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Bucaro TecHelp Newsletter
Maintain Your Computer and Use it More Effectively
to Design a Web Site and Make Money on the Web. ~ ~ ~ September 14, 2005 Volume 5 Number 16 ~ ~ ~
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How To Create a Profitable Information Product to Sell
By Jamie Madison
The product you choose to market is very important. In fact, it could easily make the difference
between untold success and miserable failure. Here are some specific guidelines to follow that will
enable you to find a phenomenal product. Your ideal product should contain some of the following
elements:
1. It should be useful. This should be something that solves a big problem. For example, it could
make overweight people lose weight, or sick people well, or make people wealthy.
2. Your product should have mass appeal. You want your product to be of interest to as many people
as possible. For example, you wouldn't want to sell collectible boxes to vampires. Why not? Because
there are not enough vampires in the world to make you rich.
3. You should be able to protect your product with a patent, copyright or exclusive agreement. Why,
If you are successful with your product, then no one will be able to rip off your product and claim
it as their own.
4. Another good element is that your product should be able to be sold for 10 times or more of the
cost. Assume for a minute that your product cost you $1.00 to produce, you can easily sell it for
$10.00 or more.
5. Your product should also be fast and easy to produce.
The above criteria are guidelines for an ideal product. Now here is what I consider the very, very
best product! INFORMATION! Why information? There are so many excellent reasons why. The one I like
in particularly is that it fits the above guidelines so well.
continued...
Chronic Fatigue : Part 4: Fatigue Caused by Self Pollution
By Stephen Bucaro
Are you always tired? Everything takes so much energy. When you wake up in the morning you're tired.
You tried to get more sleep, but that didn't help. The fatigue just won't go away. If this describes
you, read on ...
In Part 3 of this series of articles, I explained how poor life management skills, like poor time
management and not keeping mental and physical stress in balance, can result in chronic fatigue. But
good life management requires more than just time management. It requires recognizing that we live
in a world that is saturated with pollution, and this pollution makes us tired because it is slowly
killing us.
If you smoke, you are deliberately killing yourself in a most painful way. Research by the National
Cancer Institute has shown that cigarette smoke contains over 60 carcinogens, and cigarette smoking
alone is responsible for 30 percent of all cancer deaths. Smoking harms nearly every organ of the body.
If you smoke, you're not only killing yourself. Secondhand smoke significantly increases the risk of
lung cancer and heart disease in nonsmokers. Smoking during pregnancy can cause stillbirth, sudden
Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), and adverse health effects on the developing child.
- By reducing the efficiency of your lungs, smoking deprives your body of oxygen. This makes you
tired and lethargic, and can result in chronic fatigue.
If you drink alcohol, again, you are deliberately killing yourself in a most painful way. Your liver
will try to filter the alcohol from your blood, which can lead to liver cirrhosis, a leading cause
of death. Alcohol in the bloodstream causes brain damage and increases the risk of breast cancer,
lung cancer, and cancer of the liver. The toxic effect of alcohol on the heart can lead to high blood
pressure, congestive heart failure, and stroke.
Research supported by the alcoholic beverage industry claims that drinking small amounts of wine is
beneficial by providing antioxidants, increasing HDL, or reducing stroke by providing anti-clotting
properties. Give me a break! Alcohol is powerful solvent commonly added to gasoline.
- According to the American Heart Association, "There is NO scientific proof that drinking wine or
any other alcoholic beverage has any effect on the risk of developing heart disease or stroke".
- One of the functions of the liver is to maintain the proper level of sugar in the blood stream.
Too much sugar in the blood stream is toxic and causes diabetes. Low blood sugar causes a condition
called hypoglycemia. Hypoglycemia makes you tired and lethargic, and can result in chronic fatigue.
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