If you want to rank, you need to have lots of links pointing back to your website.

As simple as it sounds, a link is not a link. There are variables, such as: relevancy and authority.

We have over 30 guides that will help you master link building.

General Link Building Guides

Learn the basics. This is the best place to start if you are new at building links.

How Many Links Should You Build to Your Website?

A Step by Step Guide to Modern Broken Link Building

How to Create a Link-Building Strategy from Scratch

What Is a “Good Link Profile” and How Do You Get One?

7 Link Building Mistakes You Ought to Avoid

7 Ways to Make Your Brand and Content More Likable

How to Combine PR with SEO for the Biggest Success

Types of Content That Attract The Most Backlinks

The Quest For The Perfect Link

A New Era of Link Building

Outreach Guides

The Link Builder’s Guide to Email Outreach

7 Reasons Your Outreach Emails Aren’t Getting Responses and How to Fix That

Tactical Link Building Guides

The Guide to Link Building Techniques

4 Ways to Boost the Conversion Rates of Your Link Building

How to Leverage Link Blending and Stage 2 Link Building to Maximize Your Rankings

7 Lessons Learned from Publishing 300 Guest Posts

Relationship-Based Link Building Guide

Advanced ScrapeBox Link Building Guide

.Edu and .Gov Link Building Guide

Submission Backlinks Guide

Grey Hat Link Building Guide

A Guide to Turning Images Into Links

Advanced Link Building Guides

How to Get Backlinks: The Complete Guide

A Thirty-Day Plan for Gaining 100 Authoritative and Relevant Backlinks to Your New Website

The Ultimate Guide to Content Link Building

How I Built 826 Backlinks to a Single Article in 8 Weeks

Here’s the Process to Help You Consistently Build 7 Backlinks a Week

The Ultimate Guide to Guest Posting in 2019



Source Quick Sprout http://bit.ly/2LKlkdZ

Quick Sprout University (newest)

Quick Sprout has everything you need to become a world-class digital marketer. We’ve included it all below.

Threat this page as a syllabus, start at the top and work your way down.

When you get to the end, you’ll know more about digital marketing than most CMOs that we’ve worked with.

Digital Marketing 101

Don’t build your business with digital marketing as an afterthought. Digital marketing is going to be what ultimately makes or breaks your success online. You can build a massive business just by getting good at digital marketing. Before you start getting into the tactical stuff, spend some time wrapping your head around digital marketing as a whole.

Beginners Guide to Online Marketing

How to Write a Great Value Proposition

How to Become a Marketer Who Thinks Strategically

How to Use Surveys to Hook More Customers

28 Business-Boosting Marketing Activities You Can Do in 1 Hour or Less

Why Most Marketing Campaigns Fail Within 3 Months

22 Unconventional Marketing Tactics that Always Work

26 Marketing Tools for Non-Tech-Savvy Marketers

7 Simple Things You Can Do To Fix Your Marketing

Marketing Framework Guide

8 Marketing Ideas to Grow Your Start Up to Mythic Proportions

How to Become a Marketer Who’s Obsessed with Metrics

16 Most Costly Marketing Mistakes I’ve Ever Made

25 Ways To Increase Website Traffic

The Step-by-Step Guide to Building an Audience Before Your Business Launches

A Step-by-Step Guide to Generating Clients by Writing Case Studies

The Most Effective Ways to Generate Leads for Your Business

The Top 9 Marketing Trends

The Power Of Emotional Marketing

The Ultimate B2B Marketing Guide

How to Tell Your Brand’s Story

Customer Acquisition Strategies That Won’t Break the Bank

A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Reader Personas

—> See All Digital Marketing Guides

Starting a Website

Every digital marketing strategy starts with a website. These guides break down exactly how the pros build websites:

How to Create a Website in 120 Minutes

How to Plan Out Your New Website

The 5 Best Website Builders

The 5 Best Domain Registrars

The Best Web Hosting Companies

7 Reasons Why You Do NOT Need to Hire a Website Designer

The 22 Key Elements of a High Quality Website

Website Speed

Website Usability

Website Security

Website Mobile Friendliness

—> See All Website Building Guides

Starting a Blog

Blogging is a huge component of digital marketing. We’ve used blogging to drive millions of visitors be month, build email lists of 700,000 people, and get 8,000 leads/month for a B2B SaaS business. Nothing scales and has the profitably like blogging.

