sábado, diciembre 11, 2010

ON LINE PHONE INTERPRETING - SPANISH/ ENGLISH

Clear communication between healthcare professionals and patients is vital to successful medical care.
Telephonic interpreting is a critical component of an integrated Spanish language access program. We seek to provide interpretation, translation, and consulting services in Spanish/ English language, as a means of eliminating language barriers between healthcare providers and limited English proficient patients.

  • Quick connection times
  • Cost-effective fee options
  • We use Skype connection ( no cost - skype to skype account).
  • Highly competitive rates with volume discounts
  • Discounting based on cumulative customer group usage
  • Provide equal access for culturally diverse patients
  • Reduce risk of misdiagnosis or wrong prescriptions
  • Manage cost of interpreting services through group pricing
  • Provide accountability through custom reporting
  • Enhance patient relations and increase likelihood of a positive outcome
  • Increase the level of quality care and increased trust in your institution
  • Industry-competitive rates
  • Convenient, easy to use, transparent service
  • Complete confidentiality; HIPAA compliant
Ask for a quote TODAY!!! vatotheworld@gmail.com

viernes, octubre 22, 2010

How to Make Money Online Without a Website

How to Make Money Online Without a Website

A pay-per-click affiliate program is a great way to leverage the keyword skills you already have.

If you've got some successful keyword research and PPC advertising under your belt for your own website, why not capitalize on that and make money online without one? Affiliate marketing through pay-per-click makes it possible.

MSN adCenter and Yahoo Search Marketing both allow direct linking to sites that are not your own. (But don't try this with Google AdWords.)

Direct linking means that you can join affiliate programs, create ads for their products, and send click-throughs directly to the merchant's site. There's no need to build an intermediary site or use your own site to direct traffic. When your click-throughs convert, you get a commission.

It's a way to create an extra stream of income--or several--with some big advantages:

  • It eliminates the time, effort, and costs of building and maintaining web pages. The only time you'll have to pay is when someone clicks on your ad.
  • It allows you to do affiliate marketing without cluttering up your own site with links that might send potential customers away. You can keep your site clean and focused on its job of selling your product, but still make commissions off other people's products.
  • It eliminates an extra click for users. One click less for them means more commissions for you.

    While direct linking is a good opportunity, though, it's not a walk in the park. The PPC programs that allow it restrict the number of affiliate ads that can point at the same display URL that shows on the ad itself. So ads by experienced affiliate marketers who know exactly what they're doing can bump less skillful ads.

If you want your ads to be seen, here's what you have to do.

Step 1: Start with a big, broad market
Choose a broad market where there's a lot of searching going on. You want to get as many eyeballs as possible.

Step 2: Do some keyword research
Don't build your ads on broad, untargeted keywords, though. The competition for those will be fierce--and expensive. Your objective here is to find neglected, low-cost keywords within a broad, high-traffic market--and that's why it really helps to have keyword research experience.

And as I mentioned in an earlier article, you need to look for specific problems that are shared by a lot of people within a market. Then find relevant keyword terms that clearly show a clear intention to buy or find out more information. Those terms are much more likely to convert. And remember, you pay for every click, but you get paid only when they convert.

The Microsoft Advertising Intelligence tool can show you almost anything you'd like to know about any given keyword, including similar keywords, traffic,cost per click, and much more. The free Google AdWords Keyword Tool is also a quick and handy way of getting ideas for keywords with high search volume and low cost per click; just keep in mind that you can't use this strategy with Google.

Step 3: Find a good affiliate merchant that targets your niche
In order to find a merchant that offers a relevant product and pays you a good commission, check out these affiliate networks and directories:

When you're choosing affiliate merchants, ask these questions:

  1. Do they offer a product that directly solves a problem you've identified?
  2. Do they allow direct linking to their sites? Some don't. Check the terms and conditions before you commit.
  3. Does the landing page generate pop-ups? If so, then forget it. This is not allowed. The back button on the page also has to be functional.
  4. Is there a strong landing page for the product? If you send click-throughs to an irrelevant page, a confusing sales process, or a site that's just plain unappealing, then they won't convert and you'll end up wasting your money.

Step 4: Write a PPC ad that drives buyers to the affiliate merchant's site
Take a good look at the landing page your ad is pointing at and make your ad directly relevant to it. Your ad must:

  • address the specific problem you've identified.
  • include the keyword you've bid on, preferably more than once.
  • reflect the keywords of the landing page.
  • highlight a benefit of the product.
  • include a strong call to action.

