Buy Premise Today for $95!

Last Call for Discounts!

Brian and Rafal have finished the new Premise 2.0 site, which means the price jumps to $165 tomorrow at 5pm Pacific.

The $95 early release steal deal includes all the great features Premise already has, plus the ability to:

  • Build rock-solid membership sites with WordPress
  • Take recurring payments with automated access management
  • Automatically drip content out over time
  • Securely sell ebooks, software, and other digital downloads
  • Confidently create private forum areas with vBulletin
  • Quickly set up password-protected content libraries
  • Easily build check-out pages for PayPal and Authorize.net

But it ends tomorrow. 5pm Pacific on the dot.

From there on, you’ll spend at least $70 more for the same turnkey digital sales and marketing solution. I seriously doubt Brian will offer any discounts quite this deep again…

So get your copy now! Premise 2.0: The Complete Digital Sales and Lead Generation Engine for WordPress

Managing Social Buttons on a Responsive Site

Via Scoop.itDIY WordPress

Having Facebook, Twitter, and Google scripts on your Responsive Design can slow down your site for Mobile users. Here’s how to gracefully fallback to text links.
Via themble.com

5 Google Font Combinations That You Should Start Using

Via Scoop.itWordPress Tips & Tricks

It’s no secret that the days of custom web fonts have already begun. What started out by Typekit and Cufon is now being finished by, who else… Google.
Via www.briangardner.com

How to Add a Home Widget Area to the eleven40 Theme

Via Scoop.itWordPress Tips & Tricks

Recently we released the eleven40 mobile responsive theme and this tutorial will show you how to add a Home Featured widget area to your homepage.
Via www.briangardner.com

Why My WordPress SEO Won’t Work | SEO Theory – SEO Theory and Analysis Blog

Via Scoop.itWordPress Tips & Tricks

#SEO #article #tips Why My WordPress SEO Won’t Work http://t.co/YLs9YaKK

This guy is right on target! People constantly fret about SEO, and install plugin after plugin, and theme after theme. Matt Cutts breaks it down for you here: http://youtu.be/v6xxcQdAHbI. Follow him, and follow Google Webmaster Help here: http://youtu.be/qXgni6U6qk8.
Via www.seo-theory.com

WordPress › CSSIgniter Shortcodes « WordPress Plugins

Via Scoop.itWordPress Tips & Tricks
Version: 1.0 This plugin defines and allows you to use a lot of useful shortcodes. Need a button? Sure. Need a button with an icon? Already there. A…
Via wordpress.org

DIY Basic Facebook Page Set-up Webinar

Can’t Afford $200+ for a Facebook Business Page? What About $9.99?

I know times are tough, and there are still plenty out there unemployed and starting their own businesses. It gets overwhelming with everything you need to learn and/or pay for.

So for the next few months, I’m paying-it-forward. Rather than charge my usual fee, I’m going to host a webinar where I walk you through how to set-up your own Basic Facebook Page.

You’ll need to have the following BEFORE the webinar:

  • Vertical logo 180 pixels wide x 540 pixels high
  • Minimum of 5 photos of your product(s), service(s) or portfolio
  • About content (i.e., business phone, email address, company description, etc.)

Date & Time:

The webinar is: Thursday, February 16th, 2012 at 11:00 am PST

Pay $9.99, if you sign up before Valentine’s Day (2/14/2012).

Pay $14.99, if you sign up after Valentine’s Day.

I’ll also show you where you can get a FREE Welcome tab template!

Sign up on my registration page: Webinar Registration Page

If you have any issues with the registration form, contact me through my contact form. Check “Other” under “Interested in”, and in the box, type in your issue.

Thank you, and see you online!

Where’s Our Empathy? Really?

This article, on Brazen Careerist, prompted this post: Are You That Oh-So-Annoying Guy in Your Office?

As much as these things are annoying, and some of them should just be common sense (cleaning up after yourself, etc.).

The rest of the article (I feel), is a bit discriminating. The fact that (we feel), we need to stop people from being themselves just to suit our needs, just proves how dead on ‘The Wall’ by Pink Floyd (for those who don’t know) was. We’re all expected to be this “cookie-cutter” employee in Corp America. Even our students are expected to “fit a certain mold” or they’re labeled with having ADD, ADHD, etc. And how has that benefited our society?

Why do we need to keep our personality outside of the office, outside of our school system, outside of any place where people can’t accept us for who we are?

Do I like a gossiper? No, but I let them know “Hey, that’s not my bag. Let’s chat about something else.”