How to Start a Blog

Best Blogging Platforms / Blog Sites

Best WordPress Themes for Blogs

Blog Design

11 Things I Wish I Knew Before I Started My First Blog

The Top 12 Tips for Running a Successful Video Blog

10 Lessons Seth Godin Can Teach You About Blogging

100 Lessons Learned from 10 Years of Blogging

—> See All Blogging Guides

E-commerce

E-commerce is a game all its own and can be a fantastic business. All of our best tips are here:

Best Ecommerce Platforms

How to Start an Online Store

How to Create an Ecommerce Website

WordPress Ecommerce

How to Transfer Your Website to Shopify

Best Ecommerce WordPress Themes

Best Ecommerce Website Builder

Checkout Process Design

Ecommerce Color Schemes

How to Create a Trust Seal On Checkout Page

—> See All E-commerce Guides

Content Creation and Content Marketing

Blog posts aren’t the only way to build traffic and audiences, there’s so many types of content it’s hard to keep track. While it sems overwhelming at first, that also means there’s tons of options. And where there’s options, there’s opportunity.

How to Write 5 or More Articles a Week and Not Burn Out

How to Create a Popular Infographic

Does Infographic Marketing Still Work? A Data Driven Answer

8 Tactics to Increase Sales with Video Content

The Ultimate Guide to Creating Visually Appealing Content

9 Tips to Create Highly Engaging Content

10 Tips To Help You Find Interesting Topics in Minutes

7 Ways to Find Better Content Ideas

How to Do Curated Content RIGHT: A Step-by-Step Guide

How to Create Content More Efficiently with Curation

A Guide to Writing a Compelling Article Introduction

A Guide to Producing a 3,000-Word Article on Any Topic

A Guide on How To Create a Guide That’ll Drive 360k Visitors

—> See All Content Guides

Advanced Digital Marketing

After you spend some time wrapping your head around everything outlined above, it’s time to start digging into more advanced digital marketing topics.

Growth Hacking

Growth hacking might be our favorite discipline within digital marketing, it generates growth using points of high leverage. So you end up getting an enormous impact with relatively little effort.

Definitive Guide to Growth Hacking

11 Growth-Hacking Strategies That Require Zero Technical Skills

The Growth Hacking Process to Supercharge Your Revenue

Pull Strategies for Getting More Visitors

Push Strategies for Getting More Visitors

How to Activate Users

How to Get Fans Creating and Sharing Content for You

9 Tactics to Fix Your User Retention

Viral Hacking to Get Hyper-growth

SEO

SEO is definitely not dead. It’s as big as ever and can drive an endless stream of traffic. But it has gotten a lot more competitive than it used to be. All of our pro tips are here:

The Secret to Learning SEO

How Google Works

The Beginner’s Guide to Technical SEO

A Step-by-Step Guide to Dominating Any Keyword You Choose

How to Create Content That Drives Lots of Organic Traffic

Quantify Your Results: The 14 Most Important SEO Metrics

How to Score Your Website’s SEO in 10 Minutes or Less

How to Get Backlinks: The Complete Guide

The Link Builder’s Guide to Email Outreach

How Many Links Should You Build to Your Website?

The Ultimate Guide to Content Link Building

—> See All SEO Guides

Social Media

To build a brand, social media needs to a core part of your marketing strategy. The audiences are just massive. Don’t let this opportunity slip by:

Stop Guessing: Here’s a Social Media Strategy That Works

7 Social Media Mistakes That Can Keep Your Content from Going Viral

7 Strategies That’ll Actually Drive You More Social Media Traffic

Top 11 Social Media Tips

21 Social Media Post Ideas

How to Build a Social Media Marketing Funnel

How to Effectively Market Your Small Business on Social Media

6 Steps to Create a Bare Bones and Profitable Social Media Plan

How to Generate Leads with Social Media

11 Ways to Make a Living on Social Media Without Selling a Single Product

Top 10 Social Media Trends

Which Social Media Platforms Are Best Suited for Your Business?

The Real Reasons Your Social Media Marketing Has Bombed

8 Ways to Get More Social Shares Without Annoying Readers

—> See All Social Media Guides

Email Marketing

No channel has the immediate impact like email marketing. Whenever I’m trying to come up with a way to get a ton of people to act right away, we go straight to our email list. Once you’ve built one, it’s an absolute goldmine.