You can give your ad an extra boost by adding your keyword, or part of it, to the display URL at the bottom of the ad. The actual target URL will contain a big, ugly affiliate ID number, but the display version can show the domain name plus a subdirectory with a word or phrase that makes it look relevant to the search, like this:

Display: internetmarketing.com/affiliates_ppc
Target: http://www.internetmarketing.com/aff-iduao74elksdjdo-2u023f

Before you create your display link, check out the PPC competition to make sure it's unique so your ad won't be bumped. The better your ads, the higher the click-throughs will be, which means your ads will be rewarded with better positions for the same money. It's worth polishing them, and then testing them to see which ones are performing the best.

Running a pay-per-click affiliate campaign probably won't generate hundreds of thousands of dollars for you right off the bat--but it is the easiest way to leverage the keyword research and PPC skills you've developed in building your own site. And when Microsoft adCenter and Yahoo Search Marketing join forces sometime this year, you'll get the traffic from both, even if you only advertise on one. That makes direct linking even more appealing.

Easy, Affordable Ways to Green Your Business!!

Easy, Affordable Ways to Green Your Business

Simple tips to make your business eco-friendly and perhaps save some coin

Green business initiatives are buzzworthy for good reason: They are a boon to the environment as well as a company's balance sheet. A greener workplace reduces impact on the planet while being a healthier and more productive place to work. And according to Matt Becker, the head of BDO's Green Energy Tax Practice, "Green incentives were the most significant group of tax credits and deductions for businesses this past year." Companies that took steps to go green were eligible for up to four different sources of savings, says Becker, with tax incentives being offered from federal, state and local governments, "plus the added bonus of utility savings."

But contrary to what many cash-strapped small-business owners may think, Marcos Cordero, CEO of the Green Business Bureau, which offers green business certification, says sustainability management doesn't have to cost a lot. "Many things require simply changing behavior that results in excessive waste. Start small and building sustainability will pay for itself," says Cordero.

Whether you run a homebased business or an off-site enterprise, here are several simple and affordable things you can do to run an eco-friendly business that will green your bottom line.

Reduce
Cordero says many office-based businesses spend too much on paper and toners. If you must print, he suggests trying nonbranded toners. "Private-label and re-manufactured toners are often 70 percent cheaper and work just as well," says Cordero, a savings of hundreds or thousands of dollars, with no upfront costs.

An even better bet is to go paperless. "One of the easiest ways for a small business to go green is to turn off the paper they receive from their financial institutions and shift to electronic methods of payment with customers, suppliers and billers," suggests Richard Weeks, senior vice president with Wells Fargo Business Internet Services. Weeks says in addition to saving trees, going paperless also improves security. "Most small-business fraud is still perpetrated using paper. A check or statement in the mail, or a discarded invoice, provides an opportunity for someone to collect your accountinformation."Rachel Beckhardt Hinchliffe, project manager for Corporate Partnerships at the Environmental Defense Fund, advises setting a policy to make all copies double-sided, and work with suppliers to switch all office paper to chlorine-free, 30-100 percent post-consumer recycled. The EDF has a paper costcalculator on its website to quantify the benefits of better paper choices.

Reuse
Massimo LoBuglio, owner of the Little Cupcake Bakeshop, a carbon-neutral bakery in Brooklyn, N.Y., says using porcelain mugs saves approximately 125 cups, lids and sleeves per day. "The savings are incredible," says LoBuglio, who asserts that one simple measure added up to more than $9,000 per year.

Anca Novacovici, founder of Eco-Coach, an environmental sustainability advisory firm, points out that commercial waste, including office waste, amounts to 35 to 45 percent of the total municipal solid waste generated in the United States. She advocates reusing binders, envelopes, refill pens, tape dispensers, file indexes, and other office supplies whenever possible.

"Use incoming cardboard boxes and fiber-padded envelopes, as well as popcorn and shredded newspaper for outgoing mail and packages." Novacovici also suggests designating a reuse or exchange area. "Encourage your employees to check this center before ordering new supplies."

Recycle
At the Little Cupcake Bakeshop, no initiative is too small to have a positive effect on profitability and the planet. LoBuglio says his favorite practice is having staff bring in unused envelopes from their personal junk mail. "We can save the money it costs to buy envelopes."

Go Virtual
More than a decade ago, Frank G. Risalvato, certified personnel consultant with INTER-REGIONAL EXECUTIVE SEARCH, hired the firm's first "remote, virtual personnel recruiter." In just three months, Risalvato says that recruiter was the best and most productive employee. "So we rolled out a program to hire virtual employees across the Eastern seaboard." This, he says, eliminated cars, gas and wasted time on the highways.