Do I like it when people come into the office sick? It doesn’t really bother me, as I have a very strong immune system. And most companies only allow for so many days off. Maybe, said person, is having a tough time. Where’s our empathy? Maybe who you should be upset with, is your companies sick time policy.

“The Guy Who Acts Like a Wannabe Celeb.”

Really? That’s his personality, and this is discrimination. If you don’t like him, avoid him. I generally avoid them, but I don’t tell them they can’t be themselves at the office.

“The One-Upper.”

Maybe they’re not being competitive, but because of your upbringing/perspective, you think they are?

“The TMI Guy.”

Maybe he did try resolving it at home, but his partner is relentless. Maybe it is affecting his work-life, but maybe, he really can’t help it. Why not help him? Where’s our empathy?

“The Awful Emailer.”

I do agree that you don’t “Reply All” on a whim, and that you should keep your subject line, condensed and concise. Maybe a course on “Writing Effectively” can help? But as much as I find ”pink italic inspirational quotes in your signature block.” unattractive, I still feel that person should be allowed to express themselves this way. Ignore it, if you don’t like it. Like I do.  And I disagree with “(I trust I don’t even have to mention emoticons.)” I, on rare occasion, will throw this into an email. I feel it shows personality, which is generally absent, and assumed in most emails.

“The Antisocial Guy.”

I’ve worked with a lot of these guys, and I love them. They’re minds work so very differently than mine, and they pique my curiosity. (But I’ve always been the curious, social butterfly.) Even so, I let them be themselves. Why? Because they’re unique and beautiful, and usually very cerebral. They’re introverts (inside thinkers), and might even be shy. Let them socialize when they’re good and ready. And if they’re not, swing by and say “Hi.” smile or wave as you walk past. But never invade their space for too long. :)

Now, if I wanted to continue in the articles theme, I could say the following were forgotten:

  • The Complainer
  • The Whiner
  • The High Priest or Priestess

(I think you get the point. But if you don’t, what I mean is, we can nitpick every quirk out there.)

But instead, let’s remember empathy, and try to understand what that person might be going through, or how they were brought up, that makes/made them who they are today. Maybe even read up on Myers-Briggs, and help yourself understand those around you.

Now It’s Your Turn:

How do you feel about our cookie-cutter society?

Oh, and my Myers-Briggs Personality Type (MBTI) is ENTP. What’s your MBTI?

Security: You're Only As Good As Your Password

Image of Password Strength Indicator
For WordPress Owners/Users:

As secure as your hosting company may be, you’re still only as safe as your password is strong. If you’re still using letters only. Consider your door wide open. Sure, you may be fine now, and nothing’s happened to-date. But when your site comes crashing down, you have no one to blame, but yourself.

Now, let’s say you have both letters and numbers. That’s great! Unless of course those numbers and letters are related in ANYWAY to you, your family, your pets, or your favorite TV show, character, etc. Why? Think about it…with the mass of social networking we do, we’re bound to spill, and leave trails of, what we like. Consider your door left ajar. And again, when your site comes crashing down, you have no one to blame, but…yourself.

Now let’s move on to those that have letters and numbers, but they’re in no way related to you, your family, your pets, etc. You might even use a password generator – not bad – and you even have 12 characters. Consider your door, closed, but unlocked. Sure you’re safe, as long as no one tries the handle. ;) Yes, they’ll have to try harder than the above passwords, but it still might not be that hard. Again, when your site…yada, yada, yada…

Now let’s move on to those that use letters, numbers, and special characters. Now that’s a challenge! But only – IF – that password is in no way related to you. Here’s a great example. Let’s pretend my loved one’s name is Robert Downey (uh-huh). I could take his name and change it up like so: R08{r7|)@wN34. Not bad, right? But any hacker can figure that out.

So what do you need to do? Go off the grid with EVERYTHING you know and love, and choose something ENTIRELY random and unrelated. Choose a password with letters, numbers, and special characters, and make it – AT LEAST – 14 characters long. (The longer the better.) Change that password every 45 to 90 days. Pain in the ass? Yes, but you’re taking steps to keeping your site safe.

The other thing you should do, is back-up, back-up, BACK-UP! Why? If a hacker wants in, nothing will stop them. So backing up your data weekly (or as often as you post), keeps your content safe. And should your site go down, you can always install a fresh copy, with all your content in check.

Oh, and One More Thing:

Never, ever, EVER use “admin” (or ANY variation of the word) as your username. You’re just begging for trouble if you do. Why? It’s the first thing they look for!

Now It’s Your Turn:

What’s your most recent security or password nightmare?

How to Import an Old PowerPoint Presentation into a New Template

Best WordPress Hosting