How to Grow Your Email List as an Ecommerce Brand (A Beginner’s Guide)

Best Email Marketing Services

How to Write Emails Your Subscribers Can’t Wait to Open

How to Stop Your Emails from Being Marked as Spam

5 Simple Ways to Increase Your Email Deliverability Rates

5 Reasons Why You Can’t Make Your Email Marketing Work (and How To Fix It)

Amplify 1-on-1 Connections with Email Marketing

How to Deliver Relevant Marketing Content by Segmenting Your Email Subscribers

How to Create an Actionable Drip Campaign

A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating an Autoresponder That Subscribers Can’t Wait to Open

How to Squeeze Revenue from Confirmation Emails

—> See All Email Marketing Guides

Conversion Optimization

What if you could double the number of new customers per month with the same amount of marketing budget? That would completely change your business.

Conversion optimization has that power, it grows your revenue with the same amount of traffic.

Beginners Guide to Conversion Optimization

How To Double Your Conversions in 30 Days

How to Create a Customer Journey Map That Converts

How to Develop a Customer Persona That Improves Conversion Rates

Beginner’s Guide to Customer Conversion Funnel

Conversion Funnels and User Flows

What Spending $252,000 On Conversion Rate Optimization Taught Me

—> See All Conversion Optimization Guides

Go through these guides and you’ll know more about digital marketing than 99% of the people you are competing with.



Source Quick Sprout http://bit.ly/2w6JpRP

Think. Wait. Fast.

“Everyone can perform magic, everyone can reach his goals, if he is able to think, if he is able to wait, if he is able to fast.”Siddhartha, Hermann Hesse

My high school English teacher passed away several years ago. Before he passed, I had the chance to tell him that he had a profound impact on my life. After all, I write for a living, and it was his teaching more than anything else that enabled me to write reasonably good material fairly quickly, which led me to where I’m at now.

Another thing that he did for me that I don’t think he ever realized was that he opened my eyes to a much wider world of reading and the impact it can have on me. He introduced me to Henry David Thoreau, whose writing has had a profound impact on my life (see here and here and also a ton of my inspiration articles). He introduced me to Herman Melville, a writer I didn’t appreciate as a sixteen year old but whose works I devoured when I was in my thirties.

He also introduced me to Hermann Hesse, whose quote starts off this article. I remember diving into Hesse’s books during my last semester of high school, particularly a copy of Siddhartha with a bright blue cover, but also several others that I checked out from the library. I read every single Hesse book that my local library had (and could get) during the summer between high school and college and my dog-eared copy of Siddhartha went with me to college that fall.

A few years ago, I went through a period where I decided to re-read a fairly long list of books that I could recall having a major impact on my life. I made a long list of them and started snagging them from the library or downloading them for free from Project Gutenberg if they were old enough to be in the public domain.

Some of those books were still very impactful for me, while others were less so. Siddhartha, and several other Hesse books I re-read, were on the “impactful” side of the equation.

As I was reading through those books again, I copied down a lot of quotes that I wanted to think about, of which that quote at the beginning was one. I actually stuck the quote in a note to someday write about on The Simple Dollar, but it ended up getting buried in a pile of several hundred (yes, hundred) other ideas I have for articles, most of them half-baked.

A few days ago, I stumbled across it again, simply because I was searching through my notes for references to something else entirely. I found that note, opened it up, and the quote just rang out to me like a church bell on a quiet Sunday morning.

Think. Wait. Fast. That’s really all you need to do to achieve almost any financial goal, and almost any goal in life.

Think

The thinking part of a goal is the process by which you turn a vague daydream into something concrete that you can actually achieve in life.

An idle daydream about being debt free or being able to live off of your savings or retiring early or paying for your child’s college education is pleasant, but it’s just an idle daydream, one that slides into your head and then drifts away just as easily. It’s pleasant, but it doesn’t really do anything.

Turning that daydream into a goal requires thought and planning.

What exactly is it that you want to achieve? “Paying for my child’s college education” sounds great, but how much will that actually cost? “Saving for retirement” sounds great, but how much do I need to save? “Losing weight” sounds great, but what’s the best way to actually do that? A good goal requires some research.