Save Energy
No one can work in the dark, but task lighting doesn't have to take a big bite out of the bottom line. In fact, a switch to energy-efficient compact fluorescents (CFLs) and T8 or T5 linear fluorescents throughout the office can cut energy use by up to 75 percent, according to the Environmental Defense Fund's Beckhardt Hinchliffe.

She also urges business owners and employees to turn off all the computer equipment at night. Owners should install PC and monitor energy-management software to track the impact.

Gary Fromer, CEO of CPower, an energy management services firm, recommends getting an energy audit from a professional engineer, especially if the business is located in an older building. "Professional engineers who are familiar with lighting, heating and cooling systems can optimize their energy consumption while not compromising productivity," says Fromer. Once all systems are running efficiently, Fromer recommends getting paid for energy reduction. "Certain markets and geographies will pay energy users for smart energy management. Those payments can fund energy audits and equipment upgrades," notes Fromer.

Tell the World
Once sustainable measures are implemented, they can be used as leverage with current and potential clients. According to The Hartman Group's latest report on sustainability, more than 88 percent of consumers surveyed said they engage in what the researchers described as sustainable behavior.

Cordero says, "It shows a company is not only serious about doing the right thing for the environment, but also has the vision and innovation to realize that being green is the right thing for their business."

jueves, octubre 21, 2010

Lessons From the Corporate World: Tips for Outsourcing Business Tasks

Lessons From the Corporate World: Tips for Outsourcing Business Tasks

lessons from the corporate world

If you’re reading this post right now on, chances are you’ve at least heard of virtual assistants, and are perhaps interested in finding one or finding out how to utilize them effectively. Congratulations, you’re already more advanced than the majority of people out there who believe that affordable help is difficult to find. The fact of the matter is, outsourcing bits and pieces of your business (or in some cases, most of your business) is a critical part of making you as productive as possible.

As a member of the corporate world (I work at a large public accounting firm as a CPA/tax consultant), I will tell you that the concept of virtual assistance is not limited to savvy internet entrepreneurs. I work with virtual help from our India office on a daily basis, and have a number of tips to share with you that I think could apply to your own personal virtual assistance arrangement.

What Public Accounting Has Taught Me About Outsourcing Business Tasks

1) Clear communication is everything – You may be paying your VA $7 per hour, however if your task(s) wind up taking three times longer than they should, you’re effectively paying $21 per hour. I can’t tell you how many projects I’ve worked on where unclear instructions were given to a virtual staff in a haphazard manner, eventually necessitating an entire re-do of the project. It’s not worth rushing your instructions and explanations. Clear instructions may not always be enough, however, especially in an e-mail.

Don’t be afraid to offer a phone call as a follow-up to your e-mail, or include language to the effect of, “Please let me know if you wish to discuss these instructions further over the phone.” Most VAs are accessible via Skype or another voice-over-IP service that won’t cost you any extra to use. Taking an extra five minutes to explain something a bit further could mean shaving a couple hours of wasted time off your project. As someone who faces this problem regularly, I can assure you it’s worth it.

2) Always set deadlines – You may be wondering, “Why wouldn’t someone set deadlines?” While it seems fairly obvious, you will come across situations where you need something done, but either don’t have a deadline in mind or forget to communicate that deadline. VAs will commonly ask you about deadlines, but this doesn’t happen 100% of the time. Deadlines are important, even if when they don’t seem to be. Hang with me for a minute if that last sentence doesn’t make much sense to you.

When you give a task to a VA, it may not be urgent in that moment. You might need an article written or need some web design modified, but you don’t need it right now. Don’t make the mistake of leaving out a deadline. Some VAs are very busy, and need to know how to prioritize your work along with work from their other clients. If you fail to give a deadline, it’s possible your work won’t be done when it all of a sudden becomes urgent to you. VAs can be amazing, but they aren’t mind-readers.

3) Don’t forget to think about your client – In my industry, we’re legally required to obtain our clients’ permission to utilize virtual staff in India. This isn’t necessarily a concern about trust or quality – some clients just don’t want their confidential information traveling around the world, or would like to be aware of where exactly it is traveling. Chances are, you aren’t bound by any legal requirements, so this likely won’t be a huge issue for you.

Nevertheless, if you’re working on a sensitive project for a client, it might pay to have a discussion with them about how you’re managing their project. Reiterate the fact that this is a common practice, and helps you to deliver the same high quality deliverable at a price that you otherwise would not be able to offer. I’m not saying that this is something you need to bring up with every single client (it may not be necessary at all), but if you want to remain transparent as a service provider and you think it could be important to the client, consider having the discussion. Your clients will most likely appreciate your transparency and careful attention to their project.

