Posts Tagged ‘Real’
Real Work At Home Freelance Jobs
Good Day Fellow Freelancer,
You will find 100′s of work at home opportunities but along the road of freelance you will find plenty of scams along the way. The best way to avoid scams be sure to look for all the signs of a scam like:
If the freelance opportunity passes the 5 scam signs I would highly recommend that you investigate any company you plan to work for as a freelancer by checking with the Better Business Bureau www.bbb.org and doing a Google search to view any issues out on the net. Search company name, company address, company telephone and even company email address! And last but not least ask for references!Never and I mean never pay anything before you get your freelance job and most importantly “If It’s Too Good To Be True! It Is!”.If you are still in doubt do not do it!You will find many work at home companies offering real freelance jobs like:
You can view more information about the above companies or others at www.extramoneysolutions.com.You should have some experience before applying with any of the above companies! You should have a great phone personality! You should have a resume! You should have a quiet and private home office! Be self disciplined and organized! You will need to have some equipment before you apply for such positions like a computer, internet connection, telephone with head set, ability to fax, email address and even a small web site will help. You will have a lot of competition and you will need to set yourself aside from the completion and a resume type web site will do this for you along with a photo of your office.To your success, Ozark Mike
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21 Great Ways to Get Ahead as a Real Estate Investor
Strategy 1: Only spend time with qualified sellers who have both motivation and condition. Motivation: a compelling reason to sell with a time crunch to do it in Condition: there is a way to structure a profitable deal – either the seller has the equity to take a deep discount in price or the financing is such that you can structure terms for you to make your profit that way. Strategy 2: A deal is only a deal once you have signed contracts in hand. And even then, you might not. I just made an offer on an awesome house in a high appreciating area. There was a cash offer in ahead of me for full price. I made my offer higher. The seller rejected my offer because it was not a cash offer, and accepted the cash offer. Within 24 hours the cash offer pulled out. Apparently he made offers on several properties, tying them up, and picking which ones were best, and pulling out of the rest. Strategy 3: Use “standardized” forms and contracts that you know how to use fast. Have your attorney review contracts you have, and have a standard version of them legally approved. Then make changes to them for each transaction by using an addendum. Strategy 4: Perform your due diligence before; during and after you have the property under contract. I need comparables and a rough idea of repair expenses before making my offer. The title report is not essential until I have my offer accepted because I have a contingency clause allowing me to cancel if I don’t have marketable title. Then after having it under contract, I will have a more thorough inspection and verify my previous numbers. I have a contingency in my contract to cancel based on my inspection. Strategy 5: You don’t need to see the house before you put it under contract. I know investors that never walk through houses they buy. Their trusted contractor walks through it for them. Others make an offer subject to inspection. This is on a hot deal that might not wait for you to perform an inspection. Sometimes the property is tenant occupied, and the seller will not let you walk through it prior to an offer. Strategy 6: Always use open houses when selling or renting a property. If you set up a 1 on 1 appointment to show a property for rent, there is a 40% chance of a no show. Having an open house leverages your time, and is safer. Strategy 7: Never stop marketing a property until you have NON-refundable cash in hand. I continue to market a property for back up offers. On the deal my offer got rejected, if the seller accepted my offer in a back up position, I would not go away and buy a different property in the interim. Strategy 8: When doing the paperwork with your buyer or renter, ALWAYS collect the money FIRST then do the paperwork. Again, it is about leveraging your time. You want to make sure the money is available prior to spending a lot of time with the prospect. Strategy 9: Value your time – hire an assistant. Or better yet, have a partner. Again we are talking about leverage. I never do anything that someone else can do for me. That allows me to concentrate my energy doing things only I can do. Strategy 10: Have a system in place to take all your front line calls, whether it is an assistant, partner, or voice mail. Strategy 11: Train your assistant how to qualify buyers, renters, and sellers while NOT giving away information you don’t want them to have. Strategy 12: Get a voice mail phone number. If you have a high volume business then get a hidden line and build a system to sort out the important calls from the low level urgent calls. Strategy 13: Only give your hidden line to those people whose calls are most important to you. Strategy 14: Be willing to request that someone NOT use your hidden line. Strategy 15: Get and use caller ID. Strategy 16: Get and use mandatory phone number disclosure on your hidden line (if available). Strategy 17: Let calls go to voice mail and you call back the people you want to speak with. Strategy 18: Turn off the ringer when you are a high importance project. Strategy 19: Choose NOT to return some calls. Strategy 20: Outsource to high quality vendors in a way that lowers your real cost and provides greater results for you. Strategy 21: Build relationships with these vendors so that you know you can trust them and they know they can count on you over time. Switching back and forth and picking vendors solely on price is one of the COSTLIEST mistakes you can make.
For more information Visit www.bigdawgsbuyhouses.com AND www.realestatesecretsoftheunknown.com
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Is 3D Television a Real Possibility
The possibility of sitting down to watch some long awaited TV event and being able to holographically view the entire thing, right in the middle of your living room may sound like a big dream. However, researchers say it is a real possibility. For along time, people have been working on convincing 3D without the glasses, and so far the demo is breath-taking. 3D has been around for sometime but it requires a very large processing power as well as bulky hardware to be achieved. Lately, there has been some sort of breakthrough in the development of this holographic video system by some scientists at the University of Arizona. It is said that the researchers at the University of Arizona have created he world’s first three dimensional video displays that uses an onboard memory and can also be updated. So far the three dimensional displays produced in the labs can be erased and rewritten in only a few minutes. For a three dimensional television to be created however, the display would need to be overwritten several times in a second, something which is still very far from being achieved although researches believe it can be achieved within the next decade.This ability to erase and rewrite a three dimensional projected image is considered as a huge breakthrough in this field. Indeed it gives lots of hope that even the remaining bits can be achieved. The main challenge now is to come up with methods of continuously erasing and rewriting the image, just as is the case with the regular televisions. Although we still have along way to go to realize this technology, there is no denying that it is at least a real possibility. According to most researchers, an eventual three dimensional television will have a flat screen construction, which is similar to the modern day displays with flat panels. However, for the case of the 3D television, the display would most likely need to be placed on the floor, right in the middle of the viewing room as is presently done with the coffee table. The holographic image would then be projected above the display screen of the “coffee table”, where it would be viewable in 360 degrees.
While it is quite easy to demonstrate the great potential of the 3D TV in a laboratory setting, it is entirely a different thing to produce in mass, a 3D TV device which is cheap enough to gain a substantial following. Furthermore, in order to watch a 3D T, there would be required three dimensional TV programs. This is no small task as creating even a very cheap 30 minute sitcom in the three dimensional format would nee a vast amount of expensive equipment as well as technical expertise. It would therefore call for very serious commitment by the television networks to adapt to the 3D format. But because the technology is there, its bound to, sooner or later, be put to good use. Even though 3D TV may not be a reality within the next decade or so, it will eventually get there.