What is my target? What exactly is it that you want to do? This works best when it’s something that’s clearly a “yes” or a “no” when you’re checking to see if you’ve achieved it. Using a number is often useful, but you can also have a specific condition. For example, if you want to save for your child’s college education, what is the dollar amount you’re aiming for? If you know what tuition costs at a good university, maybe you’ll aim for four semesters of that tuition amount in their 529. Again, this builds off of the initial thought about the goal and

When is my target? Another key element is the end date for your goal. When do you want to achieve this goal by? Sometimes, it’s obvious – you want to achieve that college savings goal by the time that person starts college, or you want to achieve your retirement savings goal by the time you retire. Sometimes, it’s not so obvious – when is it that you want to be debt free? You can choose that for yourself.

Is this all realistic? If you know what you want to do and when you want to do it, you should check and make sure that the goal is realistic. You want the goal to be a bit challenging, but you don’t want it to be literally impossible. A good way to do a reality check on your goal is to break the dollar amount down into a weekly or monthly amount and see whether that makes sense. For example, if you’re aiming to pay off $10,000 in debt in two years, you’re aiming to pay off $100 in debt every week. Is that feasible?

What are your daily steps? A final major element in your thought process about goals is what that big goal translates into in terms of daily steps. I like to use a series of questions to help me figure it out if it’s not obvious:

+ What can I do this year to bring me closer to my big goal?
+ What can I do this quarter to bring me closer to what I need to do this year?
+ What can I do this month to bring me closer to what I need to do this quarter?
+ What can I do this week to bring me closer to what I need to do this month?
+ What can I do today to bring me closer to what I need to do this week?

The entire focus in terms of action, then, is that thing you need to do today. The entire plan hinges on that thing for today and nothing else. Then, each week, reassess all of those questions.

All of this requires a lot of thought. The idea is simply to bring that goal into focus so that you can actually see what effort you need to put forth today and how it relates to that goal as well as to discard half-baked ideas so you don’t throw your efforts away down an aimless path.

Wait

Big goals require a lot of patience. Almost every big goal out there has a timeline that stretches far beyond what feels “real” in our everyday life.

After all, if you could achieve a big goal in your life in just a few days, well, then you’d obviously do it. The reason that many people don’t achieve big goals is because of the wait.

For me, a key part of the wait is the part of the thought process above where I break things down into what I need to do today in order to achieve my goal, and then I make today’s element paramount. I try to avoid making the piece for today too big – it has to fit into my life, after all – but I do try to make it urgent and important. Doing that not only keeps me moving forward toward the goal, but it makes the goal feel real and tangible in my everyday life rather than something huge and outside the scope of my normal life.

I use a lot of different tricks to make today’s step toward a goal relevant, but the biggest part is that I remind myself of today’s step in the morning. One thing I do each day, early in the day, is to review my ongoing goals and make sure that there’s something in my day related to that goal. Sometimes it’s an addition to my to-do list; other times, it’s another step in a 90 day challenge.

For example, if I’m working on paying off my debts, today’s goal might be to “find one thing I can change to spend less money and execute it and put the saved money aside for an extra debt payment.”

If I’m working on saving for retirement, I might have a similar task, but with the goal of working toward a place where I can bump up my 401(k) contribution at the end of the month (meaning I need to be making a permanent or easily repeatable change).

Those kinds of things go on my to-do list. Other things are just reminders, like reminding myself to be more conscious about what I’m eating or to listen attentively when having conversations with people.

However, the most important ingredient over the long haul is patience. You have to be able to give it time, because most big goals simply can’t happen overnight.

There are a number of things you can do in your life to cultivate patience, beyond the techniques above:

+ Review your day during moments of downtime. How have things gone? What do you need to do the rest of today?
+ Intentionally do things with minimal distraction (a great step here is to start using “do not disturb” mode on your phone as often as possible, or even leaving it behind when doing things).
+ Take on “micro-challenges,” where you push yourself to do something pretty challenging for your goal today – a particularly hard daily step.
+ Ask three questions before making a statement when talking to someone. Whenever you’re conversing, make it a point to ask questions and listen rather than impatiently diving in with your initial idea.
+ Postpone impulsive splurges; if you want to splurge, put it off for another day rather than just saying “no.” You can even schedule it if you want, but don’t do it right away.
+ Plan ahead for big indulgences and enjoy the anticipation.
+ Chart your progress over time as you move from your starting point to your goal. This is really useful if you have a number to track, like your net worth or your weight or your planking time or whatever.
+ Focus on how far you’ve come, not on how far you have to go. You’ll generally buzz right through a honeymoon period with your goal, and then it’ll get tough. Rather than focusing on the distance ahead, look back at how far you’ve come and tie it to your efforts today. “I paid off $2K in debt in the last few months because I did something useful every day toward that goal; I can definitely keep that up!”
+ Take on a few long-term commitments. If you can commit to something that other people rely on that also nudges you toward your goal, that will help you keep moving forward and usually make it much easier to generate something to do today.
+ Pause before you take action and ask yourself if this really makes sense. Does this choice really help me out in terms of what I want out of life?
+ Remind yourself that mild discomfort is tolerable and doesn’t have to be immediately fixed. Your life doesn’t have to be constant comfort. (We’ll get back to this in a minute.)
+ Automate as much of your plan as you can so that impulsiveness doesn’t wreck your progress.
+ Find free hobbies to capture your attention so that you’re not tempted to always spend money.

Fast

Fasting simply means choosing to go without something in the short term in order to achieve some long term benefit. It usually applies to choosing not to consume food, but it applies to almost everything we buy or consume, from television to the internet, from hobby items to special treats.

Some people fast for spiritual or social understanding, as going without something important like food or drink can teach you a lot about the experiences of others and about yourself.

However, fasting in some form is often a key part of a long term goal. You’re usually giving up something that you consume, whether it’s money or food or time. Many 30 day and 90 day challenges are forms of fasting, where you’re agreeing to go without something that you regularly consume.

For example, let’s say that one element of fasting that you decide to take on is that you’re going to buy store brand items for everything from now on unless the product reveals itself to be problematic. At first, you’ll have to consciously remind yourself to buy store brand ketchup and store brand hand soap and store brand pasta, but as time goes on, that will begin to feel like the natural choice.

Fasting is often a dietary choice useful for weight loss. For example, many people choose to practice intermittent fasting as a weight loss strategy, in that they choose to only eat one meal a day or only eat during a six hour window each day.

Over a long period, fasting towards a goal should elicit some permanent changes in behavior. For example, I know several people who consciously practiced intermittent fasting and now feel most comfortable eating just one meal a day, along with perhaps one small snack.

Here’s the thing, though: fasting is hard. Going without something that you want, particularly when the want is incredibly strong and the thing you want is easy and harmless to acquire, is an intense personal challenge. This is often the piece that causes people to fail in their quests for financial improvement and other aspects of personal improvement. Think of the person that tries to be frugal for a while and then bounces right back to spending, or the person who diets carefully and then goes right back to eating a ton.

My advice is simple: if you’re fasting in order to help bring about a permanent change in your life or to achieve a big long term goal, choose principles of fasting that you can continue permanently. For example, if you’re trying to use fasting to diet, rather than looking for something that gives you some quick results that you can’t possibly sustain over the long haul, look for something less intense that you can sustain over the long haul that will still give results but a little less quickly. The same is true for spending changes: stick with realistic changes you can sustain rather than hyper-aggressive ones that you can’t pull off.

Not sure whether something is sustainable? That’s what a 30 day challenge is for. Stick to the change for 30 days, then assess whether it’s permanent or not.

Final Thoughts

Think. Wait. Fast. That’s really all you need to do to elicit real change in your life. Three words.

It seems simple and it is, but it’s incredibly hard to do. People constantly try and fail to achieve the changes they want out of life, not because they’re failures, but because change is hard. If it was easy, everyone would be millionaires with a perfect body and inner peace.

So what’s the trick? I think if there’s one trick to making think, wait, and fast work, it’s breaking things down into smaller pieces, trying them out, and then making sure the smaller pieces are realistically sustainable. That requires thinking, waiting, and fasting, but it leads to the strong possibility of permanent change and achieving the big goals you want.

Think. Wait. Fast.

You can do this.

The post Think. Wait. Fast. appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



Source The Simple Dollar http://bit.ly/2JpC8oT

11 Budgeting Tips for Recent College Grads to Master Adulting

Work From Home Teaching English Online

After I graduated from college (I earned a Bachelor's Degree in Cultural Anthropology), I took two months off to backpack around Europe. During this time, I met a lot of interesting people who were doing fascinating things like, joining the Peace Corps and teaching ESL classes abroad. These conversations focusing on travel, adventure, and living […]

The post Work From Home Teaching English Online appeared first on The Work at Home Woman.



Source The Work at Home Woman http://bit.ly/2jGQ8yP

Long-haul holidays are my guilty pleasure: here are some ways I cut corners to save cash

I’ve cut a few corners to save cash on long-distance trips, says Edmund Greaves

Photo: Cape Town, South Africa from the Waterfront, courtesy of the author

Wasting money on holidays is one of the more common barbs that people chuck at millennials. Why spend £1,000 on a break when you could put that towards a house deposit?

Well, because I don’t want to drive myself insane taking holidays that involve me mainly hanging around my house.

Over the years I’ve come up with lots of ways to cut corners to get a good long-haul deal. It just requires a bit of research and, sometimes, luck.

Big-name airlines

This June I’m going to Cape Town. I go every year because that is where my family lives, and I have experimented a lot over the years with flights and times to get the best deals.

This time, I am begrudgingly flying direct with British Airways because of time limitations – something I haven’t done in many years.

What frustrates me about BA is the price you see in comparison is often way off what you end up paying, thanks to add-ons such as checked luggage and seat allocation. Like many other airlines, the national carrier has become a bit ‘Ryanair of long haul’.

But in recent times I’ve flown regularly with Ethiopian Airlines. The airline has experienced negative headlines recently after one of its planes crashed.

However, I’ve always found it to be great value. The planes are clean and modern; the staff are friendly; and the flights are cheap.

And you can even get a super-tasty local beer in Addis Ababa airport during the layover!

One year, I got a flight to Cape Town for just £400 with Ethiopian. There are plenty of carriers out there that offer interesting prices, check the reviews, but don’t be put off just because they’re less well-known.

Be flexible

Google flight search is a good place to start when searching for flights, but sometimes you can even beat these deals.

Do a bit of research on what airlines fly to a destination and go direct to their websites. Play with dates too; often you’ll find flying midweek is cheaper than at the weekend.

I also signed up to Jack’s Flight Club, an email service where a team of researchers scour the web for flight deals. Some of the prices they find are amazing.

If you don’t have a specific place in mind, try it out because the flight deals they find are often a steal. If you’re not sure about subscribing straight away, they send out free email updates too.

Another trick is searching for another city in the same country. I once saved £200 by flying to Johannesburg instead of Cape Town, then jumping on a separate flight with local low-cost carrier Mango.

Johannesburg is often cheaper to fly to, and buying local flights with Mango is cheap for travellers from the UK because they are priced in South African rand.

“I once saved £200 by flying to Joburg instead of Cape Town”

Currency variations

I also tend to hire a car in Cape Town, so as to not annoy my aunts by asking for rides constantly.

I have found that you can get a decent enough rental for 14 days for around £200. However, both the pound and the South African rand suffer from volatility in value. You can use this to your advantage.

For instance, last year I booked a car hire with Avis about six months ahead of my trip. It was set to cost me £240. There was no difference in price whether you paid ahead online or on arrival, so I opted not to pay upfront.

A couple of weeks ahead of my trip, I noticed that the pound had gained quite a lot of value against the rand in the intervening six months. On checking the Avis site, I found that I could hire the exact same car for £40 less.

So, I cancelled my initial booking and immediately rebooked, saving myself £40 for five minutes’ work. Just make sure you don’t incur any booking cancellation fees, though (mine didn’t).

Off-beat destinations

The last time I paid for lodgings was on a trip to Lebanon in 2017. We had the brilliant fortune of being able to stay in a luxury five-star hotel for less than £30 per person per night.

This is because Lebanon was (and still is) an unfashionable destination. However, I had a wonderful time. I would highly recommend it. It is a beautiful country.

But just because it’s not ‘cool’, it was eminently affordable. It pays, therefore, to look for destinations that are less visited.

Do check the Foreign Office advice for warnings, though – it currently advises visitors to Lebanon to avoid large crowds, gatherings, and any protests or demonstrations.

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Source Moneywise http://bit.ly/2HnpTp8