4) Reward your VAs for a job well done – In a corporate office setting, morale is such a huge factor that drives productivity. It’s human nature to want to feel good about what you do, and when you’re unhappy about your work situation, it will be reflected in your work. The same goes for virtual assistants. Although you don’t work with them in person, they should be treated no differently than any other employee or co-worker.

When your VA does a good job on something, let them know! If you do have criticism, communicate it, but be sure to also let them know what they did well. Just like you and me, they want to feel like they’re a valued member of your business and project. I have no doubt that happy VAs are more productive and take an interest in making sure that they do a great job. Don’t be afraid to praise and reward your VA when they deserve it. This can go a long way toward keeping your VAs around (which means you spend less time training new VAs), and will help you complete your projects more efficiently.

Hopefully these tips help you out! I find them to be true every single day at my job. If you have any questions or comments, I’d love to chat about them in the comments.

3 keys to achievement: Common Sense, Hard work and Stick-with-it-ness – Thomas Edison

3 Awesome Steps to Virtual CEO Success











There are 3 keys to achievement: Common Sense, Hard work and Stick-with-it-ness – Thomas Edison

You see I believe in a simple theory; that success (in anything) is 20% mechanics and 80% psychology.

Anyone can learn the mechanics of the Virtual Business Lifestyle. You can learn about creating passive income,outsourcing your work and becoming mobile, but in order to truly make it all work for you and create the lifestyle you want, you MUST approach it in a different way.

I could ramble on for ages about all of the keys to achievement that you could incorporate into your life but I won’t. In all seriousness though, here are 3 important keys to achievement that I’d like to share with you today.

1. Common Sense

To make a successful transition between in-office CEO and Virtual CEO, you have to use common sense. To outsourcing business you have to understand the process, what works and what doesn’t, and use that knowledge to help you make the move as smooth as possible.

Use your common sense by realising that this whole process of becoming a Virtual CEO will take time and so you are not jumping into this in a week.

You have this same ability to use your common sense to live a Virtual Business Lifestyle. All it means is using your head and making sure you think your goal through before you jump in.

2. Hard work

Hard work is crucial to success, I think we can all agree on that can’t we? But many people thing that hard work equals long hours and that’s not the case (at least for the majority.) So while you might have to pull the occasional all-nighter to finish off that ebook or product for a passive income stream, the kind of hard work I’m talking about is a bit different.

Mr. XX, for example, isn’t just working hard to make sure that he can fully remove himself from the business at the end of year. He’s travelling all over the show, trying to find that all-important operations manager and he’s putting in the effort to complete projects like his ebooks.

Mr. XX is also working hard on making the time for his family and his mini-vacations. He’s working hard on disciplining himself to work from home on Fridays. He’s working hard to ensure he has all the systems in place for the big change in 2011.

You can apply the same principle of hard work to your virtual business. You’re completely able to work in this hard work fashion. It’s not about slaving away for 20 hours a day but instead, taking the approach of working hard in productive ways to get your virtual business singing and dancing.

3. Stick-with-it-ness

Finally, the last key that Mr. XX uses to his advantage is what the great Thomas Edison called “Stick-with-it-ness”. It’s a simple concept really when you think about it but the majority of people don’t live by it.

For example, when Mr. XX was looking for his ops manager, he stuck with it even though he was travelling all over the place to make it happen. Even when the search looked in vain, Mr. XX stuck with it and kept going. A year is, for some, a long time to work away on their dream of change but the success in the end comes for this ability to just hang in there long enough.

So if you’re creating your ebook that is going to be your first passive income stream and it’s taking a bit longer than planned, stick in there and see it through. It’s easy to give up and cast it into the “I tried but couldn’t do it” pile but that won’t bring you the virtual lifestyle success. To get that lifestyle you want, you need to “stick-with-it” until the end don’t you? Stick with that blog until you start to see the numbers rise. Stick with the idea of outsourcing even if you’ve been burnt a few times. Stick with creating those passive income streams even if it seems to be taking longer than planned. And stick with your goal of living that virtual business lifestyle – it’s closer than you think.

The 3 keys

So yes, I could go on for ages about all the hundreds of keys to achievement that could help you reach virtual CEO success but I won’t. Because really, using your common sense, working hard and sticking with it is a great place to start and WILL make a massive difference to you living your virtual business lifestyle.