Categories » ‘Information’

What does your 2009 Report Card look like

December 28th, 2009 by Henrik Flensborg

Another interesting blog post by Bob – the Teacher – Jenkins is his 2009 Report Card

Looking back on 2009 Bob decided to look at his successes and accomplishments instead of looking at the things he failed at.
And wow, did he ever accomplish some great things in 2009.
It’s a good read and definitely something you should sit down and do for yourself after reading Bob’s Report Card for some inspiration.
It’s always a good exercise to look back and recognize the tasks you’ve completed instead of always just looking for the things that you’ve missed or failed at.
I did 3 great things this year:
1) I changed job – best work related change of the decade
2) I lost 20 kilo and got back into shape – best health related change in 15 years
3) I revived my internet marketing adventures – best creative change of the last few years
How about you?
What did you accomplish in 2009 that you’re proud of?
What did you do in 2009 that laid the foundation for the plans you have for 2010?

Looking back on 2009 Bob decided to look at his successes and accomplishments instead of looking at the things he failed at.

And wow, did he ever accomplish some great things in 2009.

It’s a good read and definitely something you should sit down and do for yourself after reading Bob’s Report Card for some inspiration.

It’s always a good exercise to look back and recognize the tasks you’ve completed instead of always just looking for the things that you’ve missed or failed at.

I did 3 great things this year:

  1. I changed job – best work related change of the decade
  2. I lost 20 kilo and got back into shape – best health related change in 15 years
  3. I revived my internet marketing adventures – best creative change of the last few years

How about you?

What did you accomplish in 2009 that you’re proud of?

What did you do in 2009 that laid the foundation for the plans you have for 2010?

I’m sick and tired of ‘Beta Testers Needed’ scams

November 10th, 2009 by Henrik Flensborg

There’s a new trend developing with some internet marketers and I’m not at all pleased with it.

It’s the fake “Beta testers needed” approach which I’ve stumbled across too many times in the past few weeks.

Normally with beta testing you get a bunch of people outside your company to test out unfinished software to find and report bugs.

It might seem “unfair” to let other people find bugs in your software, but it’s a very powerful way of testing your software on a variety of computers, operating systems and browsers.

Another thing that makes beta testing powerful is that beta testers tend to find bugs that the developers and in-house testers have missed because they maybe use the software slightly different.

The final thing that makes beta testing effective is the determination of beta testers to actively look for ways to break the software – they are actively looking for bugs, and not actively looking to prove that the software works as designed.

Oh, and let’s not forget that plenty of beta testers are geeky code nerds that thrive on messing around with unfinished code – I know I am at least.

So when I see “Beta testers needed” in my inbox I open it and click through to see if I can help another coder get his product ready for the masses.

I do this because I love to help people – and it’s because of this that I’ve been sooo pissed off lately.

You see, there’s a new trend developing where internet marketers are looking for beta testers.

Only “catch” is that you have to pay to download a beta version – but since you’re a beta tester you’re “fortunate” enough to get it much cheaper than other people.

What a bunch a fake advertising – I have never in my 25 years of involvement with software development come across a beta test where I am going to pay to help another coder get his product ready for launch.

Another alternative to paying to beta test the software is a setup where the software is free, but you have to pay to host it. The last one of these scams I saw was a $97 hosting fee.

No matter which scheme they are trying to pull I end up taking money out of my own pocket in order to spend time testing an unfinished product for one of these internet marketers – and it makes me sick to my stomach.

Come on, put some integrity in your business and reward beta testers for their efforts or stop pretending that you need beta testers when in reality you just want people to “feel” special (without actually treating them that way) while you take their money away from them.

Interesting report from Alex Goodall

November 2nd, 2009 by Henrik Flensborg

Tip of the day: Go pick up this very interesting report by Alex Goodall

Cost: Your name and emailaddress

If you are the least bit interested in being professional in your IM business then this report is a must read.

For me its integral view brought back memories of NLP/SD/Graves and the reports really struck a cord in me – so much that I had to write Alex and let him know what I thought about his report – something I didn’t do with the previous 100 “special reports” I’ve downloaded or subscribed to over the years and months.

Split-testing article by Alex Cleanthous

April 23rd, 2009 by User ImageHenrik Flensborg

Just came across a great article about spilt-testing from Alex Cleanhous.

Split-Testing : The Secret Weapon of Experienced Online Marketers

No special and expensive software needed to get your feet wet with split-testing – Google’s Website Optimiser is completely free to use.

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I’m looking for a simple to use survey tool

March 18th, 2009 by User ImageHenrik Flensborg

I’m looking for a simple to use survey tool.

Some of the features that I would like it to have is:

  1. The ability to feed the respondents emailaddress to an autoresponder (Aweber).
  2. The ability to let radio-button answers determine which autoresponder should be used.
  3. The ability to have check-boxes in place to subscribe to several newsletter/list/autoresponders at a time.
  4. The ability to specify the final thank-you-page so I don’t end up with a standard “thank you for completing this survey”-type of page.

If you’ve used a survey tool with these features then I would love to hear about it.

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