
Welcome to the 26 October, 2008 edition of the Get International Clients Sunday Blog Carnival.
Kathleen Gage presents How to Gain Visibility, Market Reach and Revenues from Writing Free Articles posted at Street Smarts Marketing & Promotions saying ” One of the most important, yet often least understood business-building strategies for authors is the need to market. Many speakers, authors, trainers and consultants desperately want to gain visibility on the Internet and within their market, but may not know the most effective and efficient way to do this. Marketing serves several purposes including market reach, visibility, credibility and perception of expert status. There are countless ways to achieve these outcomes. Discover one of the best ways to achieve your marketing goals as an author, speaker, coach or consultant.”
Stephanie West Allen presents A key to cross-cultural conflict resolution: Around the world in almost 80 (0,000,000) brains posted at Brains On Purpose™.
Jim Logan presents Anatomy of a worthless business proposition posted at B2B Rainmaker saying “You can have the greatest, most feature rich offering in the world, but if your target market doesn’t value the problem you solve or the opportunity you enable, you’re never going to have revenue success. At best, you’ll be opportunistic. And your product or service is effectively worthless.”
Sarah Scrafford presents 100+ Free Open Courseware Links for Web Designers posted at eLearning Gurus.
Hot Domain Names presents Internationalized Domain Names And Homograph Attacks posted at Hot Domain Names saying “What is a homograph attack? A homograph attack is when a person makes an internationalized domain name, (also known as an IDN), look like a traditional domain name associated with a popular website.”
Brad Trnavsky presents How Loyal Are Your Customers? – Sales Management 2.0 posted at Sales Management 2.0.
Ian McAnerin presents 3 Factors of InternationalSEO posted at McAnerin Muse saying “Arguably, the first step towards true search personalization by the search engines was international search. This was followed by local search and universal search, with even more coming ideas coming along, including logins, “answers” and so on.”
Fiona King presents 50 Tips for An Awesome Google Chrome Experience posted at The Daily Netizen.
MBB presents 10 Steps To Retire As A Millionaire posted at Money Blue Book Finance.
Erika Collin presents Brain Trust: 100 Ivy League Business & Entrepreneurship Courses You Can Take for Free posted at BSchool.com Business Schools Directory.
Ecreativeworks’ presents Go International posted at Ecreativeworks’ International Search Engine Optimization Blog saying “Recently, I was browsing through some research on Google and stumbled upon this answer from Google as to why Product Search was renamed from Froogle: “While it was a cute and clever name, it had issues around copyright and trademark, as well as internationalization… The pun (to “frugal”) isn’t obvious.””


































{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
Thanks very much for this link, Cindy, and for your comment at my blog. I appreciate both!
You're welcome Stephanie. I do think your article should interest my readers here. And I liked having a look at your work. It's good to see rational explanations of the culture differences we feel and react to. It help us to improve our own skills.
I just ran into this page while looking for some information about international blogs.
Pretty good stuff you got going here. Will keep checking.
Augusto
International SEOs last blog post..What Have We Been Up To at Spanish SEO?
Lucky you found this page. I would love to hear about your experience with Spanish SEO and how it may compare with any other international SEO